Jex v. LBR CMMN

2013 UT 40
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 2013
DocketNo. 20120347
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 UT 40 (Jex v. LBR CMMN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jex v. LBR CMMN, 2013 UT 40 (Utah 2013).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before final publication in the Pacific Reporter.

2013 UT 40

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH ——————— LAYNE JEX, Petitioner, v. UTAH LABOR COMMISSION, PRECISION EXCAVATING, and OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY, Respondents. ——————— No. 20120347 Filed July 9, 2013 ——————— On Writ of Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals ——————— Attorneys: Aaron J. Prisbrey, Trevor C. Sanders, St. George, for petitioner Bret A. Gardner, Kristy L. Bertelsen, Salt Lake City, for respondents Precision Excavating and Owners Insurance Company Alan L. Hennebold, Salt Lake City, for respondent Utah Labor Commission ——————— JUSTICE LEE authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING, JUSTICE DURHAM, and JUSTICE PARRISH joined.

JUSTICE LEE, opinion of the Court: ¶1 While traveling home from work in his personal vehicle, petitioner Layne Jex sustained back injuries in a roll-over accident. He filed a workers‘ compensation claim shortly thereafter, which was denied. Jex appealed, first to the labor commission and then to the court of appeals. In each forum, Jex argued that in light of the benefits his employer received through various work-related uses of his vehicle, he was ―in the course of employment‖ during his accident and thus entitled to benefits under the Workers‘ Compensation Act. See UTAH CODE § 34A-2-401(1). JEX V. LABOR COMMISSION Opinion of the Court

¶2 Both the labor commission and the court of appeals reject- ed Jex‘s claim under the general rule that employees are not in the course of their employment when traveling to or from work. In affirming the labor commission, the court of appeals also conclud- ed that Jex did not qualify under the ―instrumentality‖ exception to the ―going and coming‖ rule. We affirm. We clarify the nature and scope of the going and coming rule and the instrumentality exception, conclude that Jex falls within the rule and not the ex- ception, and reject Jex‘s claim to the benefit of ―any doubt‖ about his right to workers compensation. I ¶3 Jex began working for Precision Excavating as a heavy equipment operator in St. George, Utah. After a slump in the con- struction industry made work in St. George scarce, Jex accepted Precision‘s offer to work at a jobsite near Cedar City—some sixty miles north. ¶4 Though Jex and his fellow workers were ultimately respon- sible for making and paying their own way to the new jobsite, Precision designated a location for employees to meet to carpool together if they so desired. Precision also provided a company- owned truck at the meeting spot each day to ferry at least some employees. Jex rode in this truck several times, but drove his own vehicle most days. While traveling home from the jobsite in his vehicle on one such day, Jex sustained back injuries when his pickup truck rolled after a tire failure. ¶5 After the accident, Jex applied for workers‘ compensation benefits. His application was denied under the ―going and coming rule‖—a workers‘ compensation principle deeming injuries occur- ring during a work commute outside the ―course of employment‖ and thus not compensable. Jex sought review of that denial before an administrative law judge (ALJ), contending that he qualified for an exception to the going and coming rule—an exception deeming a commuting accident in the ―course of employment‖ if the vehicle is an ―instrumentality‖ of the employer‘s business. ¶6 In advancing this exception, Jex claimed that his vehicle was employed for a number of business purposes, which in his view converted the vehicle into an instrumentality of Precision‘s business. First, Jex claimed that he provided transportation to Pre- cision employees in his pickup truck. According to Jex, his super-

2 Cite as: 2013 UT __ Opinion of the Court

visor at Precision asked him on several occasions to wait ten extra minutes at the company-designated meeting spot to give a ride to a chronically late employee, Nick. Jex also asserted that, on the day of the accident, he approached his supervisor and asked if he should give another employee, James, a ride home, to which the supervisor responded ―Yeah go ask if he wants to go now, and give him a ride.‖ At the same time, the supervisor also asked Jex to give James the option of leaving with Jex or working overtime and riding home with the supervisor. For whatever reason, Jex did not relay the supervisor‘s second message to James, and the two left together in Jex‘s vehicle. ¶7 Next, Jex reported that he transported hydraulic fluid be- longing to Precision and his personal tools—including a tape measure, a large pipe, a crescent wrench, a sledge hammer, a heavy chain, a trailer hitch, and a homemade level—in his pickup truck to Precision‘s jobsite for use there. Finally, Jex twice, at his supervisor‘s request, ran errands in his vehicle for Precision that required him to leave the jobsite and travel to Cedar City. ¶8 After hearing this evidence, the ALJ denied Jex‘s claim on the ground that these services were insufficient to qualify Jex for the instrumentality exception. As to Jex‘s transportation of Preci- sion employees, the ALJ determined that the arrangement be- tween Precision and Jex regarding Nick‘s ride to work was merely ―loose cooperation‖ and ―not mandated by the employer.‖ In the ALJ‘s view, though Jex complied with Precision‘s requests con- cerning Nick, it was not a job requirement for him to do so. The ALJ further noted that, on the day of the accident, Jex ―offered‖ to give his co-worker a ride home; it was not the result of an ―em- ployer instruction.‖ And in the ALJ‘s view, the ride offered no benefit to Precision. ¶9 As to the personal tools Jex brought and used on the job site, the ALJ concluded that that ―was not a job requirement, and was not necessary,‖ because Jex was able to perform his job ―without problem‖ the days he rode in the company truck and did not have his personal tools. Finally, the ALJ concluded that though Jex used his own vehicle for two errands, a company truck was available for use on both occasions, he was compensated for his time while on these errands, and the lack of employer control over the use of the truck weighed against a finding of compensa- bility.

3 JEX V. LABOR COMMISSION Opinion of the Court

¶10 Jex renewed the same instrumentality arguments in a mo- tion for review to the labor commission. But the labor commission agreed with the ALJ—expressly adopting the ALJ‘s factual find- ings—and denied benefits based on the going and coming rule. ¶11 Jex then appealed to the Utah Court of Appeals. The court of appeals began with the premise that ―Utah‘s appellate courts . . . have not excepted an employee‘s travel to or from work from the usual rule when the travel did not confer a substantial benefit on the employer.‖ Jex v. Labor Comm’n, 2012 UT App 98, ¶ 12, 275 P.3d 1078. It then invoked a ―substantial benefit‖ requirement it found in past cases, including Salt Lake City Corp. v. Labor Commis- sion, 2007 UT 4, 153 P.3d 179, as ―a frame of reference for as- sessing‖ whether Jex‘s vehicle had become a limited purpose in- strumentality based on its use on the day of the accident and whether it had become an all-purpose instrumentality based on the ―totality of the circumstances‖ surrounding its use to benefit Precision generally. Jex, 2012 UT App 98, ¶¶ 13–16. ¶12 As to the former, the court concluded that Jex‘s transporta- tion of James back to St. George on the day of the accident ―was not required by Precision‖ and did not ―provide the company with any substantial benefit.‖ Id. ¶ 15. It thus determined that his vehicle was not an instrumentality on the day of the accident. Id. It reached the same conclusion on the second question.

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