Steve Ray Divino v. Uninsured Employer's Fund

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 14, 2020
Docket1990191
StatusUnpublished

This text of Steve Ray Divino v. Uninsured Employer's Fund (Steve Ray Divino v. Uninsured Employer's Fund) 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
Steve Ray Divino v. Uninsured Employer's Fund, (Va. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Beales and Russell UNPUBLISHED

Argued by teleconference

STEVE RAY DIVINO

v. Record No. 1990-19-1

UNINSURED EMPLOYER’S FUND, CAVALIER LAND INC., HARLEYSVILLE INSURANCE COMPANY, JAMES McQUITTY, JR., JIMMY McQUITTY HARDWOOD FLOORS AND MULT. MISC. PROPERTIES ASSOCIATES, LC

MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY HEALTHSMART CASUALTY CLAIMS SOLUTIONS JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES AND UNINSURED EMPLOYER’S FUND JULY 14, 2020

v. Record No. 2036-19-1

STEVE RAY DIVINO, CAVALIER LAND INC., HARLEYSVILLE INSURANCE COMPANY, JAMES McQUITTY, JR., JIMMY McQUITTY HARDWOOD FLOORS AND MULT. MISC. PROPERTIES ASSOCIATES, LC

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

W. Mark Broadwell (Forbes & Broadwell, on briefs), for Steve Ray Divino.

Esther King (Jessica Hacker Trivizas; McCandlish Holton, PC, on briefs), for HealthSmart Casualty Claims Solutions and Uninsured Employer’s Fund.

Adam E. Strauchler (Teumer & Drash, on brief), for Cavalier Land Inc. and Harleysville Insurance Company.

Brian N. Casey (Taylor Walker, P.C., on brief), for Mult. Misc. Properties Associates, LC.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. No brief or argument for James McQuitty, Jr. and Jimmy McQuitty Hardwood Floors.

In this consolidated appeal, claimant Steve Ray Divino contends that the Workers’

Compensation Commission (“Commission”) erred in denying him benefits for an injury he

received while installing laminate flooring. He argues that the Commission erred in finding that

his employer was not subject to the Workers’ Compensation Act (the “Act”) because it had

regularly in service less than three employees. Divino also contends that the Commission erred

in finding that the owner and the property manager of the building where he was working when

he was injured were not his statutory employers under the subcontracted-fraction test of

Code § 65.2-302(B). The Uninsured Employer’s Fund and HealthSmart Casualty Claims

Solutions (collectively, “UEF”) also appealed the Commission’s decision, and, like Divino,

claim that the Commission erred in unanimously finding that the owner and the property

manager were not Divino’s statutory employers.

I. BACKGROUND

On appeal, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the appellees, as we must,

because they prevailed before the Commission. See Osborne v. Forner, 36 Va. App. 91, 95

(2001). So viewed, the record before us establishes that on June 22, 2017, Divino was injured

while working on a laminate flooring project in the Time Building in Norfolk. The Time

Building was owned by Mult. Misc. Properties Associates, LC (“MMPA”) and managed by

Cavalier Land, Inc. (“Cavalier”) pursuant to a verbal contract.

Prior to Divino’s injury, Cavalier had entered into a lease agreement on behalf of MMPA

with CoreVelo, one of the Time Building’s existing tenants. The terms of the lease provided that

CoreVelo, which operates a Pilates and cycling studio, would lease both its current space and an

adjoining vacant space. Pursuant to an amendment to the lease, MMPA was required to perform

certain work on the adjoining space, identified in the lease amendment as the “Landlord’s -2- Work,” to make it suitable for CoreVelo’s use. Cavalier, acting on behalf of MMPA, hired Jim

McQuitty Hardwood Flooring Co. (“McQuitty”), a flooring installation company, to perform the

flooring installation required by the lease amendment. Divino, an employee of McQuitty, was

injured while performing this work.

Divino submitted a claim for benefits to the Commission. During the proceedings,

Divino claimed that McQuitty was liable under the Workers’ Compensation Act as his actual

employer. He also claimed that MMPA and Cavalier were liable under the Act as his statutory

employers. After conducting two hearings, the deputy commissioner denied the claims, finding

none of the alleged employers liable under the Act. Upon review, the full Commission affirmed

the deputy commissioner’s decision, without dissent, and Divino and the UEF timely appealed to

this Court.

Jim McQuitty Hardwood Floor Company

Prior to the hearings before the deputy commissioner, the parties stipulated that Divino

“was an employee of Jim McQuitty Hardwood Floor Co. and/or Jimmy McQuitty in the sense

that McQuitty controlled the means and methods by which the Claimant performed his work,

(i.e., he was not an independent contractor).” McQuitty did not have workers’ compensation

insurance and was not present (or represented) at either of the hearings.

Divino testified that he had worked for McQuitty for approximately thirty years. His job

was to “[p]ut down floors, sand and finish floors, and whatever needed to be done.” He testified

that in 2016, McQuitty had five employees but then the “business changed.” He stated that by

late 2016, the company no longer had an office, and it had started storing all of its materials in

various places – including in Divino’s home. Divino testified that in 2017, the company only

had two employees in addition to Mr. McQuitty, whom Divino described as “the head man –

president.”

-3- Divino submitted into evidence the Articles of Incorporation and the Certificate of

Incorporation of “Jim McQuitty Hardwood Floor Co.” filed with the Virginia State Corporation

Commission (SCC). The effective date of the Certificate of Incorporation was August 18, 1997.

Divino also submitted into evidence W-2s for 2015 and 2016. Divino stated that, when the

accident occurred, he was working twenty to thirty hours a week for McQuitty and was making

$13 per hour. That year, unlike prior years, he was not given a W-2. He was paid by cash or

check and had no records of his earnings.

The deputy commissioner concluded that Divino failed to prove that McQuitty was an

employer subject to the Workers’ Compensation Act because Divino did not prove that the

company had three or more employees regularly in service. The deputy commissioner stated that

“[t]here is no evidence of record to support a conclusion that Employer was still operating as a

corporate entity at the time of Claimant’s injury in 2017.” The deputy commissioner instead

found that Mr. McQuitty was a sole proprietor “who regularly employed only two employees at

the time of Claimant’s injury.”

The full Commission affirmed the decision of the deputy commissioner although it noted

that the deputy commissioner had erroneously placed the burden on Divino to prove that

McQuitty had three or more employees. The Commission explained that once an employee has

proven his injury occurred while employed in Virginia, the employer has the burden of

producing sufficient evidence that it has less than three employees regularly in service in

Virginia. Even though no representative of McQuitty appeared at the hearings, the Commission

stated that it was still required to “determine whether a preponderance of the evidence

established Jim McQuitty Hardwood Floor Co. was not subject to the Act.”

The Commission found that Divino’s testimony that McQuitty “typically had three

persons, including [Mr.] McQuitty, working in 2017” was undisputed and, therefore, the issue of

-4- whether the company was liable under the Act turned on whether Mr. “McQuitty himself was an

employee.” The Commission noted that the term “employee” under the Workers’ Compensation

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