Opinion
The right to recover workers’ compensation benefits is the sole and exclusive remedy of an employee against an employer for injury arising *1059 out of and in the course of employment. (Lab. Code, §§ 3600, 3602.) 1 We granted review to resolve a conflict in decisions of the Courts of Appeal on the issue whether a person convicted of crime but not incarcerated, who undertakes to perform community service in lieu of paying a fine, is an employee within the meaning of the foregoing rule. After review we conclude that the opinion of the Court of Appeal herein, authored by Justice Ming W. Chin and concurred in by Presiding Justice Clinton White and Justice Robert W. Merrill, correctly holds that such a person is an employee for workers’ compensation purposes. We adopt that opinion as the opinion of this court. The opinion, with appropriate deletions and additions, follows: *
Linda Arriaga appeals from a judgment dismissing her action for personal injury against respondents County of Alameda (County) and State of California (State). The trial court entered judgment after sustaining a demurrer to Arriaga’s complaint without leave to amend. It sustained the demurrer because it found as a matter of law that Arriaga suffered her injuries in the course of employment with respondents, and therefore her exclusive remedy was under the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act) (Lab. Code, § 3200 et seq.).[ ] Arriaga contends that the trial court’s finding is erroneous. [ ] [[The Court of Appeal rejected the contention and affirmed the judgment. We shall affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.]]
Factual and Procedural Background
On January 4, 1993, Arriaga filed a complaint alleging a cause of action for negligence against respondents in connection with injuries she sustained on February 15, 1992. The complaint alleged liability based on the following facts: “. . . Arriaga was assigned by the Sheriff[’s] Department for the . . . County . . . through the Department’s Weekender Program to work for the Department of Transportation for [the] State . . . (hereinafter ‘Cal Trans’), as part of her sentence to work оff a four year old speeding ticket. [Arriaga] was assigned by Cal Trans to clean greasy walls of a ventilation duct deep inside the building over the Posey Tube connecting the city of Alameda to Oakland. [Arriaga] was required to work for several hours in the ventilation duct in an unsafe and dangerous environment. Specifically, [Arriaga] was left without supervision and without adequate warning or instruction concerning the hazards and risk associated with the use of the solvent *1060 she was provided by defendants. [Arriaga] was comрelled to wash walls utilizing the solvent without ventilation or special respiratory equipment which defendants knew or should have known was dangerous to [her] physical, mental and emotional health. As a consequence of said actions, [Arriaga] was exposed to toxic fumes and experienced dizziness and lost consciousness.”
Respondents demurred to the complaint on three grounds. They first argued that they were immune from liability under Government Code section 844.6, which provides that a public entity is not liablе for an injury to a prisoner. They also argued that, because Arriaga was an employee under section 3351 at the time of her injury, her exclusive remedy was workers’ compensation. Finally, they argued that, under Government Code section 815, they were not liable for general negligence, and that Arriaga had failed to allege a statutory cause of action. Arriaga opposed the demurrer, contending that she was not a prisoner within the meaning of Government Code section 844.6, that she was not аn employee within the meaning of the workers’ compensation laws, and that the alleged facts stated certain statutory causes of action. She therefore requested that the court overrule the demurrer or grant her leave to amend the complaint.
At the hearing on the demurrer, the court agreed that, under the alleged facts, workers’ compensation constituted Arriaga’s exclusive remedy. It therefore sustained the demurrer without leave to amend and entered a judgment dismissing the cоmplaint. [[The Court of Appeal affirmed the judgment, and we granted review.]]
Discussion
This appeal turns on whether the [[courts below were]] correct in determining that workers’ compensation is Arriaga’s exclusive remedy. Ordinarily, “. . . a defendant in a civil action who claims to be one of that class of persons protected from an action at law by the provisions of the . . . Act bears the burden of pleading and proving, as an affirmative defense to the action, the existence of the conditions of cоmpensation set forth in the statute which are necessary to its application. [Citations.]”
(Doney
v.
Tambouratgis
(1979)
“An employer-employee relationship must exist in order to bring the . . . Act into effect. (§ 3600.)”
(County of Los Angeles
v.
Workers’ Comp.
*1061
Appeals Bd.
(1981)
“Given these broad statutory contours, ... an ‘employment’ relationship sufficient to bring the [A]ct into play cannot be determined simply from technical contractual or common law conceptions of employment but must instead be resolved by reference to the history and fundamental purposes underlying the . . . Act [citations].”
(Laeng, supra, 6
Cal.3d at p.
777,
fn. omitted.) The purpose of the Act is to protect individuals against the special risks of employment.
(Id,
at pp. 774, 782;
Conroy, supra,
Applying these principles, [[this court]] in
Laeng
extended compensation coverage to a city job applicant who was injured “as part of a ‘tryout’ competition for the position of ‘refuse crew worker,’ ” even though he “was concededly not an ‘employee’ of the city in a strict, contractual sense” at the. time of the injury.
