1 1 Salt Lake City (the "City") appeals the district court's grant of the plaintiffs' (the "Ahlstroms") motion for summary judgment holding that Salt Lake City Police Officer Michelle Ross ("Ross") was acting within the course and scope of her employment when she was involved in an accident while driving a marked patrol car on her commute home to Tooele County. The Ahlstroms have alleged injuries caused by Ross's negligence in connection with the accident. The City contends it cannot be held vicariously liable as Ross's employer for the Ahlstrom's damages. We reverse the partial summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
12 Ross was a Field Training Officer ("FTO") for the Salt Lake City Police Department in addition to her regular duties. At the time of the accident giving rise to this case, she was driving her marked patrol car home to Tooele County from an FTO meeting on an off-duty day. Ross had her infant son in the car with her while commuting from the regularly scheduled meeting. When attending such meetings, Ross was paid for either three hours or her time attending the meeting, whichever was greater. She was not compensated for either time driving to the meeting or mileage for the trip in the City's car. The City does not require her to commute in its car, but allows officers to use its cars under a take-home program whereby participating officers pay a small amount for the opportunity to drive a patrol car between work and home. The Department regulates use of the car by requiring certain items be kept in the car, requiring appropriate attire while using the car, and requiring the officer to monitor the radio and be ready to respond while driving the car. Officers are responsible for any citations received in the car while off duty. Furthermore, in the event of an emergency, off-duty officers participating in the program may be required to respond to calls.
{3 While using the City's car, officers may, in certain situations, transport others in the car with them. Although certain passengers are allowed in the car, they must be dropped in a secure place before the officer may respond to an emergency. Officers are compensated for any time spent responding to calls. Though Ross was subject to being *317 called into duty while traveling home to Tooele in the patrol car, Ross has never responded or been asked to respond to a call while outside of Salt Lake County.
1] 4 After reviewing these facts, the district court granted the plaintiffs' motion for partial summary judgment. The court agreed with the Ablstroms that Ross's use of the City's car conveyed a benefit to the City and was under the control of the City. Citing requirements for officers' use of City vehicles, the court then noted that, "because Officer Ross can be called into duty by the mere happening of events in her presence, she is essentially always on duty, at least when operating a police vehicle."
STANDARD OF REVIEW
T5 In order to sustain a grant of summary judgment, there must be "no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party must be entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Utah R. Civ. P. 56(c). This court reviews such a grant for correctness, viewing "the facts and inferences to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party." Peterson v. Coca-Cola USA,
ANALYSIS
T6 In order to hold an employer liable for the acts of an employee, the acts giving rise to the claim must be "within the course and seope of [the employee's] employment." Whitehead v. Variable Annuity Life Ins. Co.,
T7 Attempting to augment the coming and going rule, the Ahlstroms also argue that the "special errand" and "employer-provided transportation" exeeptions to the rule should be imported from our worker's compensation jurisprudence and applied to negligence cases like this one. However, cases addressing worker's compensation rules, even when the issue is the same, are of little use in answering the question now before us. 1
I. THE COMING AND GOING RULE AND COMMUTING POLICE OFFICERS
18 This case presents a unique application of the coming and going rule. A survey of opinions from other jurisdictions involving negligence cases brought against cities for accidents involving off-duty police officers driving city vehicles reveals that the coming and going rule is generally applied in those situations to prevent vicarious liability.
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See Hanson v. Benelli,
T9 "The major premise of the 'going and coming" rule is that it is unfair to impose unlimited liability on an employer for conduct of its employees over which it has no control and from which it derives no benefit." Whitehead,
10 Louisiana has split when faced with two cases involving commuting officers. In Johnson v. Dufrene,
11 The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has also declined to hold a city liable for damages caused by a commuting officer. See Clickner v. City of Lowell,
112 In an unpublished Ohio decision, a district court of appeals held a city vicariously liable for an accident caused by an undercover officer on his way home from an assignment. Erie Ins. Co. v. City of Columbus, No. 79AP-815,
T13 The lesson of these cases 2 is that cities are not held liable for commuting accidents of officers in city cars unless there are unique cireumstances that tip the balance from a personal trip to one that primarily benefits the department. In Johnson and Erie, those cireumstances were present and liability was found. The police department in Johnson essentially required the officer to use its car while running personal errands in order to make him more accessible. In Frig, the officer's duties were such that he had no regular commute. Rather, his job required social activity while on duty,. Because he was required to maintain the appearance of social activity, he took his unmarked departmental car home. The respective cities were not liable in Hanson and Clickner where the officers were not possessed of any special skills or engaged in special duties. The conclusion that liability should not attach unless there are unique cireumstances is in accord with the stated purposes of the coming and going rule and we express no reservations with the application of the coming and going rule under the facts of this case. Having determined the coming and going rule applies, we now turn to the dual purpose exception and the exceptions suggested by the Ahistroms.
II. THE DUAL PURPOSE EXCEPTION
$14 If an employee's personal conduct benefits an employer, we have implied that the employer may be held liable where the predominant purpose of the conduct was not personal. See Whitehead,
15 Although the City received some benefit from Ross's trip home from work on the day of her accident, the facts before the trial court were not sufficient to make that benefit the predominant purpose of Ross's trip. Unlike the Johnson case, it did not appear vitally necessary to the City that she be accessible while on personal errands. There is no indication the City would have sent any one else on the trip had Ross not gone. Thus, it is apparent, based on the proof to date, that the benefits the City received from Ross's commute were only tangential to Ross's purpose of commuting home from work that day. Such tangential benefits are not enough to result in respondeat superior liability for the City under the dual purpose exception to the coming and going rule.
III, THE SPECIAL ERRAND EXCEPTION
116 We address the application of the special errand exception and the employer-provided transportation exception not be
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cause we adopt them in negligence cases, but to show that the Ahlstroms, having proffered these possible exceptions, would nevertheless be unable to meet them even were we to approve their use in such cases. A special errand occurs "when the employee engages in a special activity which is within the course of his employment, and which is reasonably undertaken at the request or invitation of the employer." - Drake v. Indus. Comm'n of Utah,
IV. THE EMPLOYER-PROVIDED TRANSPORTATION EXCEPTION
17 The other exception cited by the Ahistroms in support of their claim against the City is what they term the employer-provided transportation exception, which also has its roots in worker's compensation cases. Under this exception, employers have been liable for injuries to their employees when they have required their employees to use the employer's vehicle See State Tax Comm'n,
CONCLUSION
$18 The coming and going rule applies to bar vicarious liability against an employer for commuting accidents caused by employees. In the absence of unique cireum-stances, the rule applies with full force to police officers commuting in city owned vehicles. The Ahblstroms have failed to show that any exception to the coming and going rule as recognized in negligence cases applies. The partial summary judgment in their favor was inappropriate. Accordingly, we reverse the district court's grant of partial summary judgment and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Although the coming and going rule was imported from our worker's compensation jurisprudence, we note that such portability, while sometimes appropriate, is not the rule in Utah.
Scope of employment questions are inherently fact bound. The scope of employment question arises in both worker's compensation and negligence cases but the method by which the question is answered is markedly different. We have said that the Worker's Compensation Act "should be liberally construed and applied to provide coverage. Any doubt respecting the right of compensation will be resolved in favor of the injured employee." State Tax Comm'n,
. While additional cases involving similar circumstances exist, they deal with issues that are inapposite to this case. See, eg., Tighe v. Las Vegas Metro. Police Dep't,
