OSCN Found Document:BROWN v. INFRASTRUCTURE & ENERGY ALTERNATIVES
Bay Mitchell, Presiding Judge:
¶1 The petitioner/employee/claimant appeals from an order of the Workers' Compensation Commission that affirmed an administrative law judge's (ALJ's) order finding that the petitioner's injury was not compensable because it did not occur within the course and scope of petitioner's employment with the respondent/employer. Because the uncontroverted facts show that the accident occurred not in the course of employment but on the petitioner's daily commute to work, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶2 The relevant facts are uncontroverted. The petitioner and three co-workers were involved in a car accident on their way to a job site. All occupants of the car were employed by the petitioner's employer, Infrastructure & Energy Alternatives, LLC (IEA). IEA was a general contractor building a large wind farm near Ponca City, Oklahoma. The petitioner had temporarily relocated from Texas in order to work on the project. He had been paid mileage to relocate but was not otherwise directly reimbursed for his daily travel from his temporary residence to the job site. He was paid, however, in addition to his wage of $25 per hour, $100 per day for meals, lodging, and other "incidental expenses." As is typical, the parties refer to this additional pay as per diem.1
¶3 On July 17, 2017, as was customary, the petitioner and three co-workers were carpooling to the job site, which was 30 to 45 minutes away. The employer did not provide lodging or transportation but expected its workers to be onsite by 7:00 a.m. for a mandatory safety meeting. The petitioner was a passenger in a car owned and driven by a co-worker. The party was traveling on a two-lane state highway. They had nearly arrived at the congregation point for the mandatory safety meeting with just a single, lefthand turn remaining. Unfortunately, while engaged in this final turn, the employee's vehicle collided with a truck headed in the opposite direction. The petitioner was seriously injured and filed this claim for worker's compensation benefits.
¶4 The employer objected on the basis that the employee's injuries were not compensable because they had not occurred in the course and scope of employment, but as part of the "employee's transportation to and from his or her place of employment" which is not, by definition, a "compensable injury" under applicable law. 85A O.S. Supp.2013 §2(9) & (13). After a full hearing, the ALJ agreed and denied compensation. On review, the Workers' Compensation Commission affirmed. The employee timely appealed.2
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶5 The petitioner's injuries occurred after the effective date of the Administrative Workers' Compensation Act (AWCA), making it the applicable law. See Williams Companies, Inc. v. Dunkelgod, 2012 OK 96, ¶18, 295 P.3d 1107, 1113. The relevant standard of review provides we may modify, reverse, remand for rehearing or set aside a judgment if it was "[a]ffected by [an] error of law" or "[c]learly erroneous in view of the reliable, material, probative and substantial competent evidence ...." 85A O.S. Supp. 2014 §78(C). Our review of legal questions is de novo. Orcutt v. Lloyd Richards Pers. Serv., 2010 OK CIV APP 77, ¶8, 239 P.3d 479, 481. However, "on issues of fact, the Commission's order will be affirmed if the record contains substantial evidence in support of the facts upon which it is based and the order is otherwise free of error." Brown v. Claims Mgmt. Res. Inc., 2017 OK 13, ¶ 11, 391 P.3d 111, 115.
ANALYSIS
¶6 The petitioner claims that the commission erred in affirming the ALJ's conclusion that the injury did not arise out of the petitioner's course and scope of employment with his employer. The AWCA, unlike its predecessor, attempts a general definition of "course and scope of employment." 85A O.S. Supp.2013 §2(13). The definition is critical because injuries that do not arise in the course and scope of employment are, by definition, not compensable. 85A O.S. Supp.2013 §2(9) ("Compensable injury" means damage or harm to the physical structure of the body, or prosthetic appliances, including eyeglasses, contact lenses, or hearing aids, caused solely as the result of either an accident, cumulative trauma or occupational disease arising out of the course and scope of employment.")
¶7 As used in the act, "'[c]ourse and scope of employment' means an activity of any kind or character for which the employee was hired and that relates to and derives from the work, business, trade or profession of an employer, and is performed by an employee in the furtherance of the affairs or business of an employer." Id. §2(13). The act then hones the definition somewhat by providing three examples of activities that are within the definition and four examples of activities that are not within the definition. Id.
¶8 The definition includes, among other irrelevant inclusions, "travel by an employee in furtherance of the affairs of an employer that is specifically directed by the employer." Id., (referred to herein as "employer-directed travel").3 The definition does not include, among other irrelevant exclusions, "an employee's transportation to and from his or her place of employment ...." Id., (referred to herein as an employee's "commute").
