Court Opinion

ID: 4541047
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-06-12 14:11:41.565742+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:48:20.955418
License: Public Domain

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

R&L Carriers,                                  :
                       Petitioner              :
                                               :   No. 1164 C.D. 2019
               v.                              :
                                               :   Submitted: February 21, 2020
Workers’ Compensation Appeal                   :
Board (Timothy Grace, East Coast               :
Driver Solutions, QBE Insurance                :
Company and Uninsured Employers                :
Guaranty Fund),                                :
                   Respondents                 :

BEFORE:        HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
               HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
               HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH                                               FILED: June 12, 2020

               R&L Carriers (R&L) petitions for review from the July 24, 2019 order
of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board), which affirmed in part and
reversed in part the decision of a workers’ compensation judge (WCJ) granting the
claim petition filed by Timothy Grace (Claimant) against R&L, and denying the
claim petitions filed by Claimant against East Coast Driver Solutions (East Coast),
QBE Insurance Company (QBE), and the Uninsured Employers Guaranty Fund
(UEGF) pursuant to the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act).1 We affirm.

      1
          Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§1-1041.4, 2501-2710.
                                Facts and Procedural History
                On March 17, 2017, Claimant filed a workers’ compensation (WC)
claim petition and penalty petition naming East Coast as his employer and alleging
that he was injured at work on September 20, 2016, and that the Act had been
violated because his medical bills were unpaid. That same day, Claimant also filed a
claim petition alleging that R&L was his employer. Further, on April 10, 2017,
Claimant filed a notice of claim against uninsured employer, alleging that East Coast
was uninsured, and on May 2, 2017, filed a claim petition for benefits from the
uninsured employer, i.e., East Coast, as well as the UEGF. Subsequently, on May 9,
2017, the UEGF filed a joinder petition, joining R&L as an additional employer. On
November 30, 2017, a WCJ issued an interlocutory “410 Order,” which directed
R&L and East Coast/QBE to each pay 50 percent of Claimant’s medical expenses
and total disability benefits beginning September 20, 2016.
                On January 8, 2018, Claimant filed a penalty petition naming R&L, and
a day later filed another penalty petition naming East Coast. On February 2, 2018,
R&L submitted a notice of temporary compensation payable, and on February 15,
2018, submitted a notice of conversion of the temporary compensation into
compensation payable.
                As part of the claim petition and penalty petition proceedings, the UEGF
introduced the June 28, 2017 deposition of Claimant.2 Claimant stated that he was
involved in a work injury on September 20, 2016, when he was driving a tractor
trailer truck. Claimant affirmed that before starting to work for East Coast, he filled
out a paper application that he obtained from East Coast at its office. Later, East
Coast called Claimant to tell him he was hired and to inform him about the company
to which he would be assigned. In particular, Claimant explained that Meghan

      2
          Only those facts that are relevant to R&L’s appeal are discussed herein.

                                                  2
Marcalongo at East Coast hired him and told him that he would be assigned to a
trucking company, R&L, and would operate according to R&L’s work preferences.
Claimant stated that East Coast texted him on his phone every Friday to tell him
where he was expected to work the next week and that he stopped at East Coast every
Friday to pick up his paycheck. Claimant testified that if he needed to take sick time
or vacation time he would contact East Coast. He stated that East Coast assigned him
to any contracts it had at the time, but that he could not recall driving for a company
other than R&L after being hired by East Coast. Claimant indicated that he had to
provide East Coast with a valid commercial driver’s license (CDL) and that East
Coast’s safety director, Skyler Sloan, conducted safety training, which included
asking him different questions and requiring him to undergo a random drug test. He
stated that if he had a human resources problem on the job he would notify Mr. Sloan.
(Findings of Fact (F.F.) No. 35a-b, d-f.)
             With respect to the injury, Claimant stated that he was injured during a
home delivery for R&L in Trevose, Pennsylvania, on September 20, 2016. Claimant
explained that a hand-jack he was using to lift a pallet broke, which caused the pallet
to shift and hit him in the arms. Claimant testified he was in a lot of pain and
reported the injury to R&L the same day it occurred. R&L told him that East Coast
would take care of it, so Claimant then reported his injury to Mr. Sloan. Thereafter,
Claimant received a letter from East Coast stating that he would continue to receive
pay in the amount of $871.00 per week until he was cleared to return to work.
However, Claimant had not received a paycheck since March 2016. Claimant also
stated that during the time he worked for East Coast he was only assigned to the R&L
contract. (F.F. No. 35g-l.)
             Claimant testified that he considered R&L to be his employer on
September 20, 2016, and that East Coast merely told him who he would be working
for on that particular day. Claimant stated that R&L instructed him to conduct “pre-

                                            3
and post-trip [inspections] of the [R&L] equipment at all times and [that] all the
equipment he operated was owned by R&L.” (F.F. No. 35b.) The trucks and trailers
that he drove all said R&L on them; however, he never wore an R&L uniform. When
Claimant delivered equipment to customers, the bills indicated they were from R&L.
Claimant also explained that he used R&L’s dispatch and that his driver’s log was an
R&L log book. Claimant stated that when he worked for R&L, R&L’s dispatcher
provided Claimant his delivery paperwork, told him what type of truck to drive, and
would “run the bill through the scanner in the truck so [R&L] would know where” he
was located.     (F.F. No. 35c.)   Claimant stated that the conversations regarding
deliveries always took place at R&L’s facility in New Jersey, that Claimant did not
have “any say in the assignments,” id., and that he would go to R&L’s facility every
day. Claimant testified that R&L would tell him if it was unsatisfied with his
performance and could refuse to allow him to continue to work at its facility. (F.F.
No. 35r, t-w.)
             Claimant stated that after he was injured he took his medical bills to East
Coast, which told him it “would take care of them,” and if he needed prescriptions
“he was supplied cash by East Coast for the prescriptions.” (F.F. No. 35f.) Claimant
explained that he had a conversation with East Coast’s operations manager, Jerry
Walker, who told him that “the bills were taken care of.” Id. Claimant indicated that
he had 20 years of experience as a truck driver and had to recertify his license every 4
years. Claimant also stated that East Coast “did not provide him any training, health
insurance, pension, retirement benefit or social security benefits,” that he was paid by
the hour, and that he did not receive “sick time or sick leave” from East Coast.
Claimant only visited East Coast on Fridays in order to pick up his paycheck.
Claimant characterized East Coast as a company that provided truck drivers to other
companies, but that did not conduct any of its own deliveries. Claimant indicated that
when he filled out his application with East Coast, the application did not reference

