It is clear that if plaintiff at the time of his injury was not performing any service growing out of or incidental to his employment by the defendant, he could have no fellow-servant,- for he was employed by no one else. To *26constitute two employees fellow-servants they must bave a common employer. Hare was performing service growing out of and incidental to bis employment by tbe defendant at the time of plaintiff’s injury. To make plaintiff bis fellow-servant be must bave been engaged in like service. If be was, be came under tbe provisions of tbe Workmen’s Compensation Act and tbe question of tbe negligence of fellow-servants becomes immaterial. If be was not, be bad no fellow-servant. So in either case tbe finding of tbe court to tbe contrary, and tbe seven pages of argument of counsel for respondent upon tbe doctrine of fellow-servants, go for naugbt. Hence, tbe only question left for consideration is whether plaintiff at the time of bis injury was engaged .in service growing out of and incidental to bis employment. It appears from tbe evidence, without any conflict therein, that plaintiff was engaged to tend tbe generators; that bis hours of work were for one week from 12 o’clock at night to 12 o’clock at noon, and for one week from 12 o’clock at noon to 12 o’clock at night. Another man alternated with him in tending tbe generators. Tbe plant was located in tbe woods, fourteen miles from tbe nearest postoffice 'and railroad station. Tbe postoffice was called Orivitz and tbe railroad station Ellis Junction. Plaintiff and bis family occupied a bouse owned by the defendant, and was by it given a plot of ground for a garden and was allowed to gather firewood from certain premises belonging to defendant. At tbe hotel run by Hare was a mail box, and it was tbe custom of all the employees to mail their letters there and bave them taken by Hare to tbe postoffice, who ran a car in tbe summer time and drove a team in the winter. Flare was accustomed to do errands for all tbe employees, bring them mail, groceries, and to attend to any commissions they might bave at tbe station. Tbe furnishing of tbe bouse, garden, firewood, and privilege of having Hare attend to commissions for him all constituted a part of plaintiff’s compensation for bis services to the defendant. *27It further appears that plaintiff was expected to remain upon or near the premises of the defendant at all times, so that if anything happened to the other attendant upon the generators during his shift plaintiff would he within call and take charge of them.
The argument for defendant is in substance this: That since the privileges mentioned were accorded plaintiff and since he was at all times required to be within call and subject to duty, he was, when availing himself of those privileges, performing services growing out of and incidental to his employment. He was doing that which his contract of employment permitted him to do and hence he was performing service thereunder. The argument is ingenious and not without some merit, but we think its adoption would lead to absurd results and would extend the field of employment beyond the statutory limit. True, the statute must be liberally construed in favor of including all service that can in any sense be said to reasonably come within it. But to include the acts of an employee when off duty and when attending to business pertaining strictly to his own private affairs, such as buying groceries for his family, would be to enlarge the meaning of the statutory words beyond their reasonable import, and to constitute every act of an employee subject to a call for duty an act within the scope of his employment though performed in a matter purely personal to himself. An act, in order to constitute service growing out of and incidental to his employment, must have some connection with the employer’s work which the employee was engaged or permitted to perform. The act in question does not have any such connection. It was performed while plaintiff was off duty, and related solely to his own personal affairs. The employer was in no wise concerned therein except that it gave the privilege of sending the check and letter through its employee, Hare. In so far as the employer was concerned, if it had any relation to the contract of hire it amounted to a *28part of the compensation the plaintiff received for his work as generator attendant. That forenoon plaintiff was free to come and go as he pleased so long as he remained within call. He was subject to no one’s orders. He was working for himself and not for his employer. Had he hoed his garden and received an injury therefrom it could be held to be within the scope of his employment as much as the act of buying groceries for his family.
The facts in the instant case are so unique that it is not helpful to cite or consider cases holding certain service to be within or without the act. Hence we must dispose of it as one of first impression. Our conclusion is that the act of an employee relating solely to his own private affairs, done while off duty and while he is neither going to nor coming from his work nor making any preparation therefor, is not service growing out of and incidental to his employment, though at the time it is performed he is subject to a call for duty and though done upon the employer’s premises under the sanction of a custom.
By the Gourt. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with instructions to enter judgment for plaintiff upon the verdict.