We granted the defendant’s application for further appellate review following the Appeals Court’s issuance of its opinion in Mulford v. Mangano, 35 Mass. App. Ct. 800 (1994). The defendant Mangano argues that, as a coemployee of the plaintiff, he is immune from liability in this case.
The plaintiff argues that the Appeals Court erred in applying the traditional workers’ compensation “course of employment” standard in determining whether Mangano as a coemployee was immune from tort liability under the workers’ compensation act. G. L. c. 152 (1992 ed.). We shall also consider whether the Appeals Court applied the proper rule of law in determining whether the defendant was acting in the course of his employment, where arguably he.was acting either for a job-related purpose or for a personal reason, or perhaps both, when the plaintiff was injured. We conclude that the Appeals Court properly reversed the summary judgment entered for the defendant.
The Appeals Court opinion correctly summarizes the evidence presented on the summary judgment record as follows:
“The plaintiff [Mulford] and the defendant [Mangano] were employed at a Papa Gino’s restaurant in Stoneham. On April 23, 1987, Mulford worked his regular shift as a dishwasher. Mangano, employed as a cook, was not scheduled to work that day but came to the restaurant around 9:00 p.m. for two reasons, according to his deposition testimony. He came to observe the cashing-out procedure followed by the managers at the end of the day, in the hope of learning skills to become in time a manager himself, and also to watch the end of a Boston Celtics playoff game, on a television that had been installed by employees, for the playoffs, in a back room of the restaurant. He had watched an earlier part of the telecast at home.
*409“Mangano was to give Mulford a ride home; both left the restaurant around 11:00 p.m. and proceeded to the restaurant parking lot. There, in circumstances that are disputed, Mulford fell from the hood of Mangano’s automobile as Mangano backed it from its space.” Mulford v. Mangano, supra at 800-801.
The Appeals Court assumed, and no party has objected, “that Mangano was not scheduled to work the evening of the accident, that he had not been encouraged by the employer to learn managers’ skills, that cashing out was no part of his duties as a cook, that he did not punch the time clock on coming or leaving, and that he did not expect to be paid or otherwise credited for his presence that evening.” Id. at 802.
The plaintiff brought this action to recover for his injuries. Mangano moved for summary judgment on the ground that he was a coemployee entitled to immunity under the workers’ compensation act. A Superior Court judge allowed summary judgment for the defendant.1 As we have said, we agree with the Appeals Court’s conclusion that summary judgment was inappropriately entered.
First we state that the coemployee immunity rule under G. L. c. 152 involves the same “course of employment” standard that determines whether an employee is acting in the course of employment and thus is entitled workers’ compensation.2 Compensation is available, pursuant to G. L. c. 152, *410§ 26 (1992 ed.), to an employee (who has not preserved his common law rights) who receives a personal injury “arising out of and in the course of his employment.” If “compensation benefits are available under G. L. c. 152, an employee injured in the course of his employment by the negligence of a fellow employee may not recover from that fellow employee if he also was acting in the course of his employment.” Saharceski v. Marcure, 373 Mass. 304, 306 (1977). See G. L. c. 152, § 15 (next to last sentence).
The plaintiff wants us to conclude that a defendant may rely on the coemployee immunity rule only when the defendant, as a fellow servant, was acting within the scope of his employment, a tort principle applied to determine whether a master is liable for the negligence of a servant. See Wang Laboratories, Inc. v. Business Incentives, Inc., 398 Mass. 854, 859-860 (1986); L. Locke, Workmen’s Compensation § 211, at 228 (2d ed. 1981). Our cases have implicitly rejected this rule of narrower range and have used the course of employment standard in dealing with coemployee immunity claims. See Mendes v. Tin Kee Ng, 400 Mass. 131, 134-135 (1987); Saharceski v. Marcure, supra. Cf. Bresnahan v. Barre, 286 Mass. 593, 597 (1934).3 The rule which we apply and which the Appeals Court applied is the majority rule in *411this country among States providing tort immunity for coemployees. See 2A A. Larson, Workmen’s Compensation § 72.23, at 14-171 — 14-174 (1993) (“The more satisfactory test, unless expressly ruled out by statute, . . . simply use[s] the regular workmen’s compensation course of employment standard”); Annot., 21 A.L.R. 3d 845, 876-879 (1968 & Supp. 1993). The use of a course of employment rule provides a ready source of law for deciding claims of coemployee immunity. It also protects a coemployee to the same degree as the employer from common law liability for the coemployee’s negligence, thereby not leaving the coemployee standing alone to face a common law claim. This protection for the coemployee is part of the exchange for the employee’s surrender of common law rights.