                                           4
R&L, and if East Coast had informed him that another company required his services
he would have been required to work for that company. Claimant also stated that he
never received a paycheck from R&L. (F.F. No. 35v, x-y, aa-ff.)
             Claimant also testified at a WCJ hearing that took place on November
29, 2017. Claimant again confirmed that on September 20, 2016, he was working as
a truck driver for R&L, to whom he had been assigned by East Coast. He explained
that every morning he reported to R&L’s dispatcher for his assignment, that he
completed a pre-trip inspection of the equipment before each trip, and that if there
was a problem with the equipment he would write up a vehicle report and notify
R&L’s mechanics. He testified that at the end of each week he informed an R&L
employee, named Matt, that he was done for the week, and that Matt would tell
Claimant he was needed for the following week. Claimant also stated that an East
Coast employee would text him every Friday night to tell him to report to R&L the
next week. He testified that if he had any problems during the week, including
having to miss work due to being sick, he contacted R&L. Claimant explained that
“each day he would go to [R&L] [to] pick up the truck, drive the route, and then drop
the truck off at R&L.” (F.F. No. 35bb.) Claimant stated that “he would not go to East
Coast for anything but to pick up his paycheck.” Id. Claimant testified that East
Coast continued to pay his wages from September 20, 2016, through March 3, 2017.
(F.F. No. 35hh-jj, ll, oo.)
             The UEGF also introduced the Driver Service Agreement (Agreement),
dated September 26, 2013, between East Coast and R&L. The Agreement stated that
East Coast desired to perform services for R&L “by furnishing drivers, who shall be
employees” of East Coast, to operate motor vehicles owned or leased by R&L and
used in R&L’s business. (F.F. No. 35kk.) The Agreement also stated that East Coast
would be responsible for the WC claims of drivers and that R&L would be
responsible for automobile and all other liabilities caused by the acts or omissions of

                                          5
drivers conducting R&L’s business. East Coast also represented in the Agreement
that it would maintain WC coverage for drivers assigned to R&L and that East Coast
would indemnify, hold harmless, and defend R&L to the extent of any losses incurred
by R&L as a result of East Coast’s failure to satisfy its WC responsibilities. Yet, with
respect to “Customer Control and Supervision,” the Agreement stated that drivers on
assignments would be “borrowed servants” of R&L and would be “under the sole
control and supervision” of R&L. (F.F. No. 36a-c; Reproduced Record (R.R.) at
278a-79a.)
             The WCJ credited Claimant’s testimony that he was hired by East Coast,
received his wages from East Coast, and reported problems to East Coast. However,
the WCJ gave this testimony limited weight and placed greater weight on Claimant’s
testimony that he reported to R&L on a daily basis, received his work assignments
from R&L’s dispatchers regarding when and where to travel for deliveries, used
R&L’s trucks and trailers, contacted R&L’s dispatchers if he had work problems, and
R&L could refuse to permit Claimant to continue working if it was unsatisfied with
Claimant’s performance. Accordingly, the WCJ found that Claimant’s testimony
established that Claimant worked under the direction and control of R&L. The WCJ
also found that Claimant’s testimony was supported by the Agreement and,
particularly, its provision that drivers on assignments were considered borrowed
servants of R&L and were under the sole control and supervision of R&L. Thus, the
WCJ found that “Claimant’s credible testimony establishe[d] . . . [that] Claimant was
a borrowed servant under the direction of [R&L] who [was] [Claimant’s] statutory
employer.” (F.F. No. 40.)
             The WCJ also found that Claimant was injured on September 20, 2016,
while in the course and scope of employment and while employed by R&L. The
WCJ found that the nature of Claimant’s injury was a “bilateral bicep tendon tear
with a right arthroscopic repair,” which rendered Claimant temporarily totally

                                           6
disabled from September 21, 2016, onward. (F.F. No. 45.) Additionally, the WCJ
found that QBE was not responsible for payment of WC benefits for the September
20, 2016 injury. (F.F. Nos. 45, 47, 49.)
              Because he determined that Claimant was a borrowed servant under the
direction and control of R&L, the WCJ concluded that R&L was liable for payment
of compensation at the weekly rate of $871.00 beginning September 21, 2016,
ongoing, and liable for the payment of medical treatment provided for the September
20, 2016 injury. (WCJ’s Conclusions of Law (C.L.) Nos. 3-5.)3 However, since he
determined that the UEGF was not at risk for the injury and that East Coast was not
the employer liable for WC benefits, the WCJ dismissed those parties. (C.L. Nos. 13-
14.) Finally, the WCJ required R&L to reimburse East Coast and QBE for any
compensation and medical expenses paid by those parties to date. (C.L. No. 15.)
              R&L appealed the decision and order of the WCJ to the Board, arguing
that the WCJ erred in finding R&L liable on the basis that Claimant was a borrowed
employee and that East Coast admitted liability because it made payments to
Claimant in lieu of compensation. Based on its review of the evidence, the Board
determined that the WCJ did not err in concluding that R&L was liable for the
payment of WC benefits because Claimant was R&L’s borrowed employee. (Board
decision at 8.) Although R&L argued that the WCJ had overlooked evidence that
East Coast initially paid Claimant’s medical expenses and wages and that the
Agreement stated that drivers were employees of East Coast and that East Coast
would maintain WC coverage for drivers assigned to R&L, the Board found that

