The deceased employee lost his Ufe in a fire in the early morning of January 30, 1942, while asleep in a rooming house in New Bedford, where he was spending the night. The question is whether his injury and death arose out of and in the course of his employment. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 26, as amended.
Findings of the board and facts not in dispute are these: The deceasеd was employed by The Cooper-Bessemer Corporation, whose business was the manufacture and sale of
Staying at the lodging house in New Bedford involved a degree of risk from fire. The question is not whether that risk was greater than the similar risk at some other рlace where the employee might have stayed, or at his own home, if his employment had not called him away from home. The question is whether his employment brought him in сontact with the risk that in fact caused his death. The correctness of this statement is illustrated by cases where compensation has been allowed for injuries sustainеd on the employer’s own premises or the approaches to those premises by reason of slipping upon stairs or floors or coming in contact with objects of a familiar kind which might equally well be encountered in other places. In such cases the inquiry has not been whether the danger was greater where the employee was injured than at his own home or at some other place where he might have been if he had not been where he was. The inquiry has been whether his emplоyment exposed him to the risk, whatever it was, which actually caused the injury. See, for example, Sundine’s Case,
Another established principle is that the employee, in order to bе entitled to compensation, need not necessarily be engaged in the actual performance of work at the moment of It is enough if he is upon his p.mplover’s premises occupying himself consistently with his contract of hue m some manner pertaining to or incidental to his employment. This principle has been applied in instances where the employee was resting (Sullivan’s Case,
It follows from the principles stated and the cases cited that if the employer in the рresent case had himself maintained the lodging house or had himself hired a room in it and had insisted as a term of the employment that the em
It would be possible to draw the fine at this point and to say that where the employee himself selects the place of lodging, and so in a sense chooses the particular risk, the employment has spent its force and no longer brings him - into contact with the danger. A few courts have taken this view. Davidson v. Pansy Waist Co.
In our opinion it follows that, upon the findings of the board, the deceased employee, while as an incident of his employment he was aslеep subject to call in a place paid for by his employer and selected according to the conditions imposed by the nature of the employmеnt, met injury and death arising out of and in the course of his employment.
The decree of the Superior Court is reversed, and a decree must be entered in favor of the claimants for compensation under the act.
Ordered accordingly.
