John D. Jones v. Xtreme Pizza
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DIVISION IV
CA 06-451
December 20, 2006
JOHN D. JONES,
APPELLANT
AN APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS
WORKERS’ COMPENSATION
COMMISSION [F405689]
V.
XTREME PIZZA,
APPELLEE
REVERSED AND REMANDED
FOR AN AWARD OF BENEFITS
WENDELL L. GRIFFEN, Judge
The Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission denied benefits to appellant John
D. Jones because it determined that Jones was not performing employment services when he
was injured because he was driving to work. We reverse the Commission’s order and
remand for an award of benefits.
The facts in this case are not disputed. Jones, who lived in Jacksonville, Arkansas,
was employed by appellee Xtreme Pizza as the general manager of a Domino’s Pizza in
Bryant, Arkansas. In addition to the usual in-house duties required to operate a pizza
franchise, when necessary, Jones was also required to use his personal vehicle to leave the
store and purchase food ingredients.
He was also required to attend manager meetings and off-site training seminars. The
manager meetings were usually held at the home of Jones’s immediate supervisor, Mr.
Acklin, who lived in Conway, Arkansas. The training seminars, conducted by the franchisor,
Domino’s Pizza, were usually held in hotel meeting rooms. Jones was not provided mileage
or travel expenses when he attended seminars or manager meetings.
Jones suffered injuries to his neck on August 20, 2003, while on his way to the pizza
store in Bryant, where he was scheduled to work at 3:00 p.m. However, Jones was not
merely traveling directly from his home to work. Prior to the accident, at Acklin’s request,
Jones attended both a corporate meeting in North Little Rock and a demonstration meeting
at a Little Rock Domino’s. The corporate meeting began at 8:00 a.m. or 9:00 a.m. and lasted
two to three hours.
After that meeting concluded, Jones met Acklin at a gas station on Highway 10 in
Little Rock because Acklin did not want to drive to the Little Rock Domino’s store alone.
Jones rode with Acklin to the Domino’s store on Chenal Parkway; the purpose of this
meeting was to demonstrate the correct way to make a new pizza that was to be marketed.
This meeting lasted approximately one-and-one-half hours. Acklin then drove Jones back
to his vehicle on Highway 10. Jones called one of his employees to cover for him at the
store, because he would not be there by 3:00 p.m., as scheduled.
Jones then proceeded to the Bryant store. To avoid construction on Interstate 30, he
took the Stagecoach Road exit, a route that he sometimes takes when he drives directly from
home to work. Approximately two blocks from the pizza store, Jones’s car was rear-ended
as he stopped and waited for traffic to clear so he could make a left turn. Immediately
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thereafter, Jones telephoned Acklin and informed him of the accident. He then drove to
Acklin’s house in Conway, pursuant to Acklin’s request, where, among other things, they
discussed the wreck and issues regarding the stores. Jones reported to Acklin at that time that
his upper neck was hurting; he said that Acklin knew he was going to the emergency room.
Jones did not immediately pursue a workers’ compensation claim, but did seek
emergency treatment and follow-up treatment for upper neck pain, shoulder pain, and
headaches. He missed work from September 9, 2003, until November 10, 2003. He then
returned to work and continued to work until January 16, 2004, at which time he left
appellee’s employ due to an unspecified problem that he had with Acklin that was unrelated
to his injury. After Jones left appellee’s employ, he claimed entitlement to workers’
compensation benefits. The employer controverted Jones’s claim, and a hearing was held
before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ).
Jones was the sole witness at the hearing. The ALJ found Jones’s undisputed
testimony credible and determined that he proved entitlement to benefits from September 9,
2003, through November 10, 2003, noting an objective finding of muscle spasms in Jones’s
medical records. The ALJ awarded benefits, concluding that Jones’s activity in driving to
the Bryant store following the training seminar furthered appellee’s interests, and thus,
constituted employment services.
The Commission reversed on the sole basis that Jones was not performing
employment services at the time of the accident. The Commission reasoned:
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At the time of the injury the claimant was driving to work. Earlier in the day the
claimant had attended a management meeting and a new product demonstration. The
claimant was not injured during either of these activities which took place away from
the claimant’s store. The claimant was no longer attending managerial meetings and
he was not in route [sic] to or from a new product demonstration when he had an
accident. After this meeting and demonstration, the claimant could have returned
home had he not been scheduled to work that afternoon. Accordingly, we cannot find
that the claimant’s activities from the morning have any bearing upon the claimant’s
status at the time of the wreck. In our opinion, the claimant’s morning activities of
managerial meetings and new product demonstrations had ended. Had he not been
scheduled to work, the claimant’s work day would have ended at that time. After
these meetings, the claimant’s job duties and his responsibilities were not to resume
until he arrived at his store in Bryant. At the time of his injury the claimant was
merely driving to work like he usually did every day he was scheduled to work. At the
time of the accident the claimant was not on the clock nor was he in any manner
performing any activity that either directly or indirectly advanced his employer’s
interest other than going to work.