       3
          The WCJ also concluded that R&L had violated the Act due to its unreasonable and
excessive delay of payment of compensation and, consequently, assessed a 50% penalty against
R&L for all compensation delayed during the period from March 4, 2017, through February 2,
2018, payable directly to Claimant, plus statutory interest. In addition, the WCJ required R&L to
pay a 20% quantum meruit attorney fee, concluding that R&L did not have a reasonable basis for its
delay in complying with the 410 Order. (C.L. Nos. 8, 16-17.)

                                                7
R&L disregarded the most important factor of all, i.e., “the right to control the
performance of the work.” Id. Examining Claimant’s testimony, which was deemed
credible by the WCJ, as well as the relevant provisions of the Agreement, the Board
concluded that “[b]ecause the Agreement says that [R&L] would have the right of
control over its borrowed employees[’] work and manner of performance, and the
evidence show[ed] that [R&L] did actually have control, . . . the WCJ’s analysis
[was] legally correct.” Id. at 10.
              The Board also concluded that, although East Coast paid Claimant’s
medical expenses and wages from the time of injury on September 20, 2016, until
March 3, 2017, Claimant had not asserted a claim of estoppel against East Coast on
either his own behalf or on behalf of R&L. Id. at 11. The Board further determined
that East Coast’s action of paying wages did not mean that Claimant could not be the
borrowed employee of R&L.4 Rather than focusing on payment of wages, the Board
held that the WCJ focused on the issue of control, which weighed against R&L. Id.
Accordingly, the Board affirmed the WCJ’s order and decision to the extent that the
WCJ concluded that Claimant was R&L’s borrowed employee and that R&L was
liable for the payment of Claimant’s WC benefits.5

       4
          The Board also noted that, after initially making payments to Claimant, East Coast went
out of business. In addition, although the Board observed that R&L, as a matter of civil law, may
have a contractual right of contribution and/or indemnification from East Coast under the
Agreement, the Court declines to address the merits of this issue or otherwise comment upon the
viability of such a claim.

       5
          R&L also argued on appeal to the Board that the WCJ erred in granting Claimant’s penalty
petition and in requiring R&L to pay quantum meruit attorney fees. The Board agreed, concluding
that R&L had not violated the Act and that R&L’s contest of the penalty petition was reasonable.
(Board decision at 12, 14.) Thus, the Board reversed the WCJ’s order to the extent it granted
Claimant’s penalty petition and assessed quantum meruit attorney fees against R&L. Id. at 14.

                                                8
                                          Discussion
              R&L now petitions for review of the Board’s order,6 arguing that the
Board erred in (1) failing to conclude that East Coast accepted liability for Claimant’s
work injury, and (2) concluding that R&L is Claimant’s borrowed employer.

      A. Whether East Coast Accepted Liability for Claimant’s WC Benefits
              We first address whether the Board erred in failing to recognize that East
Coast accepted liability for Claimant’s injury.               R&L argues that the Board
disregarded substantial evidence that East Coast admitted liability for Claimant’s WC
claim and that East Coast was responsible for Claimant’s WC benefits.                       R&L
contends that East Coast sent Claimant a letter after the injury admitting liability for
Claimant’s WC claim, and then made payments in lieu of compensation from
October 2016 until February 2017, in the weekly amount of $861.00. R&L also
observes that East Coast never issued a document denying the claim. Relying solely
on Kelly v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (DePalma Roofing), 669 A.2d
1023 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1995), R&L argues that when an employer makes payments to an
employee “in lieu of workers’ compensation, and fails to file a [n]otice of
[c]ompensation [d]enial, then the employer is estopped from denying compensability
for the claim and the employer’s action is deemed an admission of liability, as if the
employer had filed a [n]otice of [c]ompensation [p]ayable.” (R&L’s Br. at 16)
(emphasis omitted).

       6
         Our scope of review is limited to determining whether findings of fact are supported by
substantial evidence, whether an error of law has been committed, or whether constitutional rights
have been violated. Section 704 of the Administrative Agency Law, 2 Pa.C.S. §704; Meadow
Lakes Apartments v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Spencer), 894 A.2d 214, 216 n.3 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2006).

                                                9
              In contrast, QBE argues that, although East Coast sent Claimant for
treatment and paid his wages for a period, Claimant did not assert a claim of estoppel
against East Coast on his own behalf or on behalf of R&L. QBE also argues that
Kelly is distinguishable because that case did not address the issue of whether an
entity that makes payments is the responsible employer, when another entity has been
adjudicated to be the legal borrowing employer that was in control of the
performance of the claimant’s work at the time of injury. QBE further maintains that
East Coast’s conduct in paying wages did not mean that Claimant could not be the
borrowed employee of R&L. It argues that because R&L controlled the manner and
performance of Claimant’s work, East Coast’s payment of wages did not release
R&L of liability for Claimant’s injury.7 Similarly, the UEGF contends that East
Coast’s payment of wages and medical bills after the injury does not preclude the
Board from concluding that R&L was Claimant’s borrowing employer. The UEGF
also asserts that an outcome where R&L would escape liability due to East Coast’s
payments is unreasonable, contrary to the humanitarian purposes of the Act, and
against public policy.
              In Kelly, after the claimant was assaulted at work, the claimant’s
employer paid the claimant’s mortgage for six months and paid the claimant’s wife
$300.00 per week for an unspecified period of time. 669 A.2d at 1024-25. After the
claimant filed two claim petitions, the employer challenged the petitions on the
ground that the claimant’s injury did not occur in the course of his employment. Id.
at 1025. The WCJ concluded that the employer was estopped from disavowing the
“compensability of the claim” because the cash payments made to the claimant and

       7
         QBE further maintains that R&L itself admitted liability for the September 20, 2016 injury
because it issued a notice of temporary compensation payable for the injury.

