delivered the opinion of the Court.
Edith Williams sued Elmer F. Smith, an individual, and Mark Shoe Corporation, d/b/a Craig’s Red Cross Shoes, in a common law action for personal injury damages. The defendants filed a plea in abatement alleging plaintiff’s exclusive remedy lay under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Tennessee. The plea in abatement was sustained, and plaintiff Williams has appealed. •
In her declaration plaintiff alleged that she had worked for six years as a saleslady for the defendant company at its retáil shoe store in Chattanooga. On -the morning of September 29, 1967, she was fired by defendant Elmer F. Smith, á fellow employee who was store manager!. She was ¿t work on the premises of the company at the time. After she was fired, the store manager went to his office where she was allegedly assaulted by thé store manager. *286 Her snit was to recover for personal injuries allegedly-received during the assault.
Defendant’s plea in abatement asserted that plaintiff’s injuries were incurred by accident arising out of and in the course of employment and that her remedy was exclusively under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, and that her common law cause of action should be abated.
The plea in abatement was sustained by the trial judge and, after plaintiff’s petition to rehear was overruled, appeal was perfected to this Court.
Two basic questions are presented by the appeal: Whether or not the Workmen’s Compensation Act bars a common law action where an employer corporation acting through its employee alter ego intentionally commits an assault and battery upon an employee, so as to restrict the assaulted employee’s remedy exclusively to the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The second question, is whether or not the Workmen’s Compensation Act provides immunity to an employee who commits an intentional and malicious assault and battery upon a co-employee.
There are no Tennessee cases on all fours with this one. We have cases dealing with an employee’s right of recovery under the Workmen’s Compensation Act which establish the rule that, generally, where an employee is injured by a fellow servant, there is no liability under the Workmen’s Compensation Act,
Milne v. Sanders,
We have authority for the proposition that an employee who is injured by a third person at a time when he is acting in the course of his employment suffers an “accident arising out of employment”, which is compensable.
Chamber of Commerce v. Turner,
All of these cases treat the injuring incident as an “accident” on the theory the incident was unexpected or unusual, or unintended from the standpoint of the employee. But none of our eases have dealt with the specific questions we have here.
Larson deals with this problem, and his conclusions are summarized as follow:
“See. 68.00. Intentional injury inflicted by the employer in person on his employee may be made the subject of a common-law action for damages on the theory that, in such an action, the employer will not be heard to say that his intentional act was an ‘accidental’ injury and so under the exclusive provisions of the compensation act. But when the intentional injury is committed by a supervisory employee, although there are cases permitting similar common-law suit, against the employer on the ground that the supervisory employee is the alter ego of the employer, the better rule holds such a suit barred against the employer.”
*288
Larson states that the theory sustaining a common-law áction against an' employer for an intentional injury is that the employer will not he heard to allege that the injury was - ‘‘accidental” and hence. únder the exclusive provisions of the "Workmen’s- Compensation Act,- when he himself intentionally committed the act. It'is also suggested that a second theory supporting the act is that the employer severs the employment relation by his act of violence. See
Boek v. Wong Hing,
Concerning the particular problem presented by this appeal, Larson says:
.. . “Sec. 68.21. Employer’s personal act versus assault by agent.
. • When the person who intentionally injures the employee is not the employer in person but a foreman, supervisor or manager, both the legal and the moral reasons for permitting a common-law suit against the employer collapse.
The legal reason for permitting the common-law suit for direct assault by the employer, as we have seen, is ■that the same person cannot commit an intentional assault and-then allege it was accidental. This does hot ■ apply when -the assailant and the defendant are two •• entirely- different people. Unless the employer has commanded or expressly authorized the assault, it cannot be said to be intentional from his standpoint any more than from the standpoint of any third person. *289 Realistically, it to. Mm is just one more industrial mis-Rap in the factory, of the sort hé has a right to consider .^exclusively.covered by the compensation’ system.
#’# #'# # # ;
-v Ttis.a commonplace rule of-respondeat-.superior that a master may, in certain circumstances, be held vicariously liable for the violent and intentional acts of his ■ employee, even if the violence is a direct violation of the employer’s orders. To impose a penalty on the employer in tMs situation, which may amount to many thousands of dollars, when he has done all he can do .personally to.provide compensation protection and to treat his employees well,, is an outrage far worse than ... the .fancied one which is supposed to be prevented by allowing the action.
The cases allowing the action proceed upon the fiction'that the supervisory employee is the ‘alter ego’ of ' the employer. As has been remarked at several other points, there is no place for fictions in compensation law; this is especially true when your particular rule is built up largely on the basis of personal moral culpability in an individual, and. the effect of the fiction is to assume that the shifting of technical legal liability under the arbitrary principle of respondeat superior connotes .also the shifting of the moral and ethical .■ responsibility for the wrong — a completely erroneous ■conclusion.”
