Simons v. SWF Plywood Company

552 P.2d 268, 26 Or. App. 137, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1615
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 26, 1976
Docket75-1784-E-3, CA 5676
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 552 P.2d 268 (Simons v. SWF Plywood Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simons v. SWF Plywood Company, 552 P.2d 268, 26 Or. App. 137, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1615 (Or. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*139 THORNTON, J.

The sole issue presented in this workmen’s compensation appeal is whether the claimant was acting within the course of his employment at the time he was seriously injured in an automobile accident. Former ORS 656.002(7)(a). The hearings referee found that claimant had abandoned his employment prior to the time of the accident and affirmed the employer’s denial of benefits. The Workmen’s Compensation Board reversed and the circuit court upheld that determination.

On the date of the injury claimant was employed as general manager for Southwest Forest Plywood Company, a subsidiary of Southwest Forest Industries. Claimant’s home was in Corvallis. His responsibilities consisted of supervising all Southwest Forest Plywood operations in Oregon, including plant operations in Albany, Grants Pass and White City.

On June 5, 1974, claimant, after attending an executive meeting of the corporation in Albany, drove to Eugene with David Rice, the company’s supervisor and his immediate superior, for the purpose of viewing corporate equipment. After the viewing, at approximately 5 p.m., the two men went to the Eugene airport where they each consumed a mixed drink at the airport lounge. They then flew in a company-leased airplane to Medford, accompanied by C. W. Booth and Kyle Gray, who also occupied executive positions in the corporations. In flight claimant drank a second mixed drink and discussed business matters with the other men.

At around 6:30 p.m. the plane arrived at the Med-ford airport. All of the men, with the exception of Booth who went bowling, proceeded directly to the airport bar. 1 The men consumed mixed drinks and talked *140 about business matters and personal matters for several hours until shortly before 11 p.m. The evidence indicates that at least 50 per cent of the conversation pertained to business matters. The only business decision identified by claimant’s witnesses was made early in the evening. During this four-hour period the men drank 11 rounds of alcoholic drinks. Most of the bar bill was paid for by Rice, using his credit card. There was testimony that the employer routinely allowed its executive personnel to bill the company for these expenses.

Claimant testified that he had no recollection of what transpired after he arrived at the airport lounge. He did not remember how much alcohol he drank that evening or how he eventually left the lounge. When the party of four did leave the lounge, Gray and the pilot departed together. Rice assisted claimant from the lounge, placed him in the passenger side of a company car, 2 and drove toward Interstate Highway 1-5. The evidence indicates that claimant and Rice were intending to drive to Grants Pass. Rice, who lived in Grants Pass, was intending to go to his home, while claimant was intending to spend the night in a Grants Pass motel. Apparently Rice took the wrong ramp and ended up driving in a southerly direction in the northbound lanes on 1-5. As a consequence about 10 miles north of Medford their automobile collided head-on with another automobile. Rice and the driver of the northbound vehicle were killed. Claimant was seriously injured.

After a hearing the referee concluded that the claimant "* * * entered on a frolic of his own and reached a level of voluntary intoxication which made him incapable of performing his duties, thereby abandoning his employment.” The Board and the circuit court determined that claimant’s journey was covered *141 because he had not grossly deviated from the course of his employment. 3

It is incumbent upon a claimant seeking workmen’s compensation benefits to prove by a preponderance of the evidence his entitlement to such benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, ORS ch 656. Davis v. Weyerhaeuser Co., 231 Or 596, 373 P2d 985 (1962); Martin v. SAIF, 22 Or App 282, 538 P2d 943 (1975); see also, Rafferty v. SAIF, 21 Or App 680, 536 P2d 540 (1975).

This court has on several occasions considered whether intoxication of the workman at the time of the accident bars recovery of benefits under our Workmen’s Compensation Law. Among those cases are the following:

Boyd v. Francis Ford, Inc., 12 Or App 26, 504 P2d 1387 (1973), involved a car salesman who had been supplied with a demonstrator vehicle which he took home at night, went anywhere at any time soliciting sales. Shortly before his death he had a business meeting at a bar-restaurant. He was killed in a single car accident approximately two hours after this meeting. We held that the salesman’s death was compensable and his widow was entitled to workmen’s compensation even though the salesman had been drinking prior to the accident and supposedly had planned to stop at another restaurant on the way home.

In Fowers v. SAIF, 17 Or App 189, 521 P2d 363, Sup Ct review denied (1974), we held that even though there was no evidence that the decedent, the general manager of a consumer co-op, engaged in any business purposes during two hours which elapsed between the time he left a barber shop and the time he started for his home, and even though investigation of the fatal automobile accident disclosed that at the time his *142 blood alcohol content was .18 per cent, decedent’s death arose out of and in the course of his employment.

In Seidl v. Dick Niles, Inc., 18 Or App 332, 525 P2d 198, Sup Ct review denied (1974), the deceased workman and other employes began drinking after work. Later they attended a company meeting at the employer’s place of business where they began drinking beer, furnished by the employer. Subsequently thereafter they continued drinking in a nearby parking lot. Later decedent was involved in a fatal automobile accident while cruising around the downtown area with fellow employes. We held that the decedent’s death did not occur while the decedent was in the course and scope of his employment.

More recently in O’Connell v. SAIF, 19 Or App 735, 528 P2d 1064 (1974), we held that an accident in which the claimant was injured approximately 80 miles from the employer’s place of business, at 3 a.m., 14 hours after claimant had concluded his business purpose in making the trip, and after claimant had consumed a substantial amount of alcoholic liquor while talking to friends about a matter in which the claimant had been told the employer had no important interest, was not in the scope of employment.

We would summarize our holdings in the above cases as follows: In Boyd and Fowers the accidents were held compensable because the evidence established that each employe’s work permitted him to be driving the automobile when and where he was driving it at the time of the fatal accident, and that the activity in which each was then engaged furthered the business of the employer.

Conversely, in both Seidl

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Bluebook (online)
552 P.2d 268, 26 Or. App. 137, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simons-v-swf-plywood-company-orctapp-1976.