Joplin v. INDUSTRIAL COM'N OF ARIZ.

858 P.2d 669, 175 Ariz. 524, 134 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 10, 1993 Ariz. App. LEXIS 35, 1993 WL 52439
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMarch 2, 1993
Docket1 CA-IC 92-0001
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 858 P.2d 669 (Joplin v. INDUSTRIAL COM'N OF ARIZ.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joplin v. INDUSTRIAL COM'N OF ARIZ., 858 P.2d 669, 175 Ariz. 524, 134 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 10, 1993 Ariz. App. LEXIS 35, 1993 WL 52439 (Ark. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

LANKFORD, Presiding Judge.

This is a special action review of an industrial commission award denying compensation for a nonindustrial auto accident occurring when petitioner employee (“claimant”) was returning home from treatment for his industrial injury. Two issues are presented for review:

(1) Is an injury while traveling for treatment of an industrial injury compensable?
(2) Did claimant remove himself from coverage by a substantial deviation on his return home?

We find that injury while traveling for treatment of an industrial injury is compen-sable. We further find that there is sufficient evidence to support the A.L.J.’s finding that the claimant substantially deviated. Accordingly, we affirm the award.

I.

Claimant injured his left foot at work. His treating physician recommended physical therapy, which was performed at Phoenix Memorial Hospital on Seventh Avenue and Buckeye Road. Claimant resided in Buckeye, Arizona on Buckeye Road and commuted to the hospital three days a week.

On January 3, 1991, claimant suffered injuries in an auto accident while driving home several hours after a physical therapy session. He retained counsel and pursued a tort claim, which he subsequently settled without notice to or consent from the compensation carrier (“Fremont”). Claimant then retained his current workers’ compensation counsel and claimed that his injuries in the auto accident were a compensable consequence of the industrial injury. When Fremont denied liability, claimant requested a hearing under Ariz. Rev.Stat.Ann. (“A.R.S.”) section 23-1061(J) (1983).

At the hearing, claimant testified that he normally drove to the hospital on 1-10 through the interchange (the “stack”) to I-17 and exited at Seventh Avenue. According to claimant, he avoided the stack on his *526 return trip because of a prior accident. He instead normally took 1-17 to Indian School Road, proceeded west to Seventy-fifth Avenue, and then took 1-10 to Buckeye. He also testified that he could not eat before therapy because he sometimes became ill and that his wife wanted him to eat before returning home.

Claimant recalled driving to the hospital on the day of the auto accident but could not recall the circumstances of his physical therapy. The A.L.J., however, accepted testimony from Fremont’s claims supervisor that Claimant had therapy from 8:00 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. According to claimant, he then made several telephone calls to medical supply stores to inquire about purchasing a paraffin bath, which his therapist had recommended for use at home. Claimant testified that before driving to a supply store on south Seventh Street, he drank a cup of coffee in his car. Once at the store, he waited about forty-five minutes for help. Although in his deposition he stated that he had ordered the bath, he testified at the hearing that he had only priced it.

Claimant also testified that after finishing his business at the store, he had another cup of coffee and then began his drive home. He proceeded on 1-17 and exited at Indian School Road. He then drove west to 35th Avenue, stopping at a restaurant for a hamburger. According to claimant, while at the restaurant, he called Fremont to request authorization for the bath. Fremont produced evidence that claimant’s doctor first prescribed the bath on January 15, 1991, and that claimant had first contacted Fremont about it on January 16th.

Claimant testified that he left the restaurant at about 1:00 p.m. and proceeded west on Indian School Road. About fifteen minutes later, while he was stopped at a signal at Fifty-first Avenue, another vehicle rear-ended him.

After the hearing, the parties submitted memoranda. Among other defenses, Fremont argued that Claimant’s account of his destinations and routes after his therapy ended at 8:45 a.m. lacked credibility.

The A.L.J. then issued the award. He assumed that an injury occurring during a commute for medical treatment of an industrial injury is compensable in principle. But he nevertheless denied compensability, reasoning that the claimant had removed himself from the scope of this coverage:

12. Giving applicant the benefit of a doubt, his physical therapy ended at 8:45 A.M. Allowing 15 minutes for his coffee in his car and 15 minutes driving time to the medical supply house, he arrived at the supply house at 9:15 A.M. If he waited 30 to 45 minutes and then drank another cup of coffee in his car before leaving, he left the supply house for home at approximately 10:15 A.M. The subject motor vehicle accident happened 3 hours later at 1:15 P.M.
13. While it seems reasonable that there should be worker’s [sic] compensation coverage when one is traveling to and from medical appointments necessitated by an industrial injury, in the instant proceeding, it appears to the undersigned that applicant’s whereabouts from the time he left the medical supply house until the time the motor vehicle accident happened were such as to take applicant outside the anticipated coverage of the Arizona worker’s [sic] compensation statutes and the case law.

After the A.L.J. affirmed on review, claimant brought this special action.

II.

Whether a deviation from covered employee travel is substantial is generally a question for the fact-finding body. See Sherrill & La Follette v. Herring, 78 Ariz. 332, 338, 279 P.2d 907, 911 (1955) (reasonableness or unreasonableness of time period of a deviation is a fact question). “[T]his Court is not a trier of fact, but must affirm an award of the Industrial Commission if supported by any theory of the evidence.” Fisher Contracting Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 27 Ariz.App. 397, 401, 555 P.2d 366, 370 (1976). We will not substitute our judgment for that of the A.L.J. when a factual determination is involved. Id.

*527 Before reviewing the question of whether this claimant substantially deviated, however, we consider the A.LJ.’s assumption that an injury while traveling for treatment is compensable. We believe that the better rule is to extend coverage to travel for treatment:

[T]he employer is under a statutory duty to furnish medical care, and ... the employee is similarly under a duty to submit to reasonable medical treatment under the act. The provisions of the act, in turn, become by implication part of the employment contract. This being so, the better view appears to be that accidental injuries during a trip made pursuant to this statutory and contractual obligation are work connected.

1 Arthur Larson, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation, § 13.13 at 3-573 (1992).

Although our supreme court has denied coverage for travel to an independent medical examination, Whitington v. Industrial Comm’n, 105 Ariz. 567, 569, 468 P.2d 926

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Bluebook (online)
858 P.2d 669, 175 Ariz. 524, 134 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 10, 1993 Ariz. App. LEXIS 35, 1993 WL 52439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joplin-v-industrial-comn-of-ariz-arizctapp-1993.