The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an appeal in a workmen’s compensation case by the respondent employer and its insurance carrier from a judgment of a district court affirming an award in favor of claimant.
We shall continue to refer to the parties as claimant and respondents as we consider the single question raised on appeal which involves two portions of the compensation act — G. S. 1949, 44-501, and the following provision of G. S. 1949, 44-508:
“. . . (k) The words ‘arising out of and in the course of employment’ as used in this act shall not be construed to include injuries to the employee occurring while he is on his way to assume the duties of his employment or *435 after leaving such duties, the proximate cause of which injury is not the employer’s negligence.”
The streets, walks, and all surfaces in the city of Wichita were covered with ice on January 18, 1955, the date here involved, because of a freezing rain the previous night. Claimant was an employee of the Boeing Airplane Company of Wichita. Her work day began at 8:00 a. m. She had a designated parking location in respondent’s fence-enclosed parking lot D. Improper parking by an employee resulted in removal of his car or a company reprimand. The place where she was directed to park had a gravel surface of rough quality but between this section and the place where claimant entered the plant proper there was a smooth blacktop section reserved for employees of higher rank over which section she had to walk in order to arrive at the plant entrance. The ice, which both parties admit covered all the ground in and around Wichita, was not so difficult to walk on where the surface was gravel but the smooth blacktop surface was slick. As claimant testified, it was “Just solid ice; nothing poured over the ice.”
Between 7:30 and 8:00 a. m. claimant, together with a lady to whom she furnished transportation to and from work, arrived at the entrance to lot D. She was admitted at the entrance by reason of a sticker on her car. She parked in her usual place on the gravel portion of the parking lot. Claimant and her passenger safely crossed the gravel portion but as they stepped onto the smooth icy blacktop, after stating to her companion, “Be careful, Hazel, it is awfully slick,” claimant slipped and fell. The fall caused injuries but we are not presently concerned with the extent thereof.
As mentioned, the point that the entire community had been subjected to the same freezing rain the previous night which formed ice everywhere is conceded by both parties.
No two workmens compensation cases are perfectly congruent and this gives rise here, as it does in many lawsuits, to citation of cases by both parties which they believe support their particular contentions. Respondents contend claimant did not satisfy the burden of proof that her accident arose out of her employment as she is required to do.
(McMillan v. Kansas Power & Light Co.,
Respondents further rely on
Rush v. Empire Oil & Refining Co.,
"The statute uses a rather broad term in the expression ‘out of’ the employment, thereby indicating that the statute should have a liberal interpretation to accomplish its purpose [citations], but this does not mean that the act should be construed to include injuries which clearly did not arise out of the employment.” (pp. 200-201.)
Respondents also cite
Murphy v. I. C. U. Const. Co.,
More in point are the following:
The case of
Taylor v. Hogan Milling Co.,
While it did not relate to an employee before he began his actual working hours, it may be well to mention
Blair v. Shaw,
There is something to be said of a contention that recovery for such an injury as the one we are here considering can be based on the premise that the injury was caused by an instrumentality of human agency. The facts in our case show the place where claimant fell was a smooth blacktop surface over which she had to walk in order to get into the plant. This would certainly be a human agency or rather an instrumentality of human agency which caused
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her fall. True there was ice everywhere but it was more dangerous on the smooth blacktop surface than it was on the gravel portion of the same parking lot. This theory is not novel. In a case involving somewhat similar circumstances
(Kennedy v. Hull & Dillon Packing Co.,
It seems quite clear that the injury here was incidental to claimant’s employment and there was a causal connection between her employment and the injury she sustained with the result the accident whereby she was injured arose out of and in the course of her employment. She is, therefore, entitled to compensation under the act.
The judgment is affirmed.
