From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Davis v. Chemical Construction Co.

Supreme Court of Arkansas
Apr 18, 1960
334 S.W.2d 697 (Ark. 1960)

Summary

In Davis v. Chemical Construction Co., 232 Ark. 50, 334 S.W.2d 697, a set of facts reflected that an employee had gotten into a vehicle in order to leave the employer's premises, but did not reach the outer gate which joined a street, before being injured.

Summary of this case from Big Chain Liquor Store v. Johnson

Opinion

No. 5-2122.

Opinion delivered April 18, 1960.

1. WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION — COMING AND GOING RULE, INJURIES ON PARKING LOT. — Claimant, who was employed by a contractor, doing work for Monsanto Chemical Company, for a workday ending at 4:30, left the "critical area" shortly after 4:12 as required by Monsanto and was injured on the Monsanto parking lot while alighting from a truck belonging to another contractor before the end of the workday at 4:30. HELD: The injury was compensable as falling within the premises exception to the coming and going rule. 2. WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION — COMING AND GOING RULE, INJURIES ON PREMISES. — The premises exception to the coming and going rule recognizes that an employee is entitled to a reasonable time to leave his employer's premises and that an injury suffered within that interval may arise out of and in the course of employment. 3 WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COMING AND GOING RULE, EFFECT OF EMPLOYER'S LACK OF CONTROL OVER PARKING LOT ON PREMISES EXCEPTION TO. — Since negligence is not an essential factor in compensation cases, no controlling importance, for purposes of the premises exception to the coming and going rule, can attach to the fact that the parking lot was owned by another, for whom the employer was doing the work, rather than by the employer.

Appeal from Union Circuit Court, Second Division; Tom Marlin, Judge; reversed.

Clint Huey, for appellant.

Bill F. Doshier and Wright, Harrison, Lindsey Upton, for appellee.


This is a workmen's compensation claim by the appellant, for an injury to his foot. The commission denied the claim upon the single ground that the claimant, at the time of his injury, had completed his day's work at the job site and therefore (we infer) was barred by the coming and going rule. The circuit court affirmed the commission.

The facts are undisputed, so that the issue is one of law. The claimant's employer, Chemical Construction Company, was engaged in a construction job for Monsanto Chemical Company. To reach the job site upon Monsanto's extensive premises the construction company employees had to pass through two gates. The first gate abutted the public highway and could be entered by anyone without special permission. The second gate, apparently a mile or more down a private road from the Highway gate, provided access to what is referred to as the critical area, which was surrounded by a high cyclone fence. Upon entering or leaving this security gate the construction company employees were required to show their identification cards. Monsanto maintained a parking area outside the security gate, where the construction employees were required to leave their cars.

The job site was deep within the critical area, a mile from the security gate. The claimant and his fellow employees were paid for a workday ending at 4:30, but Monsanto required that the critical area be cleared by that time. To this end a whistle was sounded at 4:12, which gave all the employees, some 250 in number, eighteen minutes in which to walk to the security gate and leave the critical area.

On the afternoon of Davis's injury he quit work at 4:12 and started walking toward the security gate. On the way he and several other workmen caught a ride, which was not unusual, upon a truck belonging to an electrical subcontractor. At the security gate the several occupants of the truck were duly identified and permitted to leave. (The commission held that compensation coverage ended at that point.) As the truck was traveling toward the parking lot Davis saw that his son, who was working for a subcontractor, had gotten the Davis car from the parking area and started toward the security gate to meet his father. Davis called to the driver of the truck to slow down so that Davis could alight. As he was getting off the truck Davis caught his foot and sustained the injury for which compensation is sought. It was not yet 4:30 when the accident happened.

We think the injury to be compensable, for the case falls within the premises exception to the coming and going rule. This exception was discussed in Johnson v. Clark, 230 Ark. 275, 322 S.W.2d 72, although there compensation was denied because the employee had actually left his employer's premises. By this qualification of the coming and going rule it is recognized that an employee is entitled to a reasonable time to leave his employer's premises and that an injury suffered within that interval may arise out of and in the course of the employment. The principle has often been applied in cases involving a parking lot maintained by the employer; the cases are collected in Schneider on Workmen's Compensation (Permanent Ed.), 1719.

We do not attach controlling importance to the fact that this parking lot was owned by Monsanto rather than by the claimant's employer. The premises exception is not based solely upon the master's opportunity to make his own property safe and thus minimize the possibility of injury to his employees; for negligence is not an essential factor in compensation cases. Of equal weight is the fact that the employee is upon the premises by reason of his job, so that his injury has the necessary causal connection with his employment. For a case in point see Downey v. Vanderlinde Elec. Corp., 276 A.D. 1044, 95 N.Y.S.2d 685. It does not seem to us that Davis should be held to have left his employer's premises until he had passed through the second gate and joined the general traveling public.

Reversed.


Summaries of

Davis v. Chemical Construction Co.

Supreme Court of Arkansas
Apr 18, 1960
334 S.W.2d 697 (Ark. 1960)

In Davis v. Chemical Construction Co., 232 Ark. 50, 334 S.W.2d 697, a set of facts reflected that an employee had gotten into a vehicle in order to leave the employer's premises, but did not reach the outer gate which joined a street, before being injured.

Summary of this case from Big Chain Liquor Store v. Johnson

In Davis v. Chemical Construction Co., 232 Ark. 50, 334 S.W.2d 697 (1960), the claimant's employment required him to travel one mile in eighteen minutes in order to clear a "critical area," and it was not unusual for employees to catch rides on trucks belonging to subcontractors.

Summary of this case from Woodard v. White Spot Cafe
Case details for

Davis v. Chemical Construction Co.

Case Details

Full title:DAVIS v. CHEMICAL CONSTRUCTION CO

Court:Supreme Court of Arkansas

Date published: Apr 18, 1960

Citations

334 S.W.2d 697 (Ark. 1960)
334 S.W.2d 697

Citing Cases

Woodard v. White Spot Cafe

An examination of Arkansas cases involving the going and coming rule likewise reveals a causal connection…

Johnson v. Stuttgart Memorial Hospital

Nevertheless, there are a number of exceptions to the going and coming rule, and one of these exceptions is…