                                                10
his wife were wages in lieu of WC benefits, but that the employer’s contest of the
claim was reasonable. Id.
             On appeal, this Court noted that “[p]ayments in lieu of compensation are
any voluntary or informal compensation, apart from the Act, paid with the intent to
compensate for a work-related injury.” Id. at 1026 (emphasis added). We also
observed that “[i]t is the intent of the payment, not the receipt thereof, which is
relevant.” Id. (emphasis in original). We concluded that the WCJ’s (then referee)8
determination that the payments were intended to compensate for the work-injury
was amply supported by the evidence in the record. We also determined that “by
publicly expressing [its] belief that a co-employee was responsible for [the
claimant’s] injuries and promptly beginning the weekly cash payments in lieu of
[WC] benefits, [the employer] effectively admitted liability under the Act, making
any subsequent challenge to that liability unreasonable.” Id. Thus, we held the
employer was estopped from “disavowing the compensability” of the claimant’s
claim, because, by making cash payments, the employer had admitted liability. Id. at
1026-27.
             Holmes v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Schneider Power
Corporation), 542 A.2d 197 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1988), which preceded Kelly by several
years, provides further elucidation regarding the effect of payments made in lieu of
compensation by an employer to a claimant. There, following the claimant’s injury,
the employer made payments to the claimant, representing 60% of the claimant’s
wages. On appeal, we framed the issue as whether the payments “constitute[d] an
admission of work-related disability.” Holmes, 542 A.2d at 199 (emphasis added).
We concluded that because the employer had made payments to the claimant

      8
        A WCJ was formerly known as a referee. See Clark v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal
Board (Keystone Lawn Spray), 672 A.2d 348, 349 n.1 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1995).

                                           11
pursuant to a short-term disability program, the employer had made “no admission
that the [claimant] suffered a work-related disability,” and that the burden was still on
the claimant to prove that “he had suffered a work-related disability.” Id. at 199-200
(emphasis added); see also Ward v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Snap-On,
Inc.) (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 1384 C.D. 2009, filed February 3, 2010) (unreported), slip
op. at 9-10, 12 (holding that an employer that pays an employee a percentage of his
salary, pursuant to a short-term disability program, does not “make an admission that
the employee suffered a work-related disability,” and that a claimant seeking to
establish that payments “serve as an admission of . . . acceptance of a work-related
injury” and that such payments are payment in lieu of compensation must
demonstrate that the employer intended for the payments to compensate the claimant
for a loss of earning power due to a work-related injury).9
              While R&L argues that we should apply Kelly to the instant case, that
case is distinguishable for a number of reasons. First, as Holmes and Ward clarified,
where an employer makes payments to a claimant that are intended in lieu of
compensation, a claimant may later invoke an estoppel defense against the employer
to preclude the employer from denying the existence of a work-related disability.
However, here, neither East Coast nor R&L deny, or have attempted to deny, that
Claimant suffered a work-related disability. Second, while Kelly and related cases
permit claimants to estop employers from denying that a work injury occurred where
employers have made payments in lieu of compensation, these cases do not stand for
the proposition of an employer avoiding liability for WC coverage based on another

       9
          Pursuant to this Court’s Internal Operating Procedures, an unreported opinion of the Court
filed after January 15, 2008, may be cited for its persuasive value. 210 Pa. Code §69.414(a).

                                                12
entity making payments to the claimant or invoking estoppel against a separate
entity.10
               Further, Sunset Golf Course v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board
(Department of Public Welfare), 595 A.2d 213 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1991), is more
analogous to the present set of facts than Kelly. In Sunset Golf Course, the claimant
worked for the Department of Public Welfare (DPW), but was assigned to work as a
laborer for Sunset Golf Course (Sunset). 595 A.2d at 214. After the claimant was
injured in the course of his employment, the claimant and DPW entered into a
compensation agreement, whereby DPW’s insurer agreed to pay the claimant total
disability benefits. When the claimant later filed a claim petition, DPW filed a
petition to review the compensation agreement and a petition to join Sunset, arguing
that Sunset was the actual employer at the time of the claimant’s injury. After the
Board held that Sunset was the claimant’s actual employer, Sunset appealed arguing
that the Board erred in permitting DPW to assert that it was not the claimant’s
employer after it accepted liability more than a year earlier. Sunset argued that DPW
was precluded from denying that it was the responsible employer at the time of the
claimant’s injuries and, in support of its argument, relied on several cases in which
our Supreme Court held that an employer could not relitigate the issue of whether the
cause of a claimant’s injury was work-related after the employer had already
commenced the payment of WC benefits. Id. at 215.
               We noted that unlike the cases relied upon by Sunset, which dealt
“exclusively with relitigation of the question of whether an injury [was] work-

       10
          We also note that although East Coast sent Claimant a letter stating that he would “receive
a weekly payment in the amount of $861.00 per week until such time that he [was] cleared to return
to work from the injury that occurred on September 20th 2016,” (R.R. at 277a), there is otherwise no
additional evidence in the record regarding East Coast’s intention in make these payments or
whether it made such payments “with the intent to compensate for a work-related injury.” Kelly,
669 A.2d at 1026.

