Court Opinion

ID: 8064382
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 04:43:15.89725+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:09.667099
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Swayze, J.
We have no doubt that the accident happened in the course of employment. It would be entirely too narrow a construction to limit the benefit <5f the statute to the time *455the workman is actually employed at his machine. He must have time to reach his machine and to get away from his employer’s premises. In fact, it is a necessary implication of the contract of employment that the workman shall come to his work and shall leave with reasonable speed when the work is over. The preparation reasonably necessary for beginning work after the employer’s premises are reached, and for leaving when the work is over, is a part of the employment. A workman is none the less in the course of employment because he is engaged in changing his street clothes for his working clothes, or in changing his working clothes for liis street clothes. In the present case, it was reasonably necessary that the petitioner should comb her hair and remove the particles of wool before leaving the factory.
The question whether the accident arose out of the employment is perhaps more doubtful. The employment was not indeed the proximate cause of the accident, but it was a cause in the sense that hut for the employment the accident would not have happened. The employment was one of the necessary antecedents to the accident. A case has recently arisen, under the English statute, which seems to involve the same principle under different facts. Gare v. Norton Hill Colliery Co. (1909), 2 K. B. 539. A collier was injured while leaving his work and crossing lines of rail controlled by his employers. He had three ways to go home, hut the one he used was the shortest and was commonly used by the workmen with the knowledge and consent of the employers. It was held by the Court of Appeal that the accident arose out of and in the course of the employment. It is unnecessary to review the earlier eases in the English courts.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.