Chavis v. Tlc Home Health Care

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedApril 1, 2004
DocketI.C. NO. 111074
StatusPublished

This text of Chavis v. Tlc Home Health Care (Chavis v. Tlc Home Health Care) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chavis v. Tlc Home Health Care, (N.C. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

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This matter was reviewed by the Full Commission based upon the record of the proceedings before Deputy Commissioner Rowell, along with the briefs and arguments on appeal. The appealing party has shown good ground to amend the prior Opinion and Award. Accordingly, the Full Commission MODIFIES the Deputy Commissioner's holding and enters the following Opinion and Award.

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The Full Commission finds as fact and concludes as matters of law the following, which were entered into by the parties at the hearing before the Deputy Commissioner and in a Pre-Trial Agreement as

STIPULATIONS
1. The parties are subject to and bound by the provisions of the Workers' Compensantion Act.

2. The employer-employee relationship existed between plaintiff and defendant-employer on October 26, 2000.

3. Pharmacists Mutual Insurance Company is the compensation carrier on the risk.

4. The date of alleged injury is October 26, 2000.

5. The parties also agreed to stipulate to the following documents:

a. I.C. Forms 18, 22, 61, 33, and 33R — but Forms 18, 61, 33, and 33R are stipulated only to the following extent: to show what the parties have put forth and/or contended. The truth and substantive content of those contentions (especially the ones in dispute) are not stipulated.

b. Division of Motor Vehicles Accident Report.

c. Plaintiff's medical records, subject to the right of either party to depose any medical provider with 60 days of the date of hearing. All health care provider records identified herein are admitted into evidence without further proof, but subject to the qualifications set forth in the following sentence. To the extent that the author of any such document or the source for any communication within any such document testifies in a manner which contravenes, disavows, renounces, repudiates, abandons, and/or contradicts any recitation in that document or attributed to such source, then such contravened, etc., recitations in such documents are not stipulated into evidence and there is no stipulation as to the admissibility of those recitations.

6. The parties have reserved the right to submit further proposed conclusively binding stipulations in this case, which stipulations may be entered into at a later point during the proceedings in this case.

7. Any version(s) of the Pretrial Agreement bearing transmitted-by-fax signatures as opposed to original in-ink signature(s) shall be as fully binding, valid, and effective as the version(s) bearing original in-ink signatures(s) and the attorneys signing this Pretrial Agreement hereby authorize and request that the Industrial Commission treat any transmitted-by-fax signature(s) as being as valid, binding, and effective as the version(s) bearing the original in-ink signature(s).

8. The parties stipulate into evidence as Stipulated Exhibit #1, the Pre-trial Agreement.

9. The parties stipulate into evidence as Stipulated Exhibit #2, plaintiff's medical records.

10. The parties stipulate into evidence as Stipulated Exhibit #3, DMV accident report.

11. The parties stipulate into evidence as Stipulated Exhibit #4, Industrial Commission Forms as follows: Form 18, filed February 7, 2001, Form 61, dated February 26, 2001, Form33, dated March 7, 2001, and Form 33R, dated April 16, 2001.

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Based upon all of the competent evidence in the record, the Industrial Commission makes the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. At the time of the hearing before the Deputy Commissioner, plaintiff was 27 years old. Plaintiff had completed high school. After graduating high school, she attended Robinson Tech earning her CNA (Certified Nursing Assistant) Certification. At the time of the hearing before the Deputy Commissioner, plaintiff was enrolled at Robinson Tech pursuing her RN degree.

2. Defendant-employer is a home health care agency that employs CNAs to travel to patients' homes to provide nursing services and perform household chores. Plaintiff was hired to work for defendant-employer on October 28, 1999, as a CNA.

3. It was a prerequisite of plaintiff's employment with defendant-employer that she have her own means of reliable transportation to drive to the patients' homes. Defendant-employer did not provide vehicles for its employees. Defendant-employer did, however, provide a travel allowance in the form of mileage reimbursement at the rate of 29 cents per mile.

4. When plaintiff first went to work for defendant-employer in 1999, she worked as a CNA assigned to only one patient. However, soon thereafter she became a "designated runner," which meant that she worked for multiple patients each day. As a designated runner, plaintiff was reimbursed for mileage incurred from her home to her first patient, from one patient's home to the next, and then from her last patient to her own home at the end of the day. Plaintiff was not required to go to defendant — employer's office at the beginning and end of each workday.

5. As a designated runner, plaintiff covered all of Robeson County, and would sometimes have to drive thirty to forty miles between patients' homes. Defendant-employer considered plaintiff "on duty" when she traveled from one patient's home to the next, but she was not paid wages for the time she spent driving. The only payment plaintiff would receive from driving to the homes of defendant-employer's clients was the mileage reimbursement.

6. Many of defendant-employer's clients are covered by Medicaid. Medicaid has strict billing rules, and defendant-employer could risk losing a lot of business if billing irregularities were found. Because of this, and to avoid having any of its employees accused of theft, defendant-employer had an established policy that its employees were not to remain at a patient's home if the patient left.

7. When plaintiff first encountered a situation involving a patient who was going to leave the home, she called Barbara Locklear, defendant-employer's scheduling supervisor, and asked her what to do. Ms. Locklear told plaintiff that she had to leave the premises, but if the patient was going to be right back, plaintiff should go get something to eat or do something else until the patient returned. However, if the patient were going to be gone more than an hour or two, plaintiff would have to go on to another patient, and should therefore call the office to get another assignment.

8. On October 26, 2000, plaintiff had her first appointment at the home of Linda Galegos. Plaintiff was to report to the Galegos home at 8:00 a.m. and work 3.5 hours. When plaintiff arrived, Ms. Galegos was leaving her home to go take care of some business at school. Ms. Galegos told plaintiff that she would be back home in approximately twenty minutes, and that plaintiff could stay there and wait in her home. Plaintiff told Ms. Galegos that plaintiff, pursuant to defendant-employer policy, could not stay on a patient's property while plaintiff was not present, and that plaintiff would have to leave and go do something while the patient was away. Plaintiff told Ms. Galegos that they would meet back at the patient's home.

9. Defendant-employer had no written policies or rules that addressed this situation. On October 26, 2000, plaintiff believed that she was complying with defendant-employer's policies when she left Ms. Galegos' home. Her supervisor, Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
Chavis v. Tlc Home Health Care, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chavis-v-tlc-home-health-care-ncworkcompcom-2004.