Toyota of Pensacola v. Maines
This text of 558 So. 2d 1072 (Toyota of Pensacola v. Maines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
TOYOTA OF PENSACOLA and Adjustco, Inc., Appellants,
v.
Buck E. MAINES, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*1073 Roderic G. Magie, of Karl, McConnaughhay, Roland & Maida, P.A., Pensacola, for appellants.
Thomas F. Condon, of Mitchell & Condon, P.A., Pensacola, for appellee.
ERVIN, Judge.
In this workers' compensation appeal, Toyota and Adjustco, Inc., the employer/carrier (E/C), contest an order of the judge of compensation claims (JCC), which determined that claimant's injury was compensable on the ground that he was exposed to a special hazard of employment. We affirm.
On November 27, 1987, claimant, an automobile salesman, received his weekly paycheck and then asked his supervisor for permission to leave the premises for a few minutes to drive to a nearby bank to cash the check.[1] The dealership fronts on Highway 29, a four-lane road which runs north and south. Claimant drove his automobile from the dealership, and, while waiting in the median strip of the highway in order to make a left-hand turn into the southbound lane, was struck by another vehicle, causing him grievous injuries. Evidence presented in the form of expert testimony by a Department of Transportation (DOT) employee disclosed that the stretch of highway in front of the dealership where the claimant was injured was particularly hazardous, in that within a mile of the highway on either side of the dealership the DOT had reported 41 accidents during the years 1985-86. Of those reported accidents, 78 percent transpired while motorists were entering or exiting the highway. Based upon these statistics, the witness opined that the particular area of the highway where the accident occurred was a dangerous location, and the chances of a motorist being involved in an accident there were greater than at most comparable areas on other highways in Florida.
After considering all of the facts in the case, the JCC concluded that, because the evidence indicated that the particular location of the highway was uniquely hazardous, and because the injury occurred at the very threshold of the business premises, which was the only means of southbound exit, the going and coming rule[2] did not bar the claim; therefore the injury occurred within the course and scope of employment.
Although we agree with the JCC's conclusion, we feel constrained to point out that in the absence of some particular circumstance or exception, an injury that occurs to an employee while he or she is off the employment premises for the purpose of cashing or depositing a payroll check would ordinarily be deemed to be noncompensable. In surveying applicable cases relating to the issue, Professor Larson comments that without some definite element of benefit to the employer, the special facts in those cases permitting compensation[3]
*1074 cannot be taken to support a general rule that journeys to cash pay checks are in the course of employment. Any such extrapolation would quickly get out of hand, since trips might be taken at any hour of the day or night to almost any place where claimant happened to be able to cash checks. For the time being, it would be prudent to assume that there must be at least as strong a showing of special circumstances as in the New York cases before such a journey has a chance of being covered and even then it must be recognized that these cases are poised on the outermost limits of expansion of the course of employment concept.
1A A. Larson, The Law of Workmen's Compensation § 26.30, at 5-247 (1985) (hereafter "Larson").
Professor Larson's cautionary statements are well exemplified by Hinkle v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Bd., 175 Cal. App.3d 587, 221 Cal. Rptr. 40 (1985), in which the employee, having picked up his paycheck at his post office box, deposited it at his credit union and, while returning to his place of work, was injured in an automobile accident. In a policy similar to that followed by the employer in the case at bar, the employer in Hinkle permitted its workers to leave the business premises in order to cash or deposit their weekly paychecks. In holding that the injuries suffered by Hinkle did not arise out of and occur in the course of his employment, the court applied the same rule routinely applied in California cases involving injuries suffered by employees during unpaid off-premises lunch periods, which recognizes that in the absence of special circumstances, such as a showing that the employee was performing a service for the benefit of the employer, the claim is not considered compensable. Hinkle, 175 Cal. App.3d at 590-91, 221 Cal. Rptr. at 42.
In reaching its decision, the Hinkle court followed the rule earlier stated in County of Los Angeles v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Bd. (Swift), 145 Cal. App.3d 418, 193 Cal. Rptr. 374 (1983), involving a claim for compensation brought by an employee who was injured during a lunch break when a car crashed into a food stand where she was eating lunch. Prior to the accident, the claimant had made an arrangement with her employer allowing her to work through her two paid coffee breaks in order to extend her lunch break by one-half hour. Consequently, at the time she suffered her injuries, she was on a partially paid lunch break. In affirming the denial of compensability, the California Court of Appeals concluded that the course of employment requirement could not be met in that "the employer's only connection to the injury is to allow an employee to rearrange her work time and off-duty time for the employee's convenience or benefit." Swift, 145 Cal. App.3d at 423, 193 Cal. Rptr. at 376.
Applying the Swift rule to the facts before it, the court in Hinkle concluded:
Similarly, here, the fact that, once a week, a benevolent employer allowed a one-hour unpaid lunch period to be extended to one-and-a-half hours, without loss of pay, does not change the basic character of the off-premises lunch period. As in Swift, the injuries here occurred at a place removed from the employer's premises over which the employer had no authority. Moreover, again as in Swift, there is no evidence that applicant was rendering any service benefiting his employer during the extended lunch period or that the employer exerted any control over applicant's activities and movements during that time. Consonant with Swift, the allowance here of an additional one-half hour to the lunch period without loss of pay should not extend the employment risk. Since applicant's employer's only connection to his *1075 injury was that it allowed applicant some additional off-duty time for his convenience and benefit, the injuries are noncompensable.
Hinkle, 175 Cal. App.3d at 592, 221 Cal. Rptr. at 43 (footnote omitted).
The above comments by both Professor Larson and the California Court of Appeals offer strong persuasive authority for the conclusion that without the existence of some special circumstance, injuries suffered by an employee off the premises of his or her employment while on a temporary mission for the purpose of depositing or cashing a paycheck, even with the employer's permission and with no loss of pay, cannot be considered within the course and scope of employment.
Nevertheless, as the JCC below correctly observed, the existence of the special hazard exception[4]
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558 So. 2d 1072, 1990 WL 28173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toyota-of-pensacola-v-maines-fladistctapp-1990.