In what we have just said, we have expressed no disagreement with what the Appeals Court stated on the same subject (except for our emphasis that the phrase “course of employment” should be used and not “scope of employment”). In fact, we agree with the Appeals Court on a number of points: (1) the plaintiff, as a matter of law, was injured in the course of his employment in his employer’s parking lot as he was leaving work, Mulford v. Mangano, supra at 801; (2) the question in this case is whether the defendant Mangano was acting in the course of his employment, id. at 801-802; (3) in deciding that question “[i]t is enough if he is upon his employer’s premises occupying himself consistently with his contract of hire in some manner pertaining to or incidental to his employment,” id. at 802, quoting Souza’s Case, 316 Mass. 332, 335 (1944); (4) if Mangano had gone to his place of employment solely to watch a basketball game and he did only that, he would not have qualified for coemployee immunity, id.', and (5) if he had been there solely with the bona fide and reasonable job-related purpose of upgrading his job skills and his employer knowing of it did not discourage such activity, he would have been acting within the course of his employment and entitled to coemployee immunity, id. at 803.
*412The issue here is what to do when it appears that there may have been or were two purposes, one that would make the injury compensable and one that would not. “While an employee may have more than one motive for performing an act, as long as one significant purpose is related to the employment the employee will be considered to be acting in the course of her employment.” Mendes v. Tin Kee Ng, supra at 134-135. See Locke, supra at § 247. The question then becomes what proof is required to demonstrate that the job-related purpose was a “significant” one. The Appeals Court’s opinion correctly did not say that, where an employee acts for two purposes, one that would make the injury compensable and another that would not, the employee’s testimony is controlling as to whether a particular purpose was or was not a significant reason for his action. See Mulford v. Mangano, supra at 803-804. Such an exclusively subjective source for determining the presence or absence of a job-related purpose for an employee’s action would be inappropriate. It would involve a difficult factual inquiry and might well be unreliable because circumstances may tend to lead the employee to opt for the answer, which, in an after-the-fact assessment, appears more likely to benefit him financially. We thus reject any test that looks solely to an employee’s state of mind to see if the job-related purpose was so significant that he would have acted on that motive even if the private purpose had not existed. If we were to adopt such a test, summary judgment in this case would likely be inappropriate in any event because Mangano’s motive, intent, or state of mind and his credibility would be the major issues. See Flesner v. Technical Communications Corp., 410 Mass. 805, 809 (1991), and cases cited.
We favor a more objective test which assesses what the employee did and other facts in order to determine whether he acted at least in part for a job-related purpose. See Mandell’s Case, 322 Mass. 328, 330 (1948). An employee’s state of mind at the time he acted is relevant, but, as we have said, it is not controlling. In determining whether Mangano was acting in the course of his employment, evidence of what he *413did at the restaurant that night and at any other time concerning the learning of the cashing-out process would be relevant. We agree with the Appeals Court that the employer’s encouragement or discouragement, if any, of employees’ attempts to learn the cashing-out process and other similar job skills bears on the question whether the defendant was acting in the course of his employment. Mulford v. Mangano, supra at 803. What employees knew about management’s attitude toward such training would also be relevant.
The absence of any evidence of what Mangano actually did that night and had done previously concerning the cashing-out process and the absence of evidence of his employer’s attitude toward such job-skills training make the award of summary judgment inappropriate. Mangano’s uncontroverted testimony that one of his reasons for going to the restaurant that evening was job related, although relevant to the question, does not establish for summary judgment purposes that his job-related purpose was a significant reason for his presence at the restaurant. Objective evidence might warrant a contrary finding, and the summary judgment record does not foreclose the possibility that objective evidence would do so. Hence, because there is a genuine issue of material fact on the question whether he was acting within the course of his employment, Mangano was not entitled to summary judgment.
Judgment reversed.
In fairness to the motion judge, we should note that the distinction between “scope of employment” and “course of employment” asserted by the plaintiff on appeal was not advanced in the memoranda submitted to her on the summary judgment question. Mangano’s deposition which provides the facts on which, by assent of both parties, the issues on appeal are argued apparently was not presented to the judge until the plaintiff moved for reconsideration of the order allowing summary judgment for the defendant. The defendant did not argue, and does not now argue, that issues of mixed purpose coemployee activity were not properly before the Appeals Court.
The plaintiff strenuously argues to the contrary in his supplemental brief to this court filed after we allowed further appellate review in this case. The point was presented less clearly in the plaintiffs original appellate brief. The Appeals Court opinion does not analyze the point but cor*410rectly applies the rule we now expressly recognize. See Mulford v. Mangano, 35 Mass. App. Ct. 800, 801-802 (1994).
It is true that from time to time opinions (as did the Appeals Court opinion in this case) have used the phrases “scope of employment” and “course of employment” interchangeably, but never with any suggestion that the correct test for purposes of the coemployee immunity rule, “course of employment” meant anything different from “course of employment” for workers’ compensation coverage purposes. See, e.g., O'Connell v. Chasdi, 400 Mass. 686, 690-691 (1987); Mendes v. Tin Kee Ng, 400 Mass. 131, 134-135 (1987); Murphy v. Miettinen, 317 Mass. 633, 635 (1945).
The very name of the analogous common law “fellow servant rule” suggests that the tort law “scope of employment” principle applies because it applies only to those agents who were servants acting in the scope of their employment. This case does not involve the common law fellow servant rule. General Laws c. 152, § 15, refers to the “insured person’s employees.”