(Emphasis added.) Thus, the Commission denied benefits because it concluded that Jones
was not performing employment services when he was injured. The sole issue in this case
is whether Jones was performing employment services at the time of the accident or whether
he is precluded by the going-and-coming rule from receiving benefits because he was on his
way to work.
In reviewing decisions from the Workers' Compensation Commission, we view the
evidence and all reasonable inferences deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to the
Commission's findings, and we affirm if the decision is supported by substantial evidence.
Whitlach v. Southland Land & Dev., 84 Ark. App. 399, 141 S.W.3d 916 (2004). Substantial
evidence exists if reasonable minds could reach the Commission’s conclusion. Id. When
a claim is denied because the claimant has failed to show an entitlement to compensation by
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a preponderance of the evidence, the substantial-evidence standard of review requires us to
affirm if the Commission's opinion displays a substantial basis for the denial of relief. Id.
We reverse the Commission’s decision and remand for an award of benefits because
reasonable minds could not have reached the Commission’s conclusion on the facts before
us. To be compensable under workers’ compensation law, an injury must arise out of and
in the course of employment. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-102(4)(A)(i) (Supp. 2001). An injury
is not compensable if it was inflicted upon an employee at a time when employment services
were not being performed. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-102(4)(B)(iii).
An employee is
performing “employment services” when he or she is doing something that is generally
required by his or her employer. Collins v. Excel Specialty Products, 347 Ark. 811, 69
S.W.3d 14 (2002). We use the same test to determine whether an employee was performing
“employment services” as we do when determining whether an employee was acting within
“the course of employment” – whether the injury occurred within the time and space
boundaries of the employment, when the employee was carrying out the employer's purpose
or advancing the employer's interest directly or indirectly. In reaching this determination,
we consider whether the employee was engaged in the primary activity that she was hired to
perform or in incidental activities that are inherently necessary for the performance of the
primary activity. See Olsten Kimberly Quality Care v. Pettey, 55 Ark. App. 343, 934 S.W.2d
956 (1996).
An employee is not generally considered to be performing employment services while
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merely traveling to or from the workplace; thus, the going-and-coming rule ordinarily
precludes compensation for injuries received while an employee is going to or returning from
work. Moncus v. Billingsley Logging & American Ins. Co., 366 Ark. 383, __ S.W.3d ___
(2006). The rationale for this rule is that all persons, including employees, are subject to the
recognized hazards of travel to and from work in a vehicle. Id. However, exceptions to the
going-and-coming rule exist, two of which are relevant in this case.
First, the going-and-coming rule does not preclude benefits where the journey itself
is part of the employment service; that is, where the employee must travel from jobsite to
jobsite, whether or not he or she is paid for that travel time. Id. The rationale behind this
exception is that where the employee is required to travel from jobsite to jobsite, such travel
is an integral part of the job itself, even if the travel is not the activity for which a claimant
was primarily employed. Id. Second, the going-and-coming rule does not preclude benefits
where the employee is injured on a special mission or errand. See Swearengin v. Evergreen
Lawns, 85 Ark. App. 61, 145 S.W.3d 830 (2004).
In the simplest terms, the going-and-coming rule does not preclude an award of
benefits here because this is not a going-and-coming case. That rule precludes benefits
where the claimant is merely driving from home to work, has not yet received instructions
from his employer, and where the employer is not dictating the conduct of the employee’s
work. See Moncus, supra. Here, despite the fact that Jones was on his way to his primary
place of employment, he was not “merely driving to work like he usually did every day he
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was scheduled to work” as the Commission found.
Rather, as a result of the special errands imposed by his employer, Jones clearly was
going from one job site to the other, and thus, was required to subject himself to the hazards
of driving, not from home to work, but from one job site to the next. See Olsten, supra.
Thus, it cannot be said that Jones was merely driving from his home to work as usual, that
he had not received instructions from his employer before his workday began, or that his
employer was not dictating the course of his work. Instead, Jones was where he was when
the accident happened due to his employment-related activities.
See Moncus, supra
(awarding benefits where the claimant was injured in an automobile accident, noting that the
employer was responsible for the claimant’s location on the road at the time of the accident).
While Jones may have been injured on the same route he usually takes from home, he
was in fact, late for work at the Bryant store due to that day’s previous employer-mandated
activities; it would require speculation to assume that he would have also been late for work
and would have been in the precise location where the accident occurred had he gone from
his home directly to work. Moreover, Jones’s driving did not represent a deviation from his
usual employment because he was required to drive as a regular part of his employment –
whether it be to pick up food for the store, to attend a meeting at his supervisor’s house in
Conway, or to attend other meetings as required, such as the meetings in the instant case.