                                                 13
related[,] [i]n the case before us, there [was] no dispute that the original injuries
suffered by [the claimant] [were] work-related.” Id. at 216. Hence, we determined
that the “unresolved question [was] which entity, DPW or Sunset, was the claimant’s
employer.” Id. We held that in spite of the earlier compensation agreement between
the claimant and DPW, the referee had the authority to substitute Sunset for DPW as
the responsible employer. Id.
             Similarly, here, there is no dispute that Claimant’s injury was work-
related, and the WCJ found that R&L was Claimant’s employer, even though East
Coast had initially made wage payments to Claimant following his injury. We
conclude that pursuant to Sunset Golf Course, the WCJ had the authority to conclude
that R&L was the employer responsible for paying Claimant’s WC benefits, despite
East Coast’s earlier payments to Claimant, and that Kelly and its related cases do not
require a contrary result.

              B. Whether R&L was Claimant’s Borrowing Employer
             We next turn to whether the Board erred in concluding that R&L was
Claimant’s borrowing employer.       In support of its argument that it was not
Claimant’s borrowing employer, R&L points to the language in the Agreement
whereby the parties agreed that East Coast would be responsible for the WC claims of
its employees, maintain WC coverage for drivers assigned to R&L, and remit all
federal and state withholdings for its employees. Based on this language, R&L
argues that the Board misapplied the legal test for borrowed employees established by
this Court in Red Line Express Co. v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board
(Price), 588 A.2d 90 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1991). R&L also faults the Board for evaluating
and applying the Supreme Court’s decision in, JFC Temps, Inc. v. Workmen’s
Compensation Appeal Board (Lindsay), 680 A.2d 862 (Pa. 1996), instead of our
decision in Red Line Express Co.

                                         14
            R&L contends that “the only action R&L took with regard to [] Claimant
was to tell him where to pick up a load and where to deliver it.” (R&L’s Br. at 21.)
Additionally, R&L maintains that the WCJ and Board ignored significant evidence in
reaching its conclusion, including the fact that Claimant filled out a job application
with East Coast; Claimant was hired at East Coast’s Bensalem office; Claimant had
to present a valid CDL to East Coast in order to complete the hiring process;
Claimant underwent drug screening and safety training with East Coast; Claimant
received his paychecks from East Coast; Claimant understood that East Coast could
assign him to drive for another trucking company; and that Claimant reported his
injury to East Coast. Finally, according to R&L, because East Coast had the right to
hire, fire, and send Claimant to another location; East Coast paid Claimant and was
responsible for his WC benefits; and East Coast had knowledge of the trucking
industry, R&L was not Claimant’s borrowing employer merely because it designated
the work that Claimant needed to complete.
            Conversely, QBE maintains that, based on key facts showing that East
Coast relinquished control over Claimant and that R&L had the power to control the
performance of Claimant’s work, the Board properly affirmed the WCJ’s
determination that Claimant was the borrowed employee of R&L. QBE asserts that
Claimant drove exclusively for R&L; that R&L provided Claimant with training,
equipment, and daily assignments, which had to be performed in accordance with
R&L’s operating standards; and that R&L dispatchers told Claimant when and where
to go for assignments. QBE also contends that the Agreement further establishes that
R&L controlled Claimant’s work. QBE argues that R&L is merely seeking to have
this Court reweigh the evidence in R&L’s favor.
            QBE also argues that pursuant to our Supreme Court’s decision in JFC
Temps, Inc., the right to control is the determinative factor for deciding whether an
entity is a borrowing employer. Likewise, QBE contends that Red Line Express Co.

                                         15
does not compel a different result and is distinguishable from the instant case. QBE
maintains that because R&L determined how its routes were fulfilled and had sole
control over Claimant’s day-to-day responsibilities, the WCJ and Board correctly
found that R&L was Claimant’s borrowing employer. The UEGF makes similar
arguments for why we should affirm the Board’s order.
            “The question of whether an employer-employee relationship exists is
one of law, based upon the facts of each case.” Red Line Express Co., 588 A.2d at
93. In situations where “an employee is furnished by one entity to another, the
situation is one of ‘borrowed’ employee.” Id. As our Supreme Court held in JFC
Temps, Inc., the test for determining whether an employee “furnished by one person
to another becomes the employee of the person to whom he is loaned is whether he
passes under the latter's right of control with regard not only to the work to be done
but also to the manner of performing it.” 680 A.2d at 864. Therefore, “the entity
possessing the right to control the manner of the performance of the servant’s work is
the employer, irrespective of whether the control is actually exercised.”          Id.
Moreover, “[o]ther factors which may be relevant include the right to select and
discharge the employee and the skill or expertise required for the performance of the
work. The payment of wages may be considered, but is not a determinative factor.”
Id. (citation omitted).    While “the examination of these factors guides the
determination, each case must be decided on its own facts.” Id. Although a provision
in an agreement providing that the lending entity will pay for WC insurance is an
“important factor” that militates against finding that the borrowing entity is a
“borrowing employer” for purposes of the Act, Red Line Express Co., 588 A.2d at 96,
“the right to control the performance of the work is the overriding factor,” JFC
Temps, Inc., 680 A.2d at 865.
            With respect to the trucking industry, the presence of the logo of the
borrowing entity on the truck driven by the employee is “a factor to consider, and