(Laeng, supra,
*1062 control, and the employer, in turn, assum[ed] responsibility for directing the applicant’s activities.” (Id., at p. 782.) Finally, the court found that the applicant “incurred his injury while undertaking a ‘special risk’ of employment . . . .” (Id., at p. 783.) Therefore, he qualified as an “ ‘employee,’ ” as that term must be understood “in light of ... the [Ajct’s рurpose of protecting individuals from any special risks inherent in employment. . . .” (Id., at p. 782.)
In
Conroy,
[[we]] reached a similar conclusion as to “workfare” recipients. There, Los Angeles County required Conroy to work as a watchman for a school district in exchange for general assistance.
(Conroy, supra,
Under Laeng and Conroy, we find that the allegations of Arriaga’s complaint establish as a matter of law that she was an employee under the Act.[] She was doing maintenance work for the State Department of Transportation within the County’s boundaries at the time of her injury. Thus, she *1063 was in the service of both the County and the State, and both entities received benefit from her work. She also was under the control of both the County, which had the power to assign her to a job through the weekender program, and the State, which assigned her to the particular task that she was performing at the time of her injury.[] Finally, Arriaga’s assigned work in the ventilation duct exposed her to the same risks of employment that other transportation workers face. Therefore, we find that she was an employee of both the County and the State for workers’ compensation purposes. 4
In finding that Arriaga was an employee under the Act, we decline to follow
California State Univ., Fullerton
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1993)
We find
Fullerton
unpersuasive.
6
As set out above, section 3352, subdivision (i), applies only if the person seeking compensation is “performing voluntary service.” We do not believe that persons who perform work pursuant to a court order are performing “voluntary service” within the meaning of this section, even if the order permits them to pay a fine instead of working. As generally understood, the term “voluntary” at minimum “means an exercise of will, i.e., it ‘implies freedom from any compulsion that could constrain one’s choice.’ [Citation.]”
(Moyer
v.
Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1973)
Nor do we agree that such a person “receives no remuneration for the services other than meals, transportation, lodging, or reimbursement for incidental expenses.” (§ 3352, subd. (i).) As
Fullerton
recognizes, “remuneration” for purposes of section 3352, subdivision (i), need not be in monetary form.
(Fullerton, supra,
Our conclusion comports with the Legislature’s command in section 3202 that the Act “be liberally construed by the courts with the purpose of extending [its] benefits for the protection of pеrsons injured in the course of their employment.”[ ] This command governs all aspects of workers’ compensation; it applies to factual as well as statutory construction.
(Kerley
v.
Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd.
(1971)
Our conclusion also comports with the statutory history surrounding section 3301. Subdivision (b) of that section excludes from the definition of “ ‘employer’ ” under the Act “[a]ny private, nonprofit organizatiоn while acting solely as the sponsor of a person who, as a condition of sentencing by a superior or municipal court, is performing services for the organization.” (§ 3301, subd. (b).) The Finance, Insurance, and Commerce Committee, whose chairman authored the amendment that added subdivision (b) to section 3301, provided the following analysis: “Quite often, a person convicted of a minor crime is given the opportunity of performing a certain amount of public service in lieu of a jail sentence. The sentence is normally *1066 satisfied by performing services under the sponsorship of a private nonprofit organization. A question has been raised as to whether these convicts are employees of the private nonprofit organization while performing these services. Since these individuals are not technically inmates, they are not eligible for workers’ compensation under . . . Section 3370 nor are they ‘volunteers’ and thereby excluded under Sections 3363.5 or 3363.6. Accordingly, the purpose of the amendment is to clarify that they are not employees of the sponsoring private nonprofit organization.” (Finance, Ins., and Commerce Com., Summary and Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 44 (1981-1982 Reg. Sess.) Jan. .27, 1981, p. 2, italics added.) The Legislature’s belief that persons who perform service in lieu of a jail sentence are not volunteers under the Act, and its enactment of an express exclusion for private, nonprofit organizations that receive such service, supports our conclusion that Arriaga is not a volunteеr under section 3352, subdivision (i). [[That exclusion would be superfluous if the persons it refers to were also excluded from the Act by section 3352, subdivision (i). 8
[ ] [[End of Court of Appeal opinion.]]
Arriaga contends she was not an employee within the meaning of the Act because she was not a “worker whose services form a regular and continual part of the cost of [the] product” of her employer. The point lacks merit. As shown by the decisions in
Laeng, supra,
Arriaga further stresses she received no consideration from respondents in the form of wages or monetary equivalents known as “fringe benefits.”