¶9 At its core, this appeal arises from the parties' disagreement as to the employee's status at the time of the accident in question. The employee sees the accident as having occurred during employer-directed travel. The employer on the other hand, sees the accident as having occurred during the employee's commute to work.4
¶10 Adoption of the employee's reading would turn all non-compensable commutes into compensable employer-directed travel, and must therefore be rejected. Here, it is clear that the legislature intended to exclude commutes from the definition of scope and course of employment even though such commutes could be considered employer-directed travel generally, and certainly might be in particular situations. However, because the employee's construction would make all accidents that occur during the course of a commute potentially compensable, we cannot adopt it. See Udall v. Udall, 1980 OK 99, ¶11, 613 P.3d 742. ("In ascertaining legislative intent, the language of an entire act should be construed with a reasonable and sensible construction."); Ledbetter v. Oklahoma Alcoholic Beverage Laws Enforcement Comm'n., 1988 OK 117, ¶7, 764 P.2d 172. ("[S]tatutory construction that would lead to an absurdity must be avoided and a rational construction should be given to a statute if the language fairly permits."); Mustain v. Grand River Dam Authority, 2003 OK 43, ¶23, 68 P.3d 991, 999. ("Generally, statutes addressing the same subject matter are to be construed in a manner which reconciles differing provisions and imparts to each of them an intelligent effect.").
¶11 Further, none of the case law the employee relies on supports this position. In the proceedings below, the petitioner primarily relied on Pina v. American Piping Inspection, Inc., 2018 OK 40, 419 P.3d 231, for the proposition, reiterated on appeal, that the petitioner's travel was "in furtherance of the affairs of an employer that is specifically directed by the employer." Although Pina is somewhat analogous to this case, there several critical facts that distinguish it.
¶12 In Pina, an employee drove to work at an oil rig 130 miles away from his home. Id. at ¶1. He drove his personal vehicle, for which he was compensated $50 per day, in addition to per diem for meals and lodging. Id. ¶1-2. The employer also paid for the employee's gas, ice, and water, but only if the employee stopped at a gas station specified by the employer and at a time designated by a supervisor. Id. at ¶3. After the supervisor paid for gas and other supplies, the employee would then proceed to the oil rig, still 30 miles away. Id. ¶4. The supervisor testified that he considered the employee "at work" when he arrived at the gas station. Id. ¶5. The employee was injured in a car accident after leaving the gas station, but before arriving at the oil rig. Id. ¶5. The Oklahoma Supreme Court determined that the employee was acting within the course and scope of employment of the accident under the AWCA definition because his act of transporting the ice, water, and the gas inside his truck to the job site was both in furtherance of the affairs of and specifically directed by the employer. Id. ¶20
¶13 Under our nomenclature, the Pina employee, at least after he left the gas station, was no longer commuting but engaged employer-directed travel -- a special task -- to haul supplies to the oil rig. There are no such analogous facts in this case.
¶14 The only direction given to the petitioner here was to get to the job site by 7 a.m. The employer was completely indifferent to how that happened and gave no direction to the petitioner as to how to get there. Nor was there an intermediate point at which the employer directed the petitioner to meet. The employee points to the facts that he lived out of state and considered himself "at work" the moment he arrived in Oklahoma, that his sole purpose for being in Oklahoma was for the job, and that he was directed to be at the job site at 7 a.m. However, as noted above, such a reading would make every accident that occurs during a daily commute a compensable accident. This reading would completely thwart what we view as the legislature's clear intent to remove daily commutes from the definition of "course and scope of employment," and we decline to adopt it.
¶15 The petitioner also points to the fact that the employees in the car were allegedly discussing the work they had to do that day as evidence that the travel was made in furtherance of the affairs of the employer. However, the petitioner has no counter to the employer's response that it did not direct or require the employees to have such discussions. Discussion of work while driving to work does not transform a commute to work into employer-directed travel.
¶16 Finally, we note the employee's argument that the per diem was intended to cover his travel expenses as further evidence that he was engaged in employer-directed travel as opposed to a commute. Although the employer contests the notion that the per diem was intended to cover gas or other travel expenses, we do not find any reason to settle that dispute here. After all, it was undisputed below that the per diem could be used for any purpose whatsoever and it was paid to all employees, like the petitioner, who where working more than 150 miles away from home. It was undisputed that the employer did not direct the employee to use the per diem for gas, transportation, or any other purpose. The per diem was simply an additional payment to the employee intended to cover the cost of working far from home. Such a payment does not convert a commute to work into employer-directed travel or make the employee incapable of commuting to work from his temporary residence. Even assuming the per diem was intended to cover transportation expenses in part, such a fact is insufficient in and of itself to transform an employee's daily commute into "travel by an employee in furtherance of the affairs of an employer that is specifically directed by the employer." As for this case, it is sufficient to say that payment of a per diem that is intended as reimbursement for general expenses, including transportation expenses, is insufficient to transform a daily commute into compensable, employer-directed travel.5
¶17 Indeed, none of these facts are sufficient, individually or collectively, to transform what we see as the epitome of a daily commute into compensable, employer-directed travel. The employer here gave no direction to the employee other than where to be and when. The employee was not on any special errand, but was on the way to the job site where he was to clock in and begin work each day. The employee was solely responsible to choose the method and means of his own transportation. Under these facts, we hold that the accident occurred during the "employee's transportation to and from his or her place of employment ...." 85A O.S. Supp.2013 §2(13). Accordingly, the employee's injuries are not compensable under applicable law. Id. §2(9).
¶18 AFFIRMED.
SWINTON, V.C.J., and PEMBERTON, J., concur.