NiSource, Inc. v. Thomas

674 S.E.2d 581, 53 Va. App. 692, 2009 Va. App. LEXIS 161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 7, 2009
Docket0423082
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 674 S.E.2d 581 (NiSource, Inc. v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NiSource, Inc. v. Thomas, 674 S.E.2d 581, 53 Va. App. 692, 2009 Va. App. LEXIS 161 (Va. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

JEAN HARRISON CLEMENTS, Senior Judge.

NiSource, Inc. and Ace American Insurance Company (collectively, employer) appeal a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission (commission) terminating the outstanding award of temporary total disability benefits to Eric Shawn Thomas (claimant) and awarding him temporary partial disability benefits instead. In reaching that decision, the commission determined that claimant had engaged in post-injury, light-duty work and failed to report earnings. The commission imputed a post-injury average weekly wage of $320 to claimant and calculated the amount of temporary partial disability benefits to award him on that basis. On appeal, employer contends the commission erred in imputing wages of only $320 to claimant. On cross-appeal, claimant contends the commission erred in finding he had returned to work and imputing an average weekly wage to him. Claimant also contends the commission abused its discretion in refusing to assess attorney’s fees and costs against employer. Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the commission.

*697 I. BACKGROUND

Claimant sustained injuries to his chest, abdomen, left side, and right shoulder while working as a contract inspector for employer on January 4, 2006. Employer accepted claimant’s injuries as compensable, and the commission entered an award for temporary total disability benefits in the amount of $736 per week, commencing January 12, 2006, and continuing. Claimant did not return to work with employer.

In October 2006, employer discontinued paying temporary total disability benefits to claimant. On November 8, 2006, following the commission’s rejection on technical grounds of its two previous applications, employer filed an application for a hearing alleging that claimant had returned to work on or before July 11, 2006, and had failed to report earnings as required by Code § 65.2-712. 1 Employer sought termination of the outstanding award and a credit for its overpayment of compensation. On November 20, 2006, claimant filed a motion for the assessment against employer of his costs and “a ten percent penalty on all compensation unjustly withheld” by employer. Claimant alleged that employer’s application for a hearing was filed “without reasonable grounds and in bad faith.” These matters came before the deputy commissioner for a hearing on May 7,2007.

At the hearing, claimant defended employer’s application on the grounds that he had “not returned to work” and had “earned no wages” and that there was “no medical evidence of a physical capacity to perform sustained employment.” Employer defended claimant’s motion for costs and a penalty on the ground that its application was “grounded in fact and law.”

Claimant testified at the hearing that he formed Combat Solutions, a law enforcement and military product supply company, on January 10, 2006. Claimant was the corporation’s registered agent and, pursuant to the documents filed *698 with the State Corporation Commission, he and his wife, Michelle Thomas, were the company’s only two officers. In February 2006, the company purchased and took over the operation of a business owned by Todd Bahr. Claimant wrote a check to Bahr for $50,000 for the business. On March 19, 2007, claimant and his wife executed paperwork issuing the shares of the company solely to claimant’s wife.

Claimant testified that he was identified on the company’s website as an “owner/operator” of the company, as a certified National Rifle Association instructor, and as a trainer for QuickClot products, which the company sold. Claimant also testified that, although it was “a false statement,” he was identified on the company’s website, for marketing purposes, as a former United States Army Ranger. 2

Claimant further testified that the company had “actively [sold its] product” via a Combat Solutions store on eBay until three months before the hearing. However, the company produced no documentation for those transactions.

Claimant also stated that the company had a “brick and mortar” store in Fredericksburg, Virginia, which was open Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and on Saturdays from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Claimant admitted he routinely went to the store, but, “never [having] thought about it,” could not give an “exact average” of the days per week he had been in the store since January 2006. He testified that “[i]t could [have been] anywhere from one day to four days” per week. When asked if he agreed that he had previously testified in a deposition that he went to the store an average of four days per week since January 2006, claimant stated that he believed he had said “three or four” days, but acknowledged he could not remember exactly what he had said. Claimant later testified that he went to the store “anywhere from two, three, four days” a week and had “probably ... never been there all six days” during a week. He further *699 testified that he had never “been placed on a regular work schedule there.”

Claimant stated that, when he went to the store, he “usually” watched television, played solitaire, or took naps in the store’s backroom. When the store was busy, he helped out by answering the phone and working in the store. He worked the front counter, greeted customers, rang up sales, and talked to customers about firearms and ammunition. He testified he worked alone in the store for more than 1 hour approximately 15 to 20 times. He also admitted he wrote 139 checks on behalf of the company from February 2006 to January 2007; worked at a gun show where the company had a booth on August 19, 2006; taught a home firearm safety class at the company’s store on August 9, 2006; trained a company employee to teach QuickClot classes and helped him teach a three-hour training session; and alone executed a contract on August 7, 2006, engaging Walter Darrow as the company’s accountant. Additionally, claimant acknowledged that he had personal business cards for the company with his name on them and that he drove a vehicle that had a Combat Solutions logo emblazoned on its side.

Claimant denied receiving any payment from Combat Solutions for the work he did for the company. He stated that he received reimbursement from the company for a computer he purchased. He also testified that he had to sell a boat and two motorcycles after his workers’ compensation payments stopped. It was his understanding the business lost $27,000 the first year of its operation, but admitted that this understanding of the company’s finances was based solely on the profit and loss statement prepared shortly before the hearing by the company’s accountant. He testified that his wife handled the company’s finances.

Claimant further stated that, in addition to providing training for QuickClot products, the company offered a handgun class every week as well as courses in “home firearm safety” and “personal protection.” Claimant testified that, except for the one class he taught on August 9,2006, when he filled in for *700 Todd Bahr, those classes were taught by Bahr, the person from whom claimant and his wife purchased the business, and Curt Sebastian, the only employee actually on the company’s payroll.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
674 S.E.2d 581, 53 Va. App. 692, 2009 Va. App. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nisource-inc-v-thomas-vactapp-2009.