McIlvaine Trucking, Inc. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board

810 A.2d 1280, 570 Pa. 662, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 2443
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 25, 2002
DocketA97-1992
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 810 A.2d 1280 (McIlvaine Trucking, Inc. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIlvaine Trucking, Inc. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, 810 A.2d 1280, 570 Pa. 662, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 2443 (Pa. 2002).

Opinions

OPINION

Justice SAYLOR.

The question presented concerns whether an employment agreement purporting to vest exclusive jurisdiction over work-related injuries within a foreign state’s workers’ compensation system may be enforced, consistent with the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act, where the injury at issue occurred within this Commonwealth.

Appellant Robert E. States (“Claimant”) was employed as an interstate truck driver, by Appellee Mcllvaine Trucking, Inc. (“Employer”), a liquid bulk carrier headquartered in Ohio and operating primarily there, in Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia. At hire (and apparently as a condition of his employment), Claimant signed an agreement to be bound by the workers’ compensation laws of West Virginia should he [665]*665suffer work-related injury.1 In June of 1992, Claimant did sustain injury to his leg and lower back while performing his duties at Employer’s facility located in New Stanton, Pennsylvania, initially resulting in a five-day absence from work, for which he applied for and received benefits under the West Virginia workers’ compensation act. Claimant’s symptoms later recurred following a period of furlough, and he was diagnosed with a disabling back injury in the late spring of 1994. Subsequently, Claimant filed a claim petition under the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act,2 as well as a penalty petition. In response, although acknowledging the fact of the work injury, Employer asserted that the WCJ lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate the petition in light of Claimant’s consent to be bound by the laws of West Virginia. Although Employer acknowledged the Act’s general applicability to instate injuries, it argued that in Section 305.2(d)(5) of the Act the Legislature authorized agreements altering such effect by providing that:

[a]n employe whose duties require him to travel regularly in the service of his employer in this and one or more other states may, by written agreement with his employer, provide that his employment is principally localized in this or another such state, and, unless such other state refuses jurisdiction, such agreement shall be given effect under this act.

77 P.S. § 411.2(d)(5). Employer also contested Claimant’s averments concerning the duration of his injury and liability on the penalty petition.

After a hearing, the workers’ compensation judge (the “WCJ”) issued findings of fact and conclusions of law determining, inter alia, that, because Claimant’s injury occurred in [666]*666Pennsylvania, he was entitled to compensation under the Act notwithstanding the contrary term of the employment agreement. In this regard, the WCJ cited the Act’s general prescription for its own applicability “to all injuries occurring within this Commonwealth.” 77 P.S. § 1. The WCJ rejected Employer’s argument that Section 805.2(d)(5) affords parties the opportunity to bargain concerning the applicability of the Act to in-state injuries, concluding that such provision pertained solely to injuries occurring outside Pennsylvania.3 On consideration of cross-appeals from portions of the WCJ’s determination adverse to the parties’ respective positions, the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (the “Board”) affirmed. Concerning the jurisdictional question, the Board also reasoned that:

the evidence clearly establishes that the work injury occurred at [Employer’s] New Stanton, Pennsylvania facility.... Under Section 305.2(d)(5) the employer and the employee may agree that an employer’s business is principally localized in another state but they may not agree to confer jurisdiction outside of Pennsylvania where jurisdiction would otherwise lie in Pennsylvania. Therefore, the [WCJ] did not err by finding that Pennsylvania had jurisdiction.

(emphasis added)(citing Robert M. Neff, Inc. v. WCAB (Burr), 155 Pa.Cmwlth. 44, 624 A.2d 727 (1993)).

On further appeal, however, the Commonwealth Court reversed. Unlike the WCJ and the Board, the court agreed with Employer’s contention that Section 305.2(d)(5) sanctions employment agreements designating the workers’ compensation law to be applied to job-related injuries incurred by certain traveling employees, regardless of the location of the injury. Specifically, the court stated:

Where the job duties require claimant to travel regularly outside the state, the written employment contract may [667]*667provide where the employment is principally localized and the written employment contract determines which state is vested with jurisdiction to hear the workers’ compensation claim. Here the written employment contract declares that workers’ compensation claims shall be submitted to the state of West Virginia. The claim was submitted to and accepted by the State of West Virginia. We therefore conclude that effect must be given to the agreement; claimant is not entitled to benefits under the Act.

McIlvaine Trucking, Inc. v. WCAB (States), No. 2420 CD 1999, slip op. at 4 (Pa.Cmwlth.Mar.20, 2000). Although its decision was opposite that of the Board, the Commonwealth Court also cited its RobeB M. Neff decision, as well as Creel v. WCAB (Overland Express, Inc.), 164 Pa.Cmwlth. 508, 648 A.2d 784 (1994).

We allowed appeal primarily to consider whether the provisions of the Act pertaining to extraterritorial jurisdiction also may be invoked to foreclose invocation of the Act’s remedial provisions in favor of a worker injured in the Commonwealth. We also consider, more generally, whether the WCJ and the Board were correct in invoking the policy of the Act to negate the effect of the parties’ choice-of-law agreement.

Presently, Claimant advances the position taken by the WCJ and the Board to the effect that Section 305.2(a) of the Act was designed to extend the Act’s protections to injuries occurring outside the Commonwealth. According to Claimant, Section 805.2 in no way sanctions an agreement to avoid Pennsylvania jurisdiction over an in-state injury. Further, Claimant maintains that any such agreement is void as in violation of the Act’s overriding policy to afford compensation for in-state, work-related injuries. In support of Claimant’s position, amicus curiae, the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association, criticizes the Commonwealth Court’s reliance upon Robert M. Neff, since the decision approves the assertion of Pennsylvania jurisdiction over an in-state injury, as well as Creel, since it concerned an extraterritorial injury and thus, unlike the present case, represented an appropriate setting for [668]*668application for Section 305.2. Employer, on the other hand, maintains that Section 305.2(d)(5) authorizes choice-of-law agreements in the workers’ compensation setting governing the conferral of benefits for both in- and out-of-state injuries. Employer asserts that the underlying policy of Section 305.2 is to foster broad predictability in the workers’ compensation process by allowing parties by agreement to ameliorate the administrative burden and uncertainty involved in compliance with the many, and sometimes conflicting, state workers’ compensation systems in force nationwide. Amici curiae, American Trucking Association, Inc.

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McIlvaine Trucking, Inc. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board
810 A.2d 1280 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
810 A.2d 1280, 570 Pa. 662, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 2443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcilvaine-trucking-inc-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pa-2002.