Dougherty's Case

Crosby, J.

The undisputed facts in this case show that the employee was a teamster in the employ of the Union Coal and Wood Company. On August 1, 1917, about three o’clock in the afternoon, after having delivered a load of coal, he drove into his *457employer’s yard and complained to one Finn, the treasurer of the company, that he did not feel well and that he was not perspiring; he was ordered to put up his team and go home; about half an hour later it was reported that he was lying in the employer’s barn and was unconscious; he was removed to a hospital and died several hours later, his death being due to heat prostration. The day in question was extremely hot, the temperature registering between ninety-eight and ninety-nine degrees in the afternoon.

It is plain that the sunstroke which resulted in the death of the employee was suffered while he was doing the work he was employed to perform; therefore the injury was received in the course of his employment.

The question remains whether the injury arose out of the employment within the meaning of the workmen’s compensation act. An injury arises out of the employment when it appears in view of all the circumstances that there is a causal connection between the conditions under which the work is required to be performed and the resulting injury. The first interpretation by this court of the workmen’s compensation act in this connection is found in McNicol’s Case, 215 Mass. 497, at page 499, where it is said that "if the injury can be seen to have followed as a natural incident of the work and to have been contemplated by a reasonable person familiar with the whole situation as a result of the exposure occasioned by the nature of the employment, then it arises out of ’ the employment. But it excludes an injury which cannot fairly be traced to the employment as a contributing proximate cause and which comes from a hazard to which the workmen would have been equally exposed apart from the employment. The causative danger must be peculiar to the work and not comm op to the neighborhood.” Hewett’s Case, 225 Mass. 1. Donahue’s Case, 226 Mass. 595. Warner v. Couchman, 4 B. W. C. C. 32. See McManaman’s Case, 224 Mass. 554; Mooradjian’s Case, 229 Mass. 521.

In the case at bar a member of the Industrial Accident Board found that upon all the evidence the claimant “ has not satisfied the burden of proving that the heat prostration which caused the death of her decedent was occasioned by or causally related to a personal injury which arose out of and in the course of his employment.” This finding was affirmed and adopted by the board on review which found that “ it has not been shown that the em*458ployee was subjected by reason of his employment to materially greater danger of heat prostration than other outdoor workers on the day in question.” There was no evidence to show that the employee, while engaged in delivering coal on the day of his death, was peculiarly exposed to the danger of sunstroke by reason of the nature of his work; the hazard of injury from that cause would not seem to have been different from that to which persons in general in that locality who worked in the open were exposed. It cannot be said as matter of law that the findings of the board were without .evidence to support them. The case at bar is plainly distinguishable in its facts from McManaman’s Case, supra, O’Brien’s Case, 228 Mass. 380, McCarthy’s Case, 230 Mass. 429, and McCarthy’s Case, 231 Mass. 259, where a different result was reached. The entry must be

Decree affirmed.