Joe Willie Yates v. Triple D, Inc., Nancy Denton, Scotchie Denton, Individually and Benchmark Insurance Company (Triple D Inc.)

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 5, 2020
DocketNO. 2019-WC-00796-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Joe Willie Yates v. Triple D, Inc., Nancy Denton, Scotchie Denton, Individually and Benchmark Insurance Company (Triple D Inc.) (Joe Willie Yates v. Triple D, Inc., Nancy Denton, Scotchie Denton, Individually and Benchmark Insurance Company (Triple D Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joe Willie Yates v. Triple D, Inc., Nancy Denton, Scotchie Denton, Individually and Benchmark Insurance Company (Triple D Inc.), (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2019-WC-00796-COA

JOE WILLIE YATES APPELLANT

v.

TRIPLE D, INC., NANCY DENTON, SCOTCHIE APPELLEES DENTON, INDIVIDUALLY AND BENCHMARK INSURANCE COMPANY (TRIPLE D INC.)

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/25/2019 TRIBUNAL FROM WHICH MISSISSIPPI WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALED: COMMISSION ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: RAYNETRA LASHELL GUSTAVIS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: LORALEIGH CHRISTINE PHILLIPS PAUL M. MOORE JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WORKERS’ COMPENSATION DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/05/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE J. WILSON, P.J., TINDELL AND C. WILSON, JJ.

TINDELL, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. On December 22, 2016, Joe Willie Yates filed a workers’ compensation claim against

Triple D Inc., Nancy Denton, Scotchie Denton, and Benchmark Insurance Company, alleging

that he sustained work-related injuries from a motor vehicle accident on June 14, 2016.

Triple D, Nancy, Scotchie, and Benchmark Insurance Company denied Yates’s claim,

arguing that Yates worked solely for Nancy as a farm laborer, which is exempted from

mandatory workers’ compensation coverage.

¶2. Upon hearing the merits of Yates’s claim, an administrative judge entered an order

on October 17, 2018, finding that Yates’s work constituted farm labor, which is exempted from workers’ compensation coverage under Mississippi Code Annotated section 71-3-5

(Rev. 2011). Accordingly, the judge determined that Yates’s injuries were non-compensable.

Yates filed a petition for review with the Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Commission,

arguing that (1) the administrative judge’s finding that Yates was a farm laborer was not

supported by substantial evidence, and (2) the Appellants were “dual or alter ego employers,”

thereby waiving the farm-labor exemption under the section 71-3-5. On April 25, 2019, the

Commission affirmed the decision of the administrative judge and additionally found that the

Appellees are not alter ego employers within the confines of workers’ compensation law.

Yates now appeals from the Commission’s decision, and finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶3. On June 14, 2016, Yates was involved in a motor vehicle accident wherein he

sustained injuries to his neck, back, pelvis, sternum, kidneys, and body as a whole. Yates

filed a petition to controvert on December 22, 2016, alleging that his injuries were work-

related because he was driving a service truck owned by Scotchie when the accident

occurred. Nancy, Scotchie, and Triple D filed their answers, arguing that Yates worked as

an employee for Nancy, not Scotchie or Triple D and that Yates worked as a farm laborer,

which is exempted from compensation coverage under the Mississippi Workers’

Compensation Act.

¶4. On June 11, 2018, an administrative judge conducted a hearing on the merits of

Yates’s claim to determine who employed Yates at the time of his accident and whether

Yates sustained compensable injuries under the Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Act.

2 At the hearing, the judge heard testimony from several witnesses, including Yates, Yates’s

wife Linda, Scotchie, and Nancy.

¶5. Yates testified that he was a 64-year-old man who began working for the Denton

family when he was eight years old. Yates first worked for Nancy’s father and then for

Nancy’s husband on their family farm. In 1996, Nancy’s husband died, and Yates continued

to work for Nancy from that time until his accident in 2016.

¶6. Regarding his typical workday, Yates testified that he began each day by reporting to

the workshop behind Nancy’s house at 7:30 a.m. Upon arriving at the workshop, Yates

checked all of the machines to make sure they were working properly. Yates stated that his

day-to-day work primarily included spraying and picking cotton, cutting and hauling hay,

planting and hauling corn and grain, and driving and maintaining tractors. Yates testified he

used some of Nancy’s tools that were in the workshop, and sometimes, he used tools from

Scotchie’s service truck. When asked about the types of tools he used, Yates replied,

“[R]eally anything that you need to farm with . . . .” Opposing counsel asked Yates about

the work he was doing on the day of the accident:

Counsel: Okay. So were you farming on June 14th, 2016?

Yates: Farming?

Counsel: Yes.

Yates: Yes, ma’am.

¶7. Yates’s attorney also asked the following:

Counsel: Did you ever do anything other than farm work?

3 Yates: Not really, no, ma’am.

¶8. According to Yates, Nancy was “the boss,” and he worked for her along with one

other employee, Ray Bumgard. Yates also testified that he received his weekly pay from

Nancy. The parties submitted “General Exhibit 2,” which was copies of checks from a bank

account with Nancy and Scotchie listed as the account holders. Yates testified Nancy

primarily signed his checks, and Scotchie only signed his checks if Nancy was not available.

Yates also stated that while working for Nancy, Yates would help Scotchie occasionally. But

Yates testified that Nancy’s work always came first. Yates also stated Scotchie never paid

him for this work, and he was always paid by Nancy.

¶9. Yates further testified that Nancy, Scotchie, and Scotchie’s brother, David, all have

their own farms and businesses. Nancy owns and manages the farm where Yates and Ray

Bumgard work, and David owns and manages his own grain farm. Yates also stated that he

had been working for Nancy and Nancy’s husband for so long that he remembered when

Scotchie first opened Triple D. Yates stated that Triple D was a hauling company owned and

managed by Scotchie. Scotchie, Scotchie’s son Kasey, and one other Triple D employee

drive 18-wheelers for the company. Yates further testified that he does not drive 18-wheelers

for Triple D and does not know any of Triple D’s customers.

¶10. Yates’s wife, Linda, also testified that she and Yates had been married for forty-one

years, and it was her understanding that Yates worked for Denton Farms. Throughout their

marriage, Linda helped Yates complete any tax and employment forms because he could not

read or write. Linda stated that after the accident, she assisted Yates in completing the forms

4 to receive Social Security benefits. Linda also confirmed that Yates’s forms listed his

occupation as “farm laborer” and “tractor driver.” Linda testified that Yates did not have a

commercial driver’s license and did not drive 18-wheelers as a part of his job.

¶11. Scotchie also provided testimony at the hearing. Scotchie testified that he owned

approximately 840 acres of his own farm land and farmed approximately 650 acres. Scotchie

testified that he owned and managed his own farm while Nancy and David both owned and

managed their own separate farms. Scotchie also owned and managed Triple D. Scotchie

described Triple D as a separate entity from his farm, with a separate tax ID number and

separate banking account. Scotchie testified that Nancy was not an owner or manager of

Triple D and was not on Triple D’s banking account. Scotchie testified that Triple D is a

“haul-for-hire” trucking company that uses two 18-wheelers to haul farm and farm-related

products for their customers, including Nancy’s farm, David’s farm, and his own farm.

Scotchie does not charge himself for Triple D’s services, but he does charge Nancy, David,

and his other customers.

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Bluebook (online)
Joe Willie Yates v. Triple D, Inc., Nancy Denton, Scotchie Denton, Individually and Benchmark Insurance Company (Triple D Inc.), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joe-willie-yates-v-triple-d-inc-nancy-denton-scotchie-denton-missctapp-2020.