                                         16
should be given considerable weight,” but is not necessarily decisive. Red Line
Express Co., 588 A.2d at 95; see also Lego v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal
Board, 445 A.2d 1324, 1327 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1982). However, the presence of the
lessee’s logo on the truck raises a rebuttable presumption that the driver is an
employee of that party. Red Line Express Co., 588 A.2d at 95; Shreiner Trucking
Company v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Wagner), 509 A.2d 1337,
1340 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1986).
             Because both JFC Temps, Inc. and Red Line Express Co. involved the
borrowed employee doctrine in the context of truck driver employees, we will
examine the facts of each case. In JFC Temps, Inc., the claimant applied for a
position with JFC Temps, Inc. (JFC). After reviewing the claimant’s qualifications,
JFC assigned the claimant to G&B Packing (G&B) as a tractor trailer driver. G&B
had no control over which driver was assigned to it. The claimant reported daily to
G&B, where its operation manager informed the claimant of work hours, what truck
to use, and where to go, and provided the claimant with freight documents, the bill of
lading, and the keys to a tractor trailer. G&B did not specify a particular route for the
claimant to take. After hauling a load, the claimant reported back to G&B. No
representative of JFC was ever present at G&B’s facility. Although JFC determined
and paid the claimant’s salary, the claimant’s time slips were completed and signed
by G&B personnel. The claimant called JFC if he was late, ill, or had any questions,
and JFC provided G&B with a replacement if the claimant was unable to work. G&B
decided if the claimant’s work was satisfactory and could request a replacement for
the claimant, but could not fire him. Further, the claimant drove a G&B truck. JFC
Temps, Inc., 680 A.2d at 863-64.
             Ultimately, our Supreme Court concluded that G&B was the borrowing
employer. While the Court recognized that JFC selected the claimant for the position
at G&B, JFC had the sole power to actually terminate the claimant’s employment,

                                           17
and the claimant called JFC if he was sick or had questions, it held that G&B was the
borrowing employer because it had the right to control the performance of the
claimant’s work. Id. at 865. In particular, the Court observed that once the claimant
arrived at his temporary assignment with G&B, JFC “did not instruct him regarding
the performance of his work . . . [and] had no substantial contact with [him] other
than processing his paycheck.” Id. at 866. The Court also noted that G&B controlled
the day-to-day operations of the vehicles, and that G&B had the right to select the
routes taken by the claimant, even if it did not exercise that right. Because the Court
determined that G&B had the right to control the manner of performance of the
claimant’s work, it upheld the Board’s determination that G&B was responsible for
the payment of WC benefits. Id.
            In Red Line Express Co., the claimant initially contacted Princeton
Management, Inc. (Princeton), which hired her and told her to report for work with
Red Line Express Co. (Red Line). The claimant was assigned to drive a truck that
was owned by Princeton but leased to Red Line. 588 A.2d at 92. Pursuant to the
lease between Princeton and Red Line, Princeton held title to the trucks leased to Red
Line; Princeton leased the trucks to Princeton for Princeton’s exclusive possession,
control, and complete responsibility; Princeton furnished a competent driver to
operate the trucks; and Princeton represented that the driver was familiar with all
applicable laws and would cooperate with Red Line in achieving compliance with
said laws. Id. at 94. Moreover, the lease provided that Princeton was required to pay
for all repairs, fuel, and taxes for its trucks and pay the wages and remuneration for
its drivers, including WC insurance. Finally, the lease provided that the employees or
agents of one party would not be considered employees or agents of the other party.
Id.
            Red Line told the claimant where to pick up loads and where to deliver
them. The claimant was also instructed to call Red Line upon completion of delivery

                                          18
to tell it that the load had been delivered. Additionally, the truck that the claimant
drove had a Red Line insignia on it. Id. at 95.
             However, the claimant periodically called Princeton to provide updates.
Princeton also told the claimant what route to take on one of her four deliveries.
Conversely, Red Line never told the claimant what routes to take, what hours to
work, nor whether she was hired for a specific period of time. The claimant could
also refuse a Red Line load, and could have hauled loads for other companies if
instructed by Princeton. Id.
             This Court concluded that the evidence established that the claimant
remained an employee of Princeton. While we noted the presence of the Red Line
insignia on the truck driven by the claimant, we discounted this evidence given that
the insignia specifically stated “leased to Red Line.” Id. (emphasis in original).
Therefore, we concluded that the language on the insignia, as well as other evidence
in the record, rebutted the presumption that the claimant was Red Line’s employee
because she drove a truck with Red Line’s insignia. We also found it important, but
not dispositive, that Princeton had contracted to pay for the claimant’s WC insurance.
Id. at 96.
             Most significantly, we concluded that the facts did not show that Red
Line had the power to control the manner in which the claimant performed her work.
We recognized that the claimant was paid by Princeton based on the trip, not on the
hours worked for Red Line, which tended to show that Princeton was the employer.
We also placed weight on the fact that Princeton retained the right to fire or transfer
the claimant and that claimant could refuse to transport a load for Red Line. Id. In
sum, we concluded that the only action Red Line took with regard to the claimant was
to have her take a driver’s examination, provide her with a medical certificate, and
tell her where to make deliveries. We also considered the fact that the language of
the lease indicated that the parties intended for the claimant to remain an employee of

