Bilton v. Best Western Royal Motor Lodge

321 S.E.2d 63, 282 S.C. 634, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 11, 1984
Docket0261
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 321 S.E.2d 63 (Bilton v. Best Western Royal Motor Lodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bilton v. Best Western Royal Motor Lodge, 321 S.E.2d 63, 282 S.C. 634, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 562 (S.C. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Shaw, Justice:

This is a workers’ compensation action alleging an employee death occurred during the scope and course of employment. The Full Commission and the circuit judge reversed the single Hearing Commissioner by ruling the appellants, Best Western Royal Motor Lodge and Aetna Insurance Company, were estopped from contesting liability and the employee, Marvin D. Bilton, died during the course of his employment. We reverse as to the issue of estoppel and affirm the holding Bilton died during the course of employment.

The decedent-Marvin Bilton was manager of Best Western Royal Motor Lodge in Santee. He was on call twenty four hours a day. As compensation, Bilton received $l,000/month, the use of a two bedroom apartment at the motel where he lived with his wife and daughter (his only dependents and respondents herein), and all utilities for the apartment except long distance phone calls. Bilton was provided a car for business and personal use and received commissions on referrals to another Best Western owned by his employer. He and his family also received some free meals.

The testimony indicated Bilton to be a very methodical and responsible employee. Part of his duties included checking the lights on road signs advertising the motel.

On the night in question, March 16,1980, Mrs. Bilton last saw her husband about 11:00 p.m. when he came to tell her good-night. Reverend Thomas Mellette, Bilton’s supervisor and manager of the other Best Western located in Summer-ton, talked to Bilton on the phone between 10:00 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Mellette’s wife, co-owner of the two motels, talked to Bilton on the phone about 11:10 p.m. Around 11:25 p.m. Mellette departed for Bilton’s motel to obtain some charge card summary forms. He found the motel lobby locked and deserted. After obtaining the forms elsewhere, he returned to the motel and found the situation unchanged. At this point, Mellette did not consider the situation abnormal and believed Bilton may have been checking the road signs. As he was returning to the Summerton motel, he saw an ambulance pull into a rest area on the southbound lane of Interstate 95. On impulse, Mellette followed the ambulance by crossing over the *637 interstate’s median. Bilton was found at the rest area with gunshot wounds to the head from which he died.

Mellette took Bilton’s keys and returned to the Santee motel. Upon entering the lobby, he discovered many things out of the ordinary. All of the lobby lights were on; the television was on; the lights normally on outside the lobby were off; the sign always put on the lobby door informing late night guests how to contact Bilton was not on the door; the lobby switchboard was not connected to the telephone in Bilton’s apartment as it always was at night so that guests could call Bilton; the cash drawer was open and the cash tray missing; Bilton’s calculator was on with the tape still in it; and the credit card slips were in disarray. The key to the cash drawer has never been found. Mellette found some cash in a slot for registration forms for Room 13 (which dosen’t exist). According to a pre-arranged agreement between Bilton and Mrs. Mellette, Bilton was to place money in this slot should he suspect a robbery. His testimony on the condition of the lobby was confirmed by Mrs. Bilton and Mrs. Mellette.

After Bilton’s death, Mrs. Bilton was told several times by Best Western and Aetna this was a compensable case. The Industrial Commission was informed by letter that Best Western and Aetna considered this a compensable case. However, compensability was never admitted in the employer’s first report of injury or in any formal pleading. Mrs. Bilton was advised she would need an attorney although she talked to a relative who is a practicing lawyer. She made no efforts toward building a case to prove her entitlement under the workers’ compensation laws. A hearing was set before a single Commissioner to determine Bilton’s dependents and the amount of compensation to which they were entitled.

Prior to the hearing, the cash tray from the cash drawer was found in a broken ice machine in a storage room adjacent to the motel lobby. Money was in the cash tray, but, with the other money found, it did not total the amount of cash Bilton was suspected of having on the night of his death. Because of this discovery, Best Western and Aetna contested their liability to pay workers’ compensation benefits. At the hearing set for dependency and compensation, they moved for and received a continuance. All of this occurred well within the two year statutory period for filing death claims as provided *638 in Section 42-15-40 of 1976 South Carolina Code of Laws (as amended, 1979).

The single Hearing Commissioner ruled Best Western and Aetna were not estopped from contesting liability and that Bilton did not die during the course of his employment. The Full Commission reversed, holding Best Western and Aetna was estopped from contesting liability and that Bilton died during the course of his employment. Mrs. Bilton and her daughter were awarded $197/week not to exceed 500 weeks and medical and funeral expenses. The circuit judge affirmed the Full Commission’s order.

For our initial consideration is a motion filed by respondents to strike portions of the appellant’s reply brief as being in violation of Supreme Court Rule 8, Section 7 — matters not appearing in the Transcript of Record. In their return to motion, Best Western and Aetna claim their violation of this rule is in response to matters outside the record appearing in the respondents’ brief. We have examined the alleged errors and find both the respondents’ brief and the appellants’ reply brief to be in violation.

Respondents claim unilateral acts of appellants in initially denying compensability deterred them from deposing certain witnesses, whose testimony is the matter outside the record, while they were in South Carolina and subject to subpoena. (These witnesses are from Canada.) While this is undoubtedly true, respondents did not obtain the written consent of opposing counsel nor did they petition the Supreme Court as required to insert additional facts. Supreme Court Rule 8, Section 7; Furman v. Nelson, 208 S. C. 249, 37 S. E. (2d) 741 (1946). The appellants also neither sought nor obtained such consent or permission. They presented their own version of the Canadian witnesses’ testimony and ask this court to consider all such testimony since the respondents improperly “opened the door” to this evidence.

The fact that one party has violated Supreme Court Rules does not give the other party the right to do so. While we may consider such evidence as a matter of grace, State v. Orr, 225 S. C. 369, 82 S. E. (2d) 523 (1954), we decline to do so. Each sides’ version of the testimony is different, the witnesses are unavailable to testify or to be deposed, and permission to insert this extraneous matter was never *639 requested nor received. Accordingly, the facts improperly stated in both parties’ briefs are not considered. Becker v. Uhe, 221 S. C. 334, 70 S. E. (2d) 346 (1952).

Mrs. Bilton argues appellants should be estopped from contesting liability because of their previous admissions of compensability.

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Bluebook (online)
321 S.E.2d 63, 282 S.C. 634, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilton-v-best-western-royal-motor-lodge-scctapp-1984.