CALIFORNIA CASUALTY INDEMNITY EXCHANGE (a Corporation), Petitioner,
v.
INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT COMMISSION and CECELIA E. COOPER, Respondents.
Supreme Court of California. In Bank.
Burbank & Laumeister for Petitioner.
Everett A. Corten and Dan Murphy, Jr., for Respondents.
GRIFFIN, J. pro tem.
This is a proceeding to review an order of the Industrial Accident Commission granting compensation for personal injuries.
On October 27, 1941, the petitioner was the employer's insurance carrier. The injured employee was a bookkeeper for an automobile parts concern in South San Francisco. She had been with the company for 22 years. Her normal working hours were from 8 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. She had the implied consent of her employer to go on such short personal errands as she desired during working hours and without any deduction being made in her salary. The evidence shows that the employee was obliged to use her automobile for the purpose of going to and from work because the plant was located about a mile from either train or bus. Her general duties as a bookkeeper were performed within the employer's building, which building was erected upon a sizable corner lot. Both building and lot were owned and controlled by her employer. The main entrance to the building was set back from the property line several yards. The employer, for the convenience of the employees and the public in general, constructed a driveway in the shape of a semi-circle leading from South Linden Avenue and terminating in Tanforan Avenue which runs parallel with the side of the building. The driveway was located entirely upon the employer's property and made use of for parking cars of the employees and the general public as well as for ingress and egress to and from the front entrance of the building. This driveway, at its nearest point, was but a few feet from the main entrance to the building.
On the day of the accident the employee drove her automobile to work in accordance with her usual custom, parked it on the driveway, and went into the building to her office. She there telephoned the nearest service station, which was some distance from her office, and requested the attendant to, and he did, take her car and grease it. When the car had not been returned in the afternoon, she telephoned the service station again. Since the attendant was alone, they agreed that if he delivered the car to her she would return him to the station in it. This was done. The employee then *754 drove her car to her office and parked it in the driveway just a few feet from the main entrance to the building. In attempting to step from the car to the driveway so that she could go into the office to finish her work for the day, she caught her heel in the hem of her dress, fell and broke her wrist.
In seeking to annul the award by the commission petitioner contends that because the employee had left her employment to attend to a personal errand and had not yet reached the place of her employment at the time of her injury, she was outside of the protection of the Workmen's Compensation Law and that said injury did not "arise out of and in the course of the employment" and was not proximately caused by the employment as contemplated by section 3600 of the Labor Code.
[1] There is a general rule in compensation law known as the "going and coming rule" which is that an employee going to or coming from his place of work is excluded from the benefits of the compensation act. The reason for the rule is that the relationship of employer and employee is suspended from the time the employee leaves his work to go home until he resumes his work, since the employee, during the time he is going to or coming from work, is rendering no service for his employer. (Campbell's Workmen's Compensation, vol. 1, pp. 147-148.) The general rule, subject to many exceptions, however, is that injuries inflicted under the foregoing circumstances are not compensable. Because of the "going and coming rule," difficulty has been encountered in many border-line cases such as this one, in determining just when the employee is no longer subject to the rule but falls within the purview of the compensation law, thereby becoming a beneficiary under its provisions.
[2] The term "employment" includes not only the doing of the work, but a reasonable margin of time and space necessary to be used in passing to and from the place where the work is to be done. It was said in Bountiful Brick Co. v. Giles,
The history of legislation involving Workmen's Compensation was aptly and succinctly related in Ocean Accident etc. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
[3a] In the instant case the evidence is clear that the driveway was on the premises of the employer and was a means of access to the place of employment and one contemplated by the contract of employment. The evidence is not entirely clear as to whether this was the exclusive means of access provided to the place of employment or the only one contemplated by the contract of employment. We do not believe it necessary to base our determination of this case upon this ground.
The question here presented is whether the employee, at the time of her injury, was on the premises of her employment "for the purpose of immediate resumption of her duties," so as to bring her within the provisions of section 3600 of the Labor Code. The fact relied on by petitioner that *757 applicant had not entered the building before the injury occurred would not necessarily deprive her of compensation benefits. Petitioner does not contend that had the employee entered the building and immediately thereafter caught her heel in the hem of her dress, fell and broke her wrist, the injury would not be compensable. So, where can we draw any fixed dividing line in the few feet distant between the automobile parked on the driveway and the main entrance to the building so as to say that the employee was or was not "on the premises for the purposes of immediate resumption of her duties"? Injuries sustained by an employee while going to or from his place of work on premises owned and controlled by his employer are generally deemed to have arisen out of and in the course of the employment. (Smith v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
The case of Globe Indemnity Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
In Smith v. Industrial Acc. Com., supra, this court cited Lynch v. City of New York,
It must therefore be held in the instant case, in view of the finding of the commission, that the injury "arose out of and in the course of the employment."
The next question presented is whether or not, in addition to this showing, there must be evidence to sustain the implied finding that, under section 3600 of the Labor Code, subdivisions (b) and (c) thereof, "at the time of the injury, the employee is performing service growing out of and incidental to his employment and is acting within the course of his employment," and that "the injury is proximately caused by the employment, either with or without negligence." [4] It is not indispensable to recovery that at the time of the injury an employee must be rendering service to his employer. Acts of the employee for his personal comfort and convenience while at work, such as taking a drink of water, lighting a cigarette, warming himself, etc., do not interrupt the continuity of the employment, and this exception is not limited to acts performed on the employer's premises. *759 (Western Pipe etc. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., supra.) See, also, Di Renzo v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., 7 I.A.C. 107, where the employee tripped over the feet of a fellow-employee while going toward the lunch counter located on the premises; Mulholland v. Western Ind. Co., 4 I.A.C. 182; Rieff v. City of Sacramento, 2 I.A.C. 251; 27 Cal.Jur., sec. 73, p. 359.)
Although the above cases have only an indirect bearing on the specific problem involved in this proceeding, they do demonstrate that the "going and coming rule" and the rule that the employee must be rendering service for the employer at the time of injury are not of inevitable application. If it can be properly held, as it was determined in Pacific Electric Ry. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., supra, that crossing a street before boarding a streetcar and being struck by a passing automobile was an injury "proximately caused by the employment," then the injury in the instant case could likewise be held to have been "proximately caused by the employment."
[3b] It is not disputed that the employee, immediately prior to the time she left her place of employment, was a bookkeeper and while so acting was performing a service growing out of and incidental to her employment and acting within the course of her employment, and had any such injury as tripping on the hem of her dress then and there occurred it could have been rightfully held that such injury was proximately caused by the employment. It therefore would follow that when she returned to her place of employment for the purpose of immediate resumption of her former duties it may be said, from the evidence here presented, that she again resumed her former status of performing service growing out of and incidental to her employment and was acting within the course of her employment, and that her injury was one proximately caused by the employment. Had the employee returned to the premises of the employer for a purpose other than the immediate resumption of her former duties or for a purpose not incidental to or growing out of her employment, or if the injury was not proximately caused by the employment, a different question would here be presented. But such is not the finding of the commission. We find nothing in the later interpretations of this act which would impel a different conclusion. The question was one of fact. Each case must be adjudged by the facts which are peculiarly its own. (Enterprise Foundry Co. v. Industrial *760 Acc. Com.,
For the foregoing reasons the award is affirmed.
Gibson, C.J., Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., and Traynor, J., concurred.