                                          19
Princeton and determined that, although “we are not bound by the nomenclature of
the parties applied to their relationship, . . . the other terms of the agreement and the
admitted facts establish[ed] that the parties correctly designated their relationship.”
Id. Thus, because Red Line did not have the right to control the claimant’s work or
the manner of performing it, we held that the claimant had remained an employee of
Princeton. Id. at 97.
             We conclude the instant case is more similar to JFC Temps, Inc. than
Red Line Express Co. Turning to the facts, here, Claimant testified that he first came
in contact with East Coast online, that he filled out a paper application at East Coast’s
office, and that he was hired at East Coast’s office. (F.F. No. 35b-c; R.R. at 217a-
18a.) After Claimant was hired by East Coast, he was assigned to R&L, did most of
his driving for R&L and, in fact, could not recall driving for another company. (F.F.
No. 35d-f; R.R. at 218a-19a.) As part of the hiring process with East Coast, Claimant
had to demonstrate that he had a valid CDL and met Department of Transportation
requirements, and underwent safety training with East Coast, which involved
answering East Coast’s questions and taking a random drug test. (F.F. No. 35f; R.R.
at 219a-20a.) When East Coast assigned Claimant to work for R&L, he was told that
he would “operate the way [R&L] [does] things.” (F.F. No. 35d; R.R. at 221a.)
             Claimant stated that he received a text message from East Coast every
Friday informing him that he needed to report to R&L the following week. (F.F. No.
35d; R.R. at 222a.) Claimant also went to East Coast’s office every Friday to pick up
his weekly paycheck. Id. If Claimant needed to take vacation time, call in sick, or
had general problems on the job, he contacted East Coast; however, if a similar
problem arose during the week he also notified R&L. (F.F. No. 35d-f, 35jj; R.R. at
177a, 222a-23a.) When Claimant was injured, he first reported the injury to R&L,
who told him that East Coast would take care of it, after which he reported the injury
to East Coast. (F.F. No. 35g-h; R.R. at 224a-25a.)

                                           20
             Claimant testified that he considered R&L to be his employer, and that
East Coast merely told him where to report and for whom he was working on a given
day. (F.F. No. 35r; R.R. at 235a.) Claimant stated that he was required to follow
R&L’s procedures, and that when he was first assigned to R&L, he was instructed by
R&L to complete a “pre-trip and post-trip [inspections] of the equipment at all
times.” (F.F. No. 35t; R.R. at 239a.) All of the equipment that Claimant used,
including the truck and keys, were owned by R&L. Id. While Claimant did not wear
any type of uniform, the trucks and trailers he drove all said R&L. Id. Further, when
Claimant delivered to customers, the bills said R&L on them. Id.
             Additionally,   Claimant     communicated         with   R&L’s   dispatcher,
completed R&L’s logbook, and received his assignments from R&L’s dispatcher.
(F.F. No. 35u; R.R. at 240a.) Specifically, Claimant received his assignments from
R&L’s dispatcher in R&L’s breakroom. Id. The R&L dispatcher handed Claimant
the paperwork for the deliveries, told Claimant the type of truck he would be driving,
provided Claimant a manifest of all his stops and pickups, and ran a “bill through the
scanner” so that R&L would know where he was located. (F.F. Nos. 35v, 35ii; R.R.
at 175a, 240a.) Claimant stated that these conversations always took place at R&L’s
facility in New Jersey, that he reported to R&L’s facility every day, and that he did
not have any say in the assignments he received from R&L. (F.F. No. 35v; R.R. at
241a.) If Claimant had an issue with his equipment he notified R&L’s mechanics
about it. (F.F. No. 35ii; R.R. at 176a.) At the end of each week, Claimant informed
R&L’s dispatcher that he was done for the week and the dispatcher would tell
Claimant he was needed the following week. (F.F. No. 35ii; R.R. at 177a.) If R&L
was unhappy with Claimant’s performance, it could refuse to allow him to continue
working at its facilities. (F.F. No. 35v; R.R. at 241a-42a.)
             Claimant further indicated that he had over 20 years of experience, must
recertify his license every 4 years and, “as an employee of R&L,” made deliveries for

                                           21
it. (F.F. No. 35aa, R.R. at 244a.) Claimant stated he was paid by the hour by East
Coast, never received training from East Coast, and although East Coast finds drivers
for companies, it does not make any deliveries itself. (F.F. No. 35bb-cc; R.R. at
244a-46a.) Claimant testified that he never received a paycheck from R&L and that
East Coast could have assigned him to work for a different company. (R.R. at 247a.)
             Additionally, the Agreement between R&L and East Coast stated that
East Coast would furnish drivers for R&L, who would be “employees of [East
Coast], to operate motor vehicles owned or leased by [R&L] and used in the conduct
of [R&L’s] business.” (F.F. No. 36a; R.R. at 278a.) The Agreement provided that
East Coast intended to be responsible for WC claims of its employees, but that the
customer was responsible for all other liabilities resulting from drivers’ acts. (F.F.
No. 36a; R.R. at 278a.) East Coast also represented that it would maintain WC
coverage for drivers assigned to R&L, and would indemnify R&L to the extent it
failed to satisfy its responsibilities related to WC coverage. (F.F. No. 36b; R.R. at
278a.)   Finally, the Agreement provided that “[d]rivers on assignments shall be
borrowed servants of [R&L] and will be under the sole control and supervision of
[R&L].” (F.F. No. 36c; R.R. at 279a) (emphasis added).
             Like JFC Temps, Inc., in the instant case, Claimant reported daily to his
assigned company, R&L, received instructions from R&L regarding the truck to use
and where to go for deliveries, received his delivery assignments and paperwork from
R&L, and drove R&L’s trucks. Moreover, similar to JFC Temps, Inc., R&L could
refuse to allow Claimant to continue working if it was unsatisfied with his
performance, and directed Claimant’s daily activities. In addition, as in JFC Temps,
Inc., where our Supreme Court concluded the claimant was a borrowed employer
despite the original employer selecting the claimant and the claimant calling the
original employer if he was late or ill, here, East Coast originally hired Claimant and

