This is a workmen’s compensation case in which the employee fell in a public alley, near the entrance to the building of her employer, as she was returning from lunch. There is no claim of permanent partial disability, but the Chancellor allowed temporary total disability benefits for a period of twenty-two months following the date on which the employee left her employment. The employer has appealed.
The employer operated a laundry in Kingsport, fronting on Clay Street, a public thoroughfare. There was a side entrance opening into a public alley, which was not part of the employer’s premises. Employees were permitted a 30-minute lunch period, during which they were not paid, and they were free to leave the premises and eat lunch at any place of their choice. There is material evidence that employees in fact used both the front door and the side door, although there is some indication that there were signs posted inside the building instructing them to use the Clay Street entrance.
The accident in question occurred during the middle of the day in July 1973.
The supervisor of the employee came to her aid, and the employee was taken to the hospital for emergency treatment. She returned to work the next day, and continued to work for about four months. She then left her employment in November 1973, stating that she was unable to continue to work because of pain. She married three days after leaving the employment, and never did return to work. She testified that her husband did not want her to go back to work, but she was able to do most of her household duties. She continued to suffer from pain and discomfort, however, and was seen by an orthopedic surgeon in September 1974. He found no evidence of a fracture, but did find tenderness in the coccyx area. It was his opinion that the appellee had sustained a sprain of the joint between the sacrum and the coccyx. He testified that the appellee would probably continue to have symptoms for approximately another year from the date when he saw her.
It is the contention of the appellee that the use of the alley by her was a permissible route to and from the restaurant where she ate lunch, and that a special hazard was created because of the cleaning substance which had leaked into the alley near the door of the building.
There have been a number of reported decisions in this state dealing with factual situations similar to the present case. These were considered at length in the case of Hankins v. Camel Manufacturing Company,
The trial court relied upon the case of Mallette v. Mercury Outboard Supply Company, Inc.,
“This holding is based on a finding that (1) these steps were built as an incident to the operation of the marina, and (2) employees had no other reasonable means of getting to and from the marina, (3) the employer necessarily expected the employees to use the steps for that purpose, and (4) the use of the steps was limited to the patrons and employees of the marina.”482 S.W.2d at 137 .
In the Heil-Quaker Corporation case, supra, an employee was required to use a guard gate in going to and from his place of employment. After going through the gate he walked through an open space by a route of his own choice toward a building situated about 150 feet away, where he worked. As he was leaving the building after work on the date of the injury, he slipped and fell on a film of oil which had accumulated on a concrete surface. Reversing the trial court, this Court held the injury to be compensa-ble, stressing the fact that employees were required to use the guard gate, and that the employer had a continuing interest in the employee’s route to and from his place of employment in the welding building.
In the Heil-Quaker case, the Court recognized that ordinarily employees are not covered when going to and from a place of employment, with the exception that if a particular process of going to and from work is furnished by the employer or such transit is required by the employer to be done in a certain manner or over a certain way, and this submits the employee to a definite special hazard, then injuries to the employee en route are deemed compensable.
This rule was discussed at some length in the case of McKinney v. Hardwick Clothes,
Probably the leading case in this state on the subject is Smith v. Camel Manufacturing Company,
In the case of James v. Sanders Manufacturing Co.,
Admittedly the cases on this subject involve narrow factual distinctions, but compensation has usually been denied where an employee is on a public thoroughfare or way. In the case of Travelers Indemnity Company v. Charvis,
Since the employee in the present case fell in a public alley, which was not a required route for her use, and at a time when she was not performing any services for her employer, we are of the opinion that her injuries did not arise out of and in the course of her employment as those terms have been interpreted in the case law of this state.
In view of the foregoing disposition of the case, we find it unnecessary to consider the other assignments of error filed on behalf of the employer.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the suit is dismissed at the cost of appellee.
Notes
The exact date does not appear in the record.
