7 S.E.2d 195 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
1. An injury arises out of the employment when there is apparent to the rational mind, upon a consideration of all the circumstances, a causal connection between the conditions under which the work is required to be performed and the resulting injury. Under this test, if the injury can be seen to have followed as a natural incident of the work, and to have been contemplated by a reasonable person familiar with the whole situation, as a result of the exposure occasioned by the nature of the employment, then it arises out of the employment.
(a) The danger to which the employee is exposed may originate either from the employment or outside of it, if the exposure is peculiar to it.
(b) Applying the above principles, an employee whose work requires that he travel and spend nights away from home and at hotels or lodging places, is protected by the provisions of the workmen's compensation law from exposure to the perils of the highway and the hazards of hotels which occur in the normal, usual, and accustomed manner, and which are incident to such exposure. An injury so incurred may be said to have a causal connection with the employment, and therefore to have arisen out of the employment.
2. The court did not err in affirming the award of the Industrial Board.
A traveling salesman, by reason of his employment, incurs the risk necessary and incident to the requirements of such employment. This court, in New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v.Sumrell,
If the work of a traveling salesman or representative of an employer exposes him to the hazards of the highway we can not see why he is not exposed to the same degree and in the same manner to the hazards of hotels and eating places, provided they are normal and necessary incidents to his employment. If an employee is required by the duties of his employment to be away from his home at night, and his compensation covers the expense necessary and incident to spending the night away from home, and he incurs dangers or perils arising from and incident to such staying at a hotel, "the protection of the compensation act extends" to such employee while so engaged in the service of his employer. InSprayberry v. Independence Indemnity Co.,
In Ocean Accident c. Corporation v. Farr,
Counsel for plaintiff in error insist that this case is controlled by the decision of the Supreme Court,
We are unwilling to say that an employee who is required to be away from home about the business of his employer will not be allowed compensation for an injury which occurs by reason of the fact that he has to eat or sleep during that time. Proper food and proper rest are necessary and incidental to the performance of the labor required, and in the present case they were furnished and paid for by the employer. As was said in 71 C. J. 708, § 439, "Where the employment of a traveling salesman is such that he is required to take lodging at a hotel, injuries sustained on the hotel premises while he is lodging there temporarily may be compensable as injuries arising out of and in the course of his employment." In Harivel v. Hall-Thompson Co.,
This is not a case where the employee departed on an independent venture of his own, as in the Skinner case, supra, and thus disassociated himself from the business of the master. It has been repeatedly held by the courts of this State that the master is not liable for the tort of the servant who steps aside from his employment, engages in an independent venture of his own, and in such venture injures a third person. A traveling salesman, as in the Skinner case, who goes to a resort, not about the business of *650 his employer, but solely for his own pleasure and amusement, is not engaged in the business of his employment. It does not follow that when he is eating or sleeping in the usual, regular, and accepted manner incident to the performance of his duties as a traveling representative of his employer, he thereby disassociates himself from his employment. Counsel for plaintiff in error insists that Shuttleworth might have come from Nashville on a later train and thus escaped the burning of the hotel. There can be no question that had he been injured in his trip on the train by the ordinary hazards of the transportation he would have been entitled to compensation. There was nothing about his contract of employment that required him to wait and take a night trip and spend the night on the train, rather than at a hotel. Such being the case, his spending the night at the hotel was a necessary and normal incident of his employment. Such a risk is peculiar to the employment, and the finding of the Industrial Board was at least authorized, and, we think, even demanded by the evidence in this case. See 1 Honnold, 417, § 116. Whatever may be the ruling in other jurisdictions, and that they are not in entire accord although there is plenty of outside authority for our position, we think the rule here laid down is in consonance with the provisions and purposes of the act. There was no error in affirming the award.
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and MacIntyre, J.,concur.