J. Keith v. WCAB (SEPTA)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 19, 2016
Docket591 C.D. 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of J. Keith v. WCAB (SEPTA) (J. Keith v. WCAB (SEPTA)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Keith v. WCAB (SEPTA), (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Jacob Keith, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 591 C.D. 2015 : SUBMITTED: October 16, 2015 Workers’ Compensation Appeal : Board (SEPTA), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Judge HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE LEADBETTER FILED: January 19, 2016

Claimant Jacob Keith petitions this Court for review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) that affirmed the decision of a Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) denying his claim petition. We affirm. Claimant was a bus driver for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA or Employer) on February 10, 2012, when he allegedly suffered injuries during an altercation with a passenger who did not pay his fare. Claimant filed a claim petition on May 31, 2012, asserting that he sustained a work-related right shoulder injury, a facial scar and ongoing disability due to the incident. Employer then filed an answer alleging, inter alia, that Claimant was not in the course and scope of employment when he was injured and that, therefore, his claim was barred. Employer also filed a Notice of Workers’ Compensation Denial, averring that Claimant was not in the course and scope of employment at the time of his injury. The WCJ held a number of hearings in this matter, including a hearing on July 24, 2012, in which the WCJ agreed to bifurcate the case on the question of whether Claimant was in the course and scope of his employment when he was injured. Both Claimant and Employer submitted evidence to the WCJ on this discrete issue. Claimant testified on his own behalf regarding the incident, and Employer submitted video evidence taken from Employer’s bus. By decision dated March 14, 2014, the WCJ denied Claimant’s claim petition because she concluded that, based on the evidence before her, Claimant was beyond the course and scope of employment when he suffered the alleged injuries. In the WCJ’s third finding of fact attendant to her March 2014 decision, she specifically recounted Claimant’s pertinent testimony at the July 24, 2012, hearing, as follows:

(a) On February 10, 2012, while working as a driver for SEPTA, [Claimant] picked up a passenger at Jonestown Avenue, heading southbound. (N.T., p. 7). A male passenger came aboard the vehicle, using a female Transpass (bus pass specific to a female passenger). The Claimant asked the passenger if he was male or female. (N.T., pp. 7-8). The passenger flippantly asked the same question back to Claimant.

(b) Claimant testified that the passenger continued to swipe the female Transpass and “proceeded to walk to his seat.” The Claimant then “immediately pushed the red button for police help” because “I felt that there was going to be an emergency at hand.” (N.T., p. 8). The Claimant kept his eye on his passenger, and after pushing

2 the red button, “… immediately got up and approached the passenger, asking the passenger several times to vacate the vehicle.” (N.T., p. 9). The passenger allegedly indicated that he was not going to leave the bus, and Claimant returned to his seat.

(c) Claimant testified that when he approached his bus seat, he saw the reflection of the passenger taking a “Mike Tyson” stance. He indicated that the passenger lunged at him, and therefore, he lunged back. (N.T., p. 10). Then the passenger struck him in the left eye in the aisle of the bus. (N.T., pp. 10-11). Claimant testified that, after sustaining the blow, he was “delirious,” stumbled and fell backwards on the seats, with the passenger on top of him. (N.T., p. 12). Claimant sustained injuries to his right shoulder and his face was bloody. (N.T., p. 13). Claimant testified that the passenger then ran off of the bus and Claimant picked up a “chock” [wheelstop] and proceeded to run after him. (N.T., pp. 12-16). Claimant testified that he was trying to catch the passenger to hold him until the police arrived. (N.T., p. 17).

(d) … On cross-examination, Claimant admitted that he knew that the passenger was male before he asked the passenger whether he was male or female. (N.T., p. 26). Claimant admitted that he did not ask the passenger to pay the fare. (N.T., p. 26). Claimant admitted that there were training procedures that he had undergone in reference to handling fare disputes. (N.T., p. 27). Claimant admitted that a proper check-in procedure would involve asking the passenger for the proper fare. (N.T., p. 28).

(e) Claimant admitted that nothing happened with the passenger until the Claimant physically got out of the driver’s seat and approached the passenger. Claimant testified that the passenger was walking towards the back of the bus when Claimant approached him and that is when the fight started. (N.T., pp. 31-32). Claimant testified that, after the passenger ran off of the bus, he chased him with a chock outside of the bus. (N.T., pp.

3 34-35). Although he applied for unemployment compensation, Claimant is not physically ready to return to work. [WCJ’s Decision (dated March 14, 2014) at 3-4, Finding of Fact (FF), No. 3 (emphasis in original)]. In her eighth Finding of Fact, the WCJ states that Claimant’s lawyer eventually withdrew all objections to the DVD of the incident; that, during a review of the video evidence, “Claimant is seen making the first overture towards the passenger by running into him”; and that “[t]here has been no physical contact made by the passenger to the Claimant prior to the Claimant jumping towards him.” [Id. at 5, FF, No. 8 (emphasis in original)]. The WCJ also stated in this finding that “[t]he outside-of-bus video recorder shows Claimant running around the back end of the bus with the chock in his right hand, raised above shoulder level, chasing the passenger.” [Id. at 5-6]. Moreover, in her tenth finding of fact, the WCJ recounted that, at the June 20, 2013, hearing, after Claimant’s attorney withdrew previously voiced objections to the video, Claimant “testified … contrary to his prior testimony, he forgot to indicate that the passenger ‘threw the first jab’”…..” [Id. at 6, FF, No. 10]. The WCJ rejected Claimant’s testimony to the effect that he was in the course and scope of his employment when he was injured and instead relied on the videotape surveillance to determine that Claimant was “outside the scope of his employment when he confronted the passenger in an aggressive manner, engaged in a physical altercation and chased the passenger after the passenger had voluntarily exited the vehicle.” [Id., FF, No. 11]. The WCJ further credited the testimony of Employer’s witnesses Paul Berger, who authenticated the bus video, Jerrick Croston, who testified that all of the rules in Employer’s operations manual

4 are in effect with respect to all of its employees, and Thomas Ropars, who testified to Claimant’s violation of Employer’s rules, including those against fighting and assault of a passenger. [Id. at 4-6, FF, Nos. 4-6 and 12]. The WCJ also rejected the testimony of Claimant’s union representative, Andre Jones, that Claimant acted in self-defense when he fought with the passenger, noting Claimant’s aggressive stance on the video. The WCJ found Claimant would not have sustained his injuries had he not violated Employer’s positive work order against fighting. [Id. at 5-7, FF, Nos. 7 and 13]. The WCJ also found the video to be more credible than Claimant’s testimony and that “[t]he videotape depicted Claimant as the aggressor and instigator, not the passenger.” [Id. at 7, FF, No. 14].

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