619 N.E.2d 479 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1993
B.P. America, Inc. appeals from the trial court's decisions which affirmed the allowance of Yvonne Brown's workers' compensation claim and awarded her attorney fees. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse.
On December 31, 1987, Yvonne Brown was employed by B.P. America as a CRT operator in what was then the Midland Building on Prospect Avenue in Cleveland. At 9:30 in the morning on that date, Brown left her office to go to the Ameritrust bank office located off the lobby shared by the Midland Building with other adjacent buildings. Apparently B.P. America allowed its employees to go to the bank during regular working hours on pay days. After leaving the elevator and going towards Ameritrust in this common lobby, Brown fell and injured her back. Brown did not know what caused her fall.
Brown's workers' compensation claim was allowed by a district hearing officer. Her claim was affirmed by the regional board of review and on further appeal. B.P. America then appealed the claim to the common pleas court pursuant to R.C.
"The trial court erred as a matter of law in `affirming' the `Decision of the Ohio Board of Employment Services Industrial Commission,' and in finding that plaintiff-appellant sustained an injury on December 31, 1987 in the course of, and arising out of, her employment, entitling her to participation in the benefits of the Ohio Workers' Compensation Fund."
Ohio's workers' compensation statute covers "any injury, whether caused by external accidental means or accidental in character and result, received in the course of, and arising out of, the injured employee's employment." R.C.
"As a general rule, an employee with a fixed place of employment, who is injured while traveling to or from his place of employment, is not entitled to participate in the Workers' Compensation Fund because the requisite causal connection between the injury and the employment does not exist."
Case law prior to MTD Products, supra, allowed claims when an employee was not on the employer's premises but was within the so-called "zone of employment." See, e.g., Frishkorn v. Flowers
(1971),
"(1) `but for' the employment, the employee would not have been at the location where the injury occurred, and (2) the risk is distinctive in nature or quantitatively greater than the risk common to the public."
MTD Products overruled Littlefield. In Littlefield, the employee was returning to work by car from a lunch break. He was rear-ended while waiting to make a left-hand turn into the plant entrance of his employer. The MTD Products court explained that the Littlefield claim should not have been allowed because "[t]he risk to an employee making a turn from a busy roadway and into the plant entrance is no different from, and no greater than, the risk that any number of the driving public encounters every day on crowded and congested city streets." MTD Products,supra,
In the case at bar, Brown was not on B.P. America premises when she was injured, but was nearby in the communal lobby. While Brown would not have been traversing the lobby but for her employment in the adjacent building, the risk of falling in that lobby was not a special hazard created by B.P. America. Yvonne Brown took the same risk as any other member of the public who chose to enter the lobby. Accordingly, pursuant to MTDProducts, Brown's claim should not have been allowed. *197
We also note that Brown's claim was also problematical pursuant to prior case law because she was engaged with a personal errand, not the business of her employer. CompareFisher v. Mayfield (1990),
Since Brown was engaged with a personal errand and fell in a public place outside the employer's premises where there was no special hazard created by her employer, the trial court erred in upholding her claim. Appellant's first assignment of error is sustained.
"The trial court erred as a matter of law in granting plaintiff's motion for attorney fees and awarding plaintiff's counsel attorney fees in the amount of $2500.00."
R.C.
"(E) The cost of any legal proceedings authorized by this section, including an attorney's fee to the claimant's attorney to be fixed by the trial judge, based upon the effort expended,in the event the claimant's right to participate or to continueto participate in the fund is established upon the finaldetermination of an appeal, shall be taxed against the employer or the commission if the commission or the administrator rather than the employer contested the right of the claimant to participate in the fund. The attorney's fee shall not exceed twenty-five hundred dollars." (Emphasis added.)
Since we have determined that Brown is not entitled to participate in the fund, she is also not entitled to attorney fees. Appellant's second assignment of error is sustained.
Judgment reversed.
DYKE, C.J., and JAMES D. SWEENEY, J., concur. *198