The Commission’s assertion that Jones’s “morning activities” (which lasted well
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beyond noon) had no bearing on his status at the time of the wreck is incomprehensible given
that Jones was clearly driving to his primary place of employment directly following his
activities that were undisputedly mandated by his employer.
Equally puzzling is the
Commission’s conclusion that had Jones not been scheduled to work, his work day would
have ended when he returned to his vehicle. In so stating, the Commission not only relies
on facts that were irrelevant because they were not present in this case, but it also seems to
concede the dispositive point in this case – Jones’s workday clearly had not ended at that
point because he was scheduled to work immediately thereafter. In fact, he was required to
telephone the Bryant store when Acklin returned him to his car after the second meeting
because his employer-mandated meetings rendered him unable to get to the Bryant store by
3:00 p.m. to begin work as scheduled. Thus, it cannot be said that at the time of his injury,
Jones was not performing any activities that directly or indirectly advanced his employer’s
interests, other than going to work.
The cases cited by the Commission are either not binding on this court or are
distinguishable.1 Coble v. Modern Business Systems, 62 Ark. App. 26, 966 S.W.2d 938
(1998) and Harding v. City of Texarkana, 62 Ark. App. 137, 970 S.W.2d 303 (1998), are
both distinguishable because in each of those cases, the claimants were involved in
1
The Commission first cited two of its own opinions. While the Commission may
rely on its own opinions, our appellate courts are not bound by the same; thus, the
litigants and the appellate courts are better served if the Commission also relies on
decisions rendered by our appellate courts.
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deviations from their primary employment. That is not the case here, where Jones decidedly
did not deviate from his primary employment by going from his other employer-mandated
activities to his primary place of employment. In Maupin v. Pulaski County Sheriff’s Office,
90 Ark. App. 1, 203 S.W.3d 668 (2005), also cited by the Commission, the claimant, a police
officer, was injured while merely driving to work and had not yet begun his shift. Again, that
is not the case here because Jones was not merely driving to work to begin his shift.
The Commission also relies on Wallace v. West Fraser South, Inc., 90 Ark. App. 38,
203 S.W.3d 646 (2005) (aff’d by Wallace v. West Fraser South, Inc., 365 Ark. 68, __S.W.3d
___ (2006)), because in that case this court stated that it is the activity occurring at the time
of the injury, and not the activity preceding the injury that is relevant to the question of
whether an employee is performing employment services at the time of the injury. Id. The
Wallace claimant was injured when he fell from a board into mud when returning from a
paid, scheduled work break. He remained on the clock and was not allowed to leave the
workplace during the break, and could be called back to work from his break. Thus, the
Wallace court determined that the Wallace claimant was acting in a manner consistent with
furthering his employer’s benefits and thus, was performing employment services. Id.
The Wallace case does not stand for the proposition that work-related activity that
immediately precedes an injury is irrelevant in determining whether a claimant was
performing employment services when he was injured. Rather, the Wallace court determined
that the nonwork activity (the work break) that immediately preceded the injury did not
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preclude an award of benefits. In fact, the Wallace case actually supports the view that the
Commission’s decision here was in error; like the Wallace claimant who was returning to
work as required by his employer’s schedule, Jones was performing his work relatedactivities pursuant to the schedule set by his employer. If anything, the instant facts are more
compelling to supporting a finding of compensability than are the Wallace facts, because,
unlike the Wallace claimant, there was no break in Jones’s work-related activities.
More persuasive is the case of Bell v. Tri-Lakes Services, 76 Ark. App. 42, 61 S.W.3d
867 (2001). In that case the employee was found to be performing employment services
when he was injured in an automobile accident after his employer instructed him to drive to
another city to pick up tools needed for work. There, the claimant was occasionally required
to travel. On the day he was injured, he had worked for several hours before being instructed
to retrieve the tools, and had he completed the task and returned, would have been given the
option of finishing the workday or going home. Thus, the Tri-Lake Court concluded that the
claimant’s accident in that case was compensable because it occurred after he began his
employment duties but before the work day was scheduled to end. See also Moncus, supra.
The same is true here. Jones’s work day began with the first meeting, no later than
9:00 a.m., and was not scheduled to end until he finished the 3:00 p.m. shift at the Bryant
store. Thus, his accident, which occurred as he was driving from the second employermandated meeting to the Bryant store, occurred after his work day had begun and well-before
his work day was scheduled to end. If the Bell claimant’s accident was compensable there
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is little room to assert that Jones’s accident is not compensable because unlike the Bell
claimant, Jones did not have the option of going home when his meetings ended – rather, he
was required to go from one job site to another. Accordingly, the Commission in the instant
case erred in denying benefits.
Reversed and remanded for an award of benefits.
H ART and B IRD, JJ., agree.
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