Xudong Yang's Case

130 N.E.3d 219, 95 Mass. App. Ct. 749
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 13, 2019
DocketAC 18-P-1309
StatusPublished

This text of 130 N.E.3d 219 (Xudong Yang's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Xudong Yang's Case, 130 N.E.3d 219, 95 Mass. App. Ct. 749 (Mass. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

MILKEY, J.

*221 *749 Xudong Yang (the decedent) was the principal of a family-owned business known as Oriental International Trading Corp. (OITC). On February 4, 2014, he died in an automobile accident. His widow, Chuan Zhang, 2 filed a claim seeking death benefits from Norfolk & Dedham Mutual Fire Insurance Company, OITC's workers' compensation insurer (the insurer). 3 An administrative judge at the Department of Industrial Accidents (department) denied the claim after a three-day hearing, concluding that the trip during which the decedent was killed was not *750 undertaken in the course of OITC's business. 4 After the department's reviewing board summarily adopted the administrative judge's decision, Zhang appealed to this court pursuant to G. L. c. 152, § 12 (2). 5 For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

Background . 6 According to its articles of organization, OITC was formed "[t]o own and operate [an] import and export business in Norwood, Massachusetts, and to generally engage in and carry on any business related thereto." OITC specifically served as a "manufacturer's representative" that imported chemicals from China for sale to domestic companies that manufactured pharmaceuticals, food supplements, and animal feed. The decedent was "solely responsible for running [OITC's] business at all times prior to his death." In Zhang's own words, the decedent "called all the shots." Zhang also worked at OITC, and she and the decedent were OITC's sole officers, directors, and shareholders.

In 2005, OITC purchased a workers' compensation policy from the insurer to cover its employees. On its application for the policy, OITC listed four employees (including the decedent and Zhang), two in sales and two doing clerical work. No out-of-State travel was indicated on the application, which also stated that OITC was not "engaged in any other type of business." OITC renewed its workers' compensation policy annually, and the insurer performed "premium audits" to review whether its premiums should be adjusted based on the risks presented. 7 According *751 *222 to the insurer's underwriter, OITC's being engaged in "any other business ... was never indicated at any point in the file including [through] subsequent premium audits that were done over the course of the policy." Premiums periodically were adjusted to reflect up-to-date information regarding the number of employees, their job classifications, and their current salaries.

The decedent also was engaged in various other commercial enterprises. One of those businesses was a restaurant in Belmont, New Hampshire, known as the Garden Oasis Family Restaurant (the restaurant). 8 The restaurant was operated by Garden Oasis Family Restaurant LLC, a limited liability corporation that the decedent formed and incorporated in New Hampshire. The New Hampshire property formally was managed by a separate entity, 223 DW Highway, LLC. 9

The restaurant, which opened in 2010, had its own New Hampshire-based staff (a manager, cooks, and waiters). However, the restaurant's bookkeeping was done out of OITC's Norwood offices by the person who served as OITC's accounts manager. OITC itself entered into the construction contracts for the restaurant, and "[t]he funds to build the restaurant came from the main checking account at OITC." Moreover, although the restaurant had its own bank account, at the direction of the decedent, OITC's accounts manager frequently used OITC's bank account to pay the restaurant's ongoing bills, including mortgage payments, utility bills, and the like. Such financial intermingling extended beyond the decedent's corporate entities to his personal finances as well. For example, "OITC paid bills personal to the [decedent] including but not limited to his daughter's college *752 tuition, personal loans[,] and his mother's funeral."

The restaurant venture was short-lived, and it closed by the end of 2010, the same year it opened. According to Zhang's testimony, the decedent eventually decided to sell the property on which the restaurant had been located, because the failed venture had become a financial drain. 10 While driving to New Hampshire to meet a real estate broker and a potential buyer, the decedent was killed in a car accident.

*223 Discussion . From its enactment in 1911, the workers' compensation act has covered injuries "arising out of and in the course of [an employee's] employment." G. L. c. 152, § 26. The just-quoted language was interpreted generally as covering injuries incurred at the workplace, but not those incurred in travel away from the workplace. 11 Bell's Case , 238 Mass. 46 , 50, 130 N.E. 67 (1921) ("If [an employee] is injured on the public street, he does not come within the benefit of the act, unless his work is of a kind which is pursued on the highway and he is engaged at the time of the accident in the actual work for which he is employed, and not merely using the highway in the exercise of the public right of passage").

In 1927, the Legislature amended the statute to expand its coverage regarding work-related travel. 12 St. 1927, c. 309, § 3. See Higgins's Case , 284 Mass. 345 , 349, 187 N.E. 592 (1933) (characterizing 1927 amendment as creating "an additional class of compensable personal injuries"). Specifically, the Legislature expanded the language of the statute to also cover injuries "arising out of an ordinary risk of the street while actually engaged, with [the] employer's authorization, in the business affairs or undertakings of [the] employer." St. 1927, c. 309, § 3. In determining whether *753 employee travel was covered under this language, "[t]he test or legal standard to be applied is whether the employment or something else sent the employee on the journey."

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Bluebook (online)
130 N.E.3d 219, 95 Mass. App. Ct. 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/xudong-yangs-case-massappct-2019.