                                          22
Claimant reported to East Coast if he was sick or had problems. However, unlike
JFC Temps Inc., Claimant also reported any issues arising during the week to R&L.
            Overall, like in JFC Temps, Inc., we conclude that because R&L had the
right to control the performance of Claimant’s work, it was the borrowing employer.
Once Claimant was placed with R&L, he did not receive instructions regarding day-
to-day operations from East Coast and received all directions regarding his deliveries,
routes, assignments, and trucks from R&L. Indeed other than Claimant receiving a
weekly paycheck and text message instructing him to report back to R&L the
following week, Claimant had no significant contact with East Coast after being
assigned to R&L.
            R&L argues that the Board misapplied Red Line Express Co. in reaching
its decision; however, that case is clearly distinguishable from the instant case. R&L
contends that the Board ignored the language in the Agreement stating that East
Coast was responsible for WC coverage and that Claimant was an employee of East
Coast. Yet, as we determined in Red Line Express Co., while such language is an
important factor, it is not dispositive, and the determining factor is the “actual
conduct of the parties” and whether R&L “had the power to control Claimant’s work
and manner of performance.” Red Line Express Co., 588 A.2d at 94, 96. Further,
unlike Red Line Express Co., the Agreement, here, expressly stated that Claimant was
a borrowed servant and would be under the sole control and supervision of R&L,
which tends to negate any contrary weight that might be placed on East Coast’s
agreement to provide WC coverage.
            Additionally, there was R&L insignia on the trucks and trailers driven by
Claimant, and contrariwise to Red Line Express Co., there is no evidence of limiting
language stating that the trucks and trailers were leased to R&L. See id. Thus, the
presence of R&L’s logo on the truck creates a rebuttable presumption that Claimant

                                          23
was R&L’s borrowed employee. See id. at 95; Shreiner Trucking Company, 509
A.2d at 1340.
              More importantly, unlike Red Line Express Co., where the evidence
demonstrated that Red Line did not have the power to control the manner of the
claimant’s work, and merely provided the claimant’s driver examination and told her
where to make deliveries, here, R&L was the entity possessing the right to control the
manner of performance of Claimant’s work. JFC Temps, Inc., 680 A.2d at 864.
Specifically, contrary to Red Line Express Co., after East Coast selected Claimant,
verified his qualifications, and placed him with R&L, East Coast’s only real
involvement with Claimant was to pay his wages, and R&L otherwise controlled all
aspects of Claimant’s work performance. As discussed previously, R&L owned the
trucks driven by Claimant, provided him daily assignments and paperwork, told him
what deliveries to make, required him to report to its facility once per day and to
update R&L when he was done for the week, and could refuse to allow Claimant to
continue working for it if it was unsatisfied with his performance. Additionally,
contrasting Red Line Express Co., where Princeton was a trucking company that paid
the claimant based on the trip, rather than hours worked, and Princeton periodically
checked up on the claimant to find out where she was and instructed her on the routes
to take, here, Claimant was paid by the hour and East Coast was not a trucking
company, but rather, was merely a conduit that matched drivers with trucking
companies. Therefore, the instant case is distinguishable from Red Line Express Co.
and the Board did not err in concluding that Claimant was R&L’s borrowed
employee.11

      11
          Finally, R&L argues that the WCJ and Board ignored critical pieces of evidence in
reaching their conclusion. However, as noted above, the WCJ accurately recounted Claimant’s
testimony regarding his relationships with East Coast and R&L, as well as a summary of the
Agreement. See F.F. Nos. 35-37. The WCJ found Claimant’s testimony credible, but placed
(Footnote continued on next page…)

                                            24
                                           Conclusion
               Accordingly, because the Board did not err in concluding that Claimant
was R&L’s borrowed employer, we affirm the order of the Board.

                                                 ________________________________
                                                 PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge

(continued…)

greater weight on Claimant’s testimony that he reported to R&L on a daily basis; received work
assignments regarding when and where to go from R&L’s dispatcher; drove R&L’s trucks and
trailers; and R&L could refuse to continue Claimant’s assignments. (F.F. No. 40.) The WCJ also
found that this testimony was supported by the language in the Agreement stating that Claimant was
the borrowed servant of R&L and was under the sole control and supervision of R&L. Id. Based
on this evidence, the WCJ found that Claimant was R&L’s borrowed employee.
         “[I]t is a fundamental tenet of workers’ compensation law that the WCJ, as fact-finder, has
complete authority over questions of witness credibility and evidentiary weight.” Verizon
Pennsylvania Inc. v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Mills), 116 A.3d 1157, 1162 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2015). Therefore, “[a]s the ultimate fact-finder, the WCJ has exclusive province over
questions of credibility and evidentiary weight, and is free to accept or reject the testimony of any
witness . . . in whole or in part.” Id. Here, the WCJ credited Claimant’s testimony, but placed
greater weight on the evidence demonstrating that R&L controlled the manner of performance of
Claimant’s work. It is apparent that R&L’s argument regarding the evidence that the WCJ
allegedly disregarded is merely an attempt to have us reweigh the evidentiary determinations made
by the WCJ. Because such determinations are within the exclusive province of the fact-finder, they
are not subject to review on appeal.
         In any event, because the WCJ examined the entirety of both Claimant’s testimony and the
Agreement, and determined both were credible, we fail to discern how the WCJ ignored evidence.
We also conclude that the WCJ’s legal determination that Claimant was R&L’s borrowed employer,
which is fully reviewable on appeal, see Red Line Express Co., 588 A.2d at 93, was correct.

                                                 25
            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

R&L Carriers,                         :
                 Petitioner           :
                                      :    No. 1164 C.D. 2019
           v.                         :
                                      :
Workers’ Compensation Appeal          :
Board (Timothy Grace, East Coast      :
Driver Solutions, QBE Insurance       :
Company and Uninsured Employers       :
Guaranty Fund),                       :
                   Respondents        :

                                   ORDER

           AND NOW, this 12th day of June, 2020, the July 24, 2019 order of the
Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board is affirmed.

                                          ________________________________
                                          PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge