Court Opinion

ID: 5137349
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-21 14:38:45.049684+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:01.720271
License: Public Domain

IN THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

                                     ‐‐‐‐ooOoo‐‐‐‐

Shane O. Wood,                             )         MEMORANDUM DECISION
                                           )
      Petitioner,                          )            Case No. 20100932‐CA
                                           )
v.                                         )
                                           )                  FILED
Labor Commission, Karr Painting and        )              (January 26, 2012)
Decoration Inc., and Uninsured             )
Employers Fund,                            )              2012 UT App 26
                                           )
      Respondents.                         )

                                          ‐‐‐‐‐

Original Proceeding in this Court

Attorneys:      Benjamin T. Davis, Salt Lake City, for Petitioner
                Mark L. Shurtleff, Nancy L. Kemp, and Ryan E. Simpson, Salt Lake
                City, for Respondents

                                          ‐‐‐‐‐

Before Judges Orme, Davis, and Thorne.

THORNE, Judge:

¶1     Shane O. Wood seeks review of an order of the Utah Labor Commission Appeals
Board (the Board) denying his claim for workers’ compensation benefits. The Board’s
order reversed an Administrative Law Judge’s (the ALJ) decision that Wood was
entitled to benefits. We decline Wood’s invitation to disturb the Board’s order.

¶2     Wood was employed by respondent Karr Painting and Decoration Inc. (Karr) as
a painter. On May 1, 2007, he was painting the interior of a three‐story Salt Lake City
home that had an empty elevator shaft running from the first floor to the third floor.
According to his coworker’s testimony, Wood spent the morning of May 1 performing
employment duties throughout the house but began consuming alcohol at the job site
after lunch and then went to sleep for approximately two hours in a closet on the first
floor. When he awoke, he returned to the second floor and fell into the elevator shaft,
sustaining serious injuries for which he seeks workers’ compensation benefits.

¶3     The ALJ conducted an evidentiary hearing and ruled that Wood’s accident
occurred within the course of his employment because the “accident occurred at his job
site during the workday.” See generally Utah Code Ann. § 34A‐2‐401(1) (2011) (requiring
compensation for injuries caused “by accident arising out of and in the course of [an]
employee’s employment” (emphasis added)). Karr requested a Board review of the
ALJ’s decision. After reviewing the evidence, the Board determined the following facts
to be dispositive of Wood’s claim for workers’ compensation benefits:

              Mr. Wood was engaged in work activities on behalf of Karr
              during the morning and early afternoon of May 1, 2007. He
              began drinking alcohol at the work site at about 2 p.m. and
              continued until he had consumed a small bottle of whiskey
              and more than half a fifth of vodka. By 4 p.m. he had
              stopped performing any work duties for Karr and removed
              himself to a 1st floor closet where he slept for two hours.
              When he awoke, he made his way up to the 2nd floor but
              did not resume any work on behalf of Karr. He fell into the
              elevator shaft and suffered the injuries for which he now
              claims workers’ compensation benefits.

In light of these facts, the Board reversed the ALJ’s decision, ruling that Wood was not
acting in the course of his employment at the time he was injured because he was not
fulfilling work duties or engaged in activity incidental to his duties. Wood now seeks
review of the Board’s decision.

¶4     We review the Board’s decision rather than the ALJ’s, giving the Board’s factual
determinations great deference but reviewing its legal determinations for correctness.
See Drake v. Industrial Comm’n, 939 P.2d 177, 181 (Utah 1997). Here, the Board’s scope‐
of‐employment decision presents “a mixed question of law and fact, one that calls upon
us to review the application of law to fact.” Salt Lake City Corp. v. Labor Comm’n, 2007
UT 4, ¶ 13, 153 P.3d 179. Our standard of review of such decisions is “conditionally

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deferential,” id. ¶ 15, balancing the “multifarious array of factual settings presented by
scope‐of‐employment cases,” id., with “our statutory obligation to give effect to the
[Workers’ Compensation] Act’s purpose to alleviat[e] hardship upon workers and their
families,” id. ¶ 16 (second alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
“We will therefore look closely to assure ourselves that the Commission has liberally
construed and applied the Act to provide coverage and has resolved any doubt
respecting the right to compensation in favor of an injured employee.” Id.

¶5     Wood first argues that his “intoxicated nap after drinking on the job did not
constitute a departure from the course of his employment.” Utah Code section
34A‐2‐401(1) provides for workers’ compensation benefits to employees injured in
accidents “arising out of and in the course of” their employment. See Utah Code Ann.
§ 34A‐2‐401(1). “[A]n injury occurs ‘in the course of’ employment when it takes place
(1) within the period of employment, (2) at a place where the employee reasonably may
be in the performance of [his] duties, and (3) while [he] is fulfilling those duties or
engaged in doing something incidental thereto.” Walls v. Industrial Comm’n, 857 P.2d
964, 967 (Utah Ct. App. 1993) (emphasis omitted). “[A]ll three criteria of time, place and
circumstances must be fulfilled in order for a claimant to recover workers’
compensation benefits.” Id.

¶6      Wood argues that the definition of activities incidental to his employment should
be construed very broadly given the undisputed facts that he was injured at the job site
and during working hours. However, we cannot simply ignore the requirement that
Wood must have been “fulfilling [his employment] duties or engaged in doing
something incidental thereto” at the time of his accident. See id. (emphasis omitted); see
also 2 Lex K. Larson, Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law § 20.01 (rev. ed. 2007) (“It is not
enough that the injury arise within the time and space limits of the employment.”). The
Board found that, as a result of his significant alcohol consumption and subsequent
two‐hour nap, Wood “stopped performing any work or any activities incidental to
work,” and “completely removed himself from his job duties.” We see no other
reasonable interpretation of Wood’s activities and agree with the Board that, under the
circumstances of this case, Wood departed from the course of his employment.

¶7     Wood next argues that even if he did leave the course of his employment during
his nap, he returned to that course when he awoke and began moving around the job
site. Respondent Uninsured Employers Fund (UEF) contends that Wood cannot raise

20100932‐CA                                  3
this argument in this judicial review proceeding because he did not preserve the issue
in the original proceeding before the ALJ. See generally Zupon v. Industrial Comm’n, 860
P.2d 960, 962 n.2 (Utah Ct. App. 1993) (determining that a claim for additional disability
benefits was not preserved for review in this court when the claimant failed to seek
such benefits in his application for hearing or before the ALJ but presented the claim for
the first time on review by the Industrial Commission).1

¶8      However, Wood’s argument before the ALJ was that he was acting within the
scope and course of his employment at the time of the accident—an argument that,
without further development, encompasses both the possibility that he never left the
course of his employment at all and the possibility that he left that course and then
returned. In opposition before the ALJ, UEF and Karr merely argued that Wood was
not in the course of his employment when the accident occurred. The ALJ ruled in
Wood’s favor on this argument, and when the distinction between Wood staying on the
job versus his leaving and returning to the job was further developed in review
proceedings before the Board, Wood clearly raised the argument that he had returned
to work when the accident occurred. Further, the Board actually considered and
rejected Wood’s argument on its merits.2 Under these circumstances, we deem Wood’s
argument preserved for review in this court.

      1
        There may be some tension in our case law on the question of whether issues
must be initially presented to an ALJ in order to preserve them for review by this court
or whether it is sufficient to raise issues for the first time before an administrative
review board. Compare Zupon v. Industrial Comm’n, 860 P.2d 960, 962 n.2 (Utah Ct. App.
1993), with Columbia HCA v. Labor Comm’n, 2011 UT App 210, ¶ 6, 258 P.3d 640 (mem.)
(stating that a claimant “need only to have raised the issues currently on appeal to
either the ALJ or the reviewing [Board] for the issues to be properly preserved”). We
need not resolve any such tension in this case, however, as we determine that Wood
adequately raised his return‐to‐work argument before both the ALJ and the Board.
      2
        We note that the Board’s decision to consider Wood’s argument would likely
have fallen within its discretion to conduct its own proceedings regardless of whether
Wood had raised the issue before the ALJ. Cf. Frito‐Lay v. Utah Labor Comm’n, 2009 UT
71, ¶ 22, 222 P.3d 55 (“The Workers’ Compensation Act expressly gives the Labor
Commission broad authority to review Commission orders . . . .”).

20100932‐CA                                 4
¶9      Although we consider Wood’s argument that he returned to the course of his
employment, we do not disturb the Board’s decision. Wood testified that he did not
drink any alcohol on the day of his injury and fell down the elevator shaft while
masking the trim around the second‐floor shaft opening. The Board made an express
finding that this testimony was not credible. Wood’s coworker, whose testimony the
Board expressly found to be credible, testified that all work around the second‐floor
shaft opening had been completed one to two days prior to Wood’s injury and that
there were no tools or painting supplies at the bottom of the shaft or near the second‐
floor opening at the time Wood was injured. Karr’s owner and a safety inspector
corroborated the coworker’s testimony about the absence of tools or supplies, and
Karr’s owner also testified that he had personally prepared the area around the second‐
floor opening prior to Wood’s injury and that there was no work for Wood to be doing
at that location at the time of his injury.

¶10 This testimony clearly supports a finding that Wood was not actively performing
employment duties for Karr at the time of his injury. However, Wood argues that the
course of his employment also included incidental movement throughout the house.
Therefore, Wood argues, his return trip to the second floor after his first‐floor nap was
just as much a part of his employment as an identical trip made after, for example,
looking for a tool on the first floor. Under these circumstances, we disagree.

¶11 The Board found that Wood had “completely removed himself from his job
duties” and that “[i]n the short period between the time that Mr. Wood awoke and the
time he fell down the elevator shaft, there is no reasonable basis to conclude that Mr.
Wood returned to his work duties or was engaged in any activity incidental to his
work.” In light of the Board’s finding that Wood had completely removed himself from
his job duties and Wood’s failure to identify any evidence suggesting that he had
returned to those duties, we see no error in the Board’s determination that Wood had
not returned to the course of his employment. Although both the Board and this court
are obligated to construe the Act liberally and resolve any doubt in favor of coverage, it
would be pure speculation to assume that Wood was returning to his work duties at the
time he was injured, as opposed to merely continuing his non‐work‐related activities.

20100932‐CA                                 5
¶12 For these reasons, we do not disturb the Board’s decision denying Wood’s
petition for workers’ compensation benefits.

____________________________________
William A. Thorne Jr., Judge

                                       ‐‐‐‐‐

¶13   WE CONCUR:

____________________________________
Gregory K. Orme, Judge

____________________________________
James Z. Davis, Judge

20100932‐CA                             6