Whеre the facts in a workmen’s compensation case are undisputed, whether the injury arose out of and in the course of the employment is a questiоn of law.
Thornton
v.
Hartford Accident
&c.
Co.,
198
Ga.
786, 795 (
The director hearing this case set out in his award the following rule of law quoted in
General Accident Fire
&c.
Corp.
v.
Worley,
86
Ga. App.
794 (
The able deputy director hearing this case noted this rule of law, but felt constrained to reach the decision that the claimant was not entitled to compensation, on the theory that a different rule applied to identical sets of circumstances, depending upon whether the claimant was on his way to work in the morning (in which case he might recover) or was returning from lunch (in which case he might not). There is concededly, under certain circumstances, a conflict in our Workmen’s Compensation Law, relating to this time element, but we do not believe that conflict exists here, for the reason that the thеory on which compensation is refused in the lunch-hour cases, cited in the director’s findings of fact, is that the employee is about to depart from the employer’s premises to attend to something purely personal to himself.
In
Aetna Casualty &c. Co.
v.
Honea,
71
Ga. App.
569 (1) (
So too, in
Austin
v.
General Accident Assurance Corp.,
56
Ga.
*310
App.
481 (
In none of those cases, nor in any other we have been able to find, has this court or the Supreme Court held as a matter of law that undisputed facts such as appear in the present case would bar a claimant from compensation. It should accordingly be concluded that where, as here, the claimant has departed from his employment to go elsewhere to eat his lunch on time given him for that purpose, but where he is returning to his employment and is injured at a place and time where it is necessary for him to be in order to get back to his work station at the time set for him to recommence his duties, thе situation is exactly the same as though he were arriving in the morning preparatory to undertaking his day’s duties, and the injury must, therefore, be presumed to have arisen out of and in the course of his employment.
Since the hearing director found an erroneous conclusion of law from undisputed facts, the judge of the superior court did not err in reversing the award.
Judgment affirmed.
