Duck, Melissa v. Cox Oil Company

2016 TN WC App. 2
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedJanuary 21, 2016
Docket2015-07-0089
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 TN WC App. 2 (Duck, Melissa v. Cox Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duck, Melissa v. Cox Oil Company, 2016 TN WC App. 2 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Melissa Duck ) Docket No. 2015-07-0089 ) v. ) ) State File No. 37887-2015 Cox Oil Company ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers' ) Compensation Claims ) Allen Phillips, Judge )

Reversed and Remanded - January 21, 2016

In this interlocutory appeal, the employee worked as a clerk at the employer's convenience store. Soon after arriving at work on the day of the accident, she had a disagreement with an assistant store manager. After indicating she "was quitting," she turned to leave, slipped in water on the floor, and fell. The employer denied the employee's claim for workers' compensation benefits, asserting that the fall did not occur within the course of employment since the employee quit before the fall. In response to the employee's request for a pre-trial ruling without an evidentiary hearing, the trial court ordered the employer to provide medical benefits, concluding that "an employee who is leaving the premises of an employer immediately after terminating her employment remains in the course and scope of her employment for a reasonable time thereafter." Because we find there is insufficient evidence that an employment relationship existed at the time of the injury, it was error for the trial court to conclude that the employee is likely to prevail at a hearing on the merits. We therefore reverse and remand the case.

Judge Timothy W. Conner delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board, in which Judge Marshall L. Davidson, III, joined. Judge David F. Hensley dissented.

Colleen K. Horn, Nashville, Tennessee, for the employer-appellant, Cox Oil Company

Charles L. Holliday, Jackson, Tennessee, for the employee-appellee, Melissa Duck

1 Factual and Procedural Background

Melissa Duck ("Employee"), a forty-nine year old resident of Gibson County, Tennessee, worked for Cox Oil Company d/b/a Little General Convenience Store ("Employer") in Dyer, Tennessee. On March 22, 2015, Employee reported to work and clocked in at approximately 2:00 p.m. According to Employee's affidavit, she then "had a conversation with my supervisor ... about the duties he wished for me to perform that 1 day." She stated, "[s]hortJ.y thereafter, I told Mr. Sanders [sic] that I was quitting.' As Employee turned to leave, she "fell due to some water on the floor behind the ice cream cooler." Employee stated in her affidavit that "[a]fter I fell, I texted the Manager, Jake Flowers, telling him I had quit. He never called or texted back."

According to the affidavit of the assistant store manager, Jason Stanford, Employee arrived on the premises and clocked in at approximately 2:03 p.m. He then asked Employee to "work the main register." According to Mr. Stanford's affidavit, she declined. He then asked her to finish cleaning the ice cream freezer he had been working on so that he could run the main register. She again declined. According to Mr. Stanford's affidavit, the subsequent chain of events occurred as follows: "She then began picking up her items on the counter. I asked whether she was leaving, and she replied, 'Yes.' I asked whether she was quitting, and she replied, 'Yes.' As she turned around to leave, she slipped and fell in the water around the ... ice cream freezer." Mr. Stanford stated that he clocked Employee out after she fell and after she left the premises.

The record also contains the affidavit of the store manager, Jacob Flowers. Mr. Flowers did not indicate he received any text message from Employee on the date of the accident. To the contrary, Mr. Flowers noted that "[o]n March 23, 2015, Ms. Duck was scheduled to work from 4:00 p.m. to 11: 15 p.m. She did not report to work, and she did not contact me with respect to her absence as required pursuant to the Employer's Handbook Attendance Policy." He made an identical statement regarding the following day, March 24, 2015. Then, "[o]n or about March 30, 2015, Ms. Duck came into the Little General Store while I was at work. Ms. Duck told me that Jason Stanford, the Assistant Manager, was rude to her on March 22, 2015, and his behavior was why she walked out of the store. I told Ms. Duck that I could not help her at this point since the situation occurred over a week ago and she had walked out on the job."

A Notice of Separation was issued by Employer on or about April 6, 2015. It listed the period of employment from November 3, 2014 to March 21, 2015. Employer did not complete the section of the form instructing it to "explain the circumstances of this separation."

1 Employee's affidavit identifies the assistant store manager as "Jason Sanders," but his affidavit indicates that his name is Jason "Stanford." Thus, we will refer to him as Jason Stanford. 2 Employee filed a Petition for Benefit Determination ("PBD") on May 19, 2015, seeking medical benefits for her injury. Under the section of the PBD entitled "Description of Injury," she wrote "quit minutes before falling." Following the issuance of a Dispute Certification Notice, Employee filed a Request for Expedited Hearing, but asked the trial judge to "issue a ruling based on a review of the file without an evidentiary hearing." Employer did not object and did not request an evidentiary hearing.

In her brief filed in the trial court, Employee presented a "narrow" issue: "is an employee who has just quit but is injured on the employer's premises passing from the place where work is done entitled to workers' compensation benefits." The crux of Employee's argument was that "[t]he act of the employee leaving the premises after she has stated she was quitting certainly bears a reasonable relationship to the employment, albeit the end to employment." In its response brief, Employer argued that "after resigning from her position as a store clerk, [Employee] no longer had a connection to her former place of employment."

In its Expedited Hearing Order for Medical Benefits, the trial court expressly found that "it requires no additional information to determine whether Ms. Duck is likely to prevail at a hearing on the merits of the claim." Consequently, the trial court exercised its discretion not to conduct a hearing and, instead, decided the motion based on the record alone, concluding that Employee was entitled to medical benefits. The trial judge noted that "the term 'course and scope of employment' encompasses the idea that an injury must occur at a time and place where the employee is expected to be and when doing something incidental or rationally-connected to the work." The trial court relied on case law, decided prior to the effective date of the 2013 Workers' Compensation Reform Act, which discussed whether an activity resulting in injury "bears a reasonable relationship to the employment." Noting that Professor Lex Larson has espoused the idea that "[c]ompensation coverage is not automatically and instantaneously terminated by the firing or quitting of the employee," the trial court concluded that "an employee who is leaving the premises of an employer immediately after terminating her employment remains in the course and scope of her employment for a reasonable time thereafter." Employer timely filed its notice of appeal.

Standard of Review

The standard of review to be applied by this Board in reviewing a trial court's decision is statutorily mandated and limited in scope. Specifically, "[t]here shall be a presumption that the findings and conclusions of the workers' compensation judge are correct, unless the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise." Tenn. Code Ann. § 50- 6-239(c)(7) (2014).

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Bluebook (online)
2016 TN WC App. 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duck-melissa-v-cox-oil-company-tennworkcompapp-2016.