In reaching this conclusion
Stewart v. McLellan’s Stores,
The discussion of this question by Larson is concluded with this statement:
“Perhaps the strongest argument against allowing suit against the employer for a supervisory employee’s intentional assault is a practical one; acceptance of this rule would mean that in all assault cases by one co-employee on another, of which there are hundreds, you would have only to show that the assailant was one notch higher on the totem-pole than the victim, and the compensation act would go out the window. So, in a large factory, with layer upon layer of foremen, supervisors, managers, executives and officers, the exclusiveness of compensation would no longer depend on whether the assault was merely another work-connected quarrel, but would turn on the relative rank of participants — a consideration which has no bearing on work-connection at all.” Yol. 2, sec. 68.23.
Upon analysis, we are of opinion Larson’s reasoning is better than that of the three cases he criticizes
(Lavin v. Goldberg Building Material Corp.,
which followed
DeCoigne v. Ludlum Steel Co.,
*291 The discussion in Larson which we have cited, concluding the employer is saved from suit by the Workmen’s Compensation, closes with this statement:
“In any event, it should be remembered that the victim ccm always sue the person himself who was guilty of the assault, and that therefore the corporateness of the employer does not leave the plaintiff altogether •without a common-laio defendant.” Yol. 2 sec. 68.22.
Larson refers to three cases in which the assaulted employee had sued both the employer and the supervisory employee at common law in which the action against the employer had been dismissed and that against the actual assailant sustained.
Echols v. Chattooga Mercantile Co.,
Actually, what we have to decide is whether or not the fiction, that the employee-victim of an intentional, deliberate assault has sustained an accident because it was unexpected and unintended on his part, can be availed of by an assaulting co-employee to compel his victim to proceed under the Act. And we think the assaulter cannot so compel the victim, because the fiction was created and is allowed to operate solely because this is the fair, right and just thing to do. It is a conclusion based entirely on the effect on the assaulted employee. So that it would be a travesty on justice, indeed, to make this fiction operate in favor of one whose act has been wilful and malicious and intentionally harmful and is in no conceivable sense an “accident”.
*292 We hold that while the fiction- of accident is available to the assaulted employee to sustain a recovery under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, this being-just and right, this fiction created for the benefit.of the injured employee is not available to the intentional assaulter to require ■ that ■ the injured employee proceed under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, so to do being unfair'and unjust.
This is not contrary to Majors v. Moneymaker, supra, as that case involved an injury which was accid¿ntal in fact and not in fiction, growing out of a negligent act óf a co-employee. From any point of view, either that of the injured-employee or the negligent co-employee, the entire incident was an accident and’ so clearly came under the Workmen’s Compensation; which as we have pointed out is not true of the present case where the assault was not an accident on the part of defendant Elmer F. Smith.
Since writing the -above, we have found the following discussion in Larson, which relates somewhat to what we have said:
“It'is interesting to'observe that -this holding'has the rather remarkable-effect of'giving the employee in these circumstances an option to claim compensation or sue at common law, although such options' áre usually not supposed to exist. The option comes about-in this way: it is well established that delibérate -assault upon ail innocent employee by some third person of co-employee is án ‘ accidental injury’. It will be recalled from the discussion of assaults that the early difficulty presented by the argument that such an injury was the result of intention as distinguished from accideilt was overcome by the simple expedient of viewing the affair *293 from the point of view of the victim rather than of the assailant, since from the victim’s point of view the assault was an unexpected and' untoward mishap.
“However, if the incident gets into court not as a compensation claim but as a damage suit by the employee- mgainst .an: employer-assailant, it is the employer who must affirmatively plead the exclusiveness of the Act as a defense: To do this he must allege that the injury was an accident — and how can he do this, when he‘himself has deliberately produced it? Thus, from the point of view of the person who, as a matter of pleading, must allege the accidental character of the injury, the occurrence was not accidental but inten-tionál.--'-' ...
, , “ There is nothing, inconsistent in, :this - result, curious .. as.it may. seem on the-surface, since it is quite proper -■-to-analyze the-incident in each type of action from the •standpoint of the person having the burden of establishing his case or defense.” Yol. 2, sec. 68.12
“ This statement, which is sound, is a further reason for .distinguishing, the present case from Majors v. Moneymaker, supra. ...
■The action of the trial court in sustaining the plea in abatement-in favor of Mark Shoe Corp., d/b/a Craig’s Bed Cross ..Shoes is affirmed. The action of the trial judge •sustaining the-plea in abatement of Elmer E. Smith, is set aside and the case is remanded for trial as to this defendant. The costs are taxed equally against plaintiff-in-error Edith Williams and defendant-in-error Elmer F. Smith; •