*1067
But as noted in
Laeng, supra,
6 Cal.3d at page
777,
footnote 5, “Contrary to the . . . suggestion, California workers’] compensation law does not require that an applicant be receiving actual ‘compensation’ for his ‘services’ in order to fall within the workers’] compensation scheme.” Here, as explained above, Arriaga was not a true volunteer: for her services she received the valuable benefit of forgiveness of her criminal fine. Thus “[t]he present case ... is not one in which the applicant can be said to have ‘gratuitously’ volunteered [her] services ... as was true of the volunteer canteen hostess in
Edwards
v.
Hollywood Canteen[, supra,
]
Arriaga also asserts that she did not “consent to an employment rеlationship” with respondents. In the present context, however, the question is not whether Arriaga consented to the employment relationship but whether she was a “volunteer” within the meaning of the Act. The difference is illustrated by the case on which Arriaga relies,
Kowalski
v.
Shell Oil Co.
(1979)
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed.
*1068 Lucas, C. J., Kennard, J., Arabian, J., Baxter, J., George, J., and Werdegar, J., concurred.
Notes
All unlabelled code refеrences hereafter are to the Labor Code.
Brackets together in this manner [ ], without enclosed material, are used to denote our deletions from the opinion of the Court of Appeal; double brackets enclosing material are used to denote our additions. Footnotes in the Court of Appeal opinion that have been retained are sequentially renumbered.
Real party in interest was Francis P. Conroy.
In a footnote, the court also stated that
McBurney
“erred in concluding . . . that no contract of hire existed.”
(Conroy, supra,
As between the County and the State, the situation is similar to that in
Conroy.
There, the court held that Los Angeles County was Conroy’s general employer because it assigned Conroy to the school district, but retained the right to control other aspects of his work: “whether to acceрt him as a worker, where to assign him, and whether to discharge him.”
(Conroy, supra,
Section 3363.5, subdivision (a), provides: “Notwithstanding Sections 3351, 3352, and 3357, a person who performs voluntary service without pay for a public agency, as designated and authorized by the governing body of the agency or its designee, shall, upon adoption of a resolution by the governing body of the agency so declaring, be deemed to be an employee of the agency for purposes of this division while performing such service.”
Because we find that Arriaga was not a volunteer under section 3352, subdivision (i), we need not decide whether respondents have complied with section 3363.5, subdivision (a), by adopting a resolution declaring her to be an employee. Therefore, we dеny [[Arriaga’s]] request for judicial notice of a 1983 agreement between the County and the State relating to “referral work volunteers,” and a County resolution authorizing execution of the agreement.
If, in exchange for her work, Arriaga had received money with which to pay her fine, she unquestionably would have received sufficient remuneration. The same result must obtain in this case, where Arriaga simply received credit against the fine instead.
The result of this statutory scheme, admittedly, is that the workers’ compensаtion rights of a person who elects to work in lieu of paying a fine turn on the nature of the entity, if any, to which the county assigns that person. In all cases the county will remain liable for workers’ compensation because it is the “general employer.” (See fn. 4, ante.) If the county, as here, assigns the person to work for another public entity, the latter will also be liable for workers’ compensation because it is a “special employer.” (Ibid.) But if the county assigns the person to work for a private nonprofit organization, that organization will not be liable for workers’ compensation because the statute (§ 3301, subd. (b)) specifically exempts it from employer status.
Although no party makes an issue of this distinction, it is not difficult to conceive of a rational basis for it. To deny such a person the right to sue the public entity at law supports the sovereign immunity provisions of the California Tort Claims Act (Gov. Code, § 810 et seq.); conversely, to relieve the private nonprofit organization of the expense of workers’ compensation insurance encourages such organizations to provide community service programs of the type now before us.]]
In the cited case, Thomas Kowalski, an employee of a company that contracted to do maintenance work on the premises of another (Shell), was injured on the job. Kowalski sued Shell for damages. The jury returned a verdict finding that Kowalski was not a special employee of Shell and that Shell was liable to him in damages. The court enterеd a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, ruling that Kowalski was Shell’s special employee and hence Kowalski’s exclusive remedy was in workers’ compensation. The sole issue on appeal was whether the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s finding of lack of a special employment relationship. We reviewed eight factors that generally bear on that question, e.g., the right to control, right to discharge, nature and duration of the work, source of the tools and equipment, etc. (23 Cal.3d at pp. 176-178.) Onе of these factors was whether the worker had expressly or impliedly consented to the special employment relationship. (Id. at p. 178.) We found that under all the factors there was substantial evidence to support the finding that Kowalski was not Shell’s special employee, and therefore reversed the judgment. (Id. at pp. 178-179.)
Likewise distinguishable are
Rowland
v.
County of Sonoma
(1990)
Because we hold that workers’ compensation constitutes Arriaga’s exclusive remedy, we need not determine whether respondents are immune under Government Code section 844.6 or whether Arriaga’s complaint stated sufficient facts to allege a statutory cause of action.
For the reasons stated we disapprove
California State Univ., Fullerton
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd., supra,
