Opinion
May 17, 1939.
Appeal from State Industrial Board.
Claimant was employed by Levy's Bazaar, Inc., located at 5706 Fifth avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y., as a salesman and as such had charge of delivering packages. On December 15, 1934, a customer of the employer purchased merchandise in the employer's store and was waited upon by the claimant. The customer directed that the merchandise be delivered to her at her home in Brooklyn, N.Y., between one and two o'clock P.M. on the same day. The president of the employer corporation is a brother-in-law of the claimant and bears the same name. Claimant's mother resided in the home of the president of the corporation who is her son-in-law. On December 15, 1934, she requested her son-in-law to drive her to her husband's store, also located in Brooklyn. The employer drove the automobile to his own store. He then directed claimant to deliver the merchandise to her customer for whom it was intended and to take his mother in the automobile to her husband's store. While claimant was driving the employer's automobile for the purposes indicated the car collided with another motor vehicle as a result of which claimant sustained the injuries in question. The evidence conclusively establishes that the main purpose of the automobile trip was the delivery of the merchandise to the customer who had purchased it, and also that claimant was taking his mother to his father's store at the express direction of his employer. We can see no reason to indicate that the accident and injuries did not arise out of and in the course of the employment. Decision reversed, and matter remitted to the State Industrial Board for further consideration; with costs to the claimant against the employer and the carrier. All concur.