This is an appeal from a judgment approving an award of compensation to ap-pellee, Louis Isbell. The United States Steel Company, appellee’s employer, urges a reversal of the judgment, contending that Isbell’s injury did not arise out of and in the course of his employment.
On the occasion he sustained his injury, Isbell rode to work in an automobile owned and driven by another employee of the company. The operator of the car entered the mining property and parked the car on a parking lot provided by the company. The ground was covered with snow. Isbell got out of the car and walked toward the bathhouse where the employees changed their clothes in preparation to enter the mine. He slipped and fell as he was walking down an embankment, causing a fracture of his right knee. It appears that the route taken by Isbell was a path which had been used by him and by other employees in going to and from their work, although there was available for their use a road built by the company from the parking lot to the bathhouse.
Apparently the Workmen’s Compensation Board was of the opinion that Isbell had suffered an injury which was compensable under the rule set forth in the case of Wilson Berger Coal Co. v. Brown,
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In Harlan-Wallins Coal Corp. v. Stewart, decided this day, Ky.,
The judgment is reversed, with directions that the case be remanded to the Workmen’s Compensation Board for an entry of an order consistent with this opinion.
