696 N.E.2d 640 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1997
The city advances three assignments of error. First, the city contends that the trial court erred by granting Cooper's summary judgment motion and declaring the city his employer for workers' compensation purposes for an off-duty injury Cooper sustained. Next, the city claims that the trial court erred by denying its summary judgment motion and failing to find that it was not Cooper's employer for workers' compensation purposes. Finally, the city asserts that the trial court erred by awarding Cooper the statutory maximum attorney fees without providing the city an opportunity to be heard and without sufficient evidence to justify the award.
The present appeal stems from an injury Cooper sustained on December 2, 1994, while attempting to stop a shoplifter outside a Groceryland store. Cooper, a Dayton police officer, was out of uniform and off-duty, working as a loss-prevention specialist at the grocery store.1 He had obtained the part-time *36 security work from a fellow police officer, John D. Pawelski, who acted as an independent contractor supplying the grocery store with off-duty officers to prevent shoplifting. Pawelski's work for Groceryland was conducted on his own time and was unrelated to his work as a city police officer. The work consisted primarily of scheduling off-duty officers for morning or afternoon shifts at the store, recording the officers' hours worked, and billing Groceryland for the security work. Groceryland paid Pawelski $15 per hour for the officers' work, and Pawelski, in turn, paid the officers approximately $11 per hour.
While working as a security specialist on December 2, 1994, Cooper observed a shopper stealing meat. Cooper followed the shopper outside into the parking lot, and the shopper entered a vehicle driven by a second person. The two suspects then attempted to leave. In response, Cooper drew his service revolver, identified himself as a police officer, displayed his badge, and ordered the suspects to place their hands in the air. Rather than complying, the two suspects sped toward Cooper, who jumped onto the car's hood. The driver then braked hard in front of the store at Troy and Stanley streets, causing Cooper to be thrown to the pavement. As a result of the incident, Cooper suffered lacerations, abrasions, a contusion to the knee, and a tibial fracture. He remained hospitalized until December 4, 1994.
Following his release, Cooper filed an application for compensation and medical benefits with the Bureau of Workers' Compensation, identifying the city of Dayton as his employer and listing his occupation as "police officer."2 The Bureau of Workers' Compensation administrator subsequently issued a January 9, 1995 order allowing Cooper's claim against the city. A district hearing officer *37 then denied the city's appeal from the administrator's order, finding the appeal not timely filed. A staff hearing officer affirmed the district hearing officer's ruling. Thereafter, the Ohio Industrial Commission refused to hear the city's appeal from the staff hearing officer's order.
The city subsequently filed an appeal in the Montgomery County Common Pleas Court. The trial court first recited the foregoing procedural history and then proceeded to address the merits of the city's appeal, ultimately finding the city's arguments unpersuasive and granting summary judgment in Cooper's favor. In response, the city filed a timely appeal to this court, advancing three assignments of error. On March 25, 1997, wesua sponte ordered the city to show cause why its failure to timely appeal from the Bureau of Workers' Compensation's initial order allowing Cooper's claim did not compel us to affirm the trial court's judgment or dismiss the appeal. The city responded to the show cause order on April 2, 1997.
After reviewing the city's response, we continue to question this court's and the trial court's jurisdiction to hear the city's appeal. In short, we are not entirely convinced that the city's failure to timely appeal the BWC administrator's award did not deprive us of jurisdiction to hear the present appeal. Although we find much of the city's argument on the issue unpersuasive,3 this court's own research has revealed no clear answer. *38
In any event, we have decided to view the present situation as simply raising a failure-to-exhaust-administrative-remedies question. Although the city did file an appeal at each administrative level, the appeals were rejected as untimely and included no substantive review. In our view, a party cannot be deemed to have exhausted its administrative remedies by filing an untimely administrative appeal and having subsequent administrative appeals rejected expressly on that basis.
In Arbar Corp. v. Wellmeier (Sept. 20, 1995), Greene App. No. 94-CA-99, unreported, 1995 WL 558781, this court noted that "a failure to exhaust administrative remedies has been viewed as a jurisdictional defect which will deprive a common pleas court of jurisdiction to hear an appeal in a workers' compensation case." At least one other appellate court has concluded, however, that a failure to exhaust administrative remedies is not a jurisdictional defect, but an affirmative defense that must be raised. See Jackson v. Ohio Bur. of Workers' Comp. (1994),
In its first two assignments of error, the city contends that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in Cooper's favor and denying summary judgment for the city. Both assignments of error involve the same legal issue: whether the city was Cooper's "employer" for workers' compensation purposes at the time of his injury. If so, the trial court properly granted Cooper's motion and properly denied the city's motion.
In its brief to this court, the city essentially raises two legal arguments against granting Cooper summary judgment. First, the city contends that R.C.
"Every person in the service of an independent contractor or subcontractor who has failed to pay into the state insurance fund the amount of premium determined and fixed by the administrator of workers' compensation for his employment or occupation * * * shall be considered as the employee of the person who has entered into a contract, whether written or verbal, with such independent contractor unless such employees or their legal representatives or beneficiaries elect, after injury or death, to regard such independent contractor as the employer."
In the present case, the record reveals that Pawelski acted as an independent contractor for Groceryland. Furthermore, the parties do not dispute Pawelski's failure to pay into the state workers' compensation fund. Under these circumstances, the city contends that Cooper was "in the service of" Pawelski, a non-complying employer.5 Therefore, pursuant to R.C.
"Faced with a non-complying employer (Pawelski) and one who entered into a contract with Pawelski (Groceryland), who could have and should have seen to Pawelski's compliance with the Act, as part of its contract with him, there is simply no statutory or other legal basis for imposing employer status, for purposes of the Ohio Workers' Compensation Act, on yet a third entity, the City *40 of Dayton, merely because of its employment of Cooper at other times. The trial court's decision to do so, merely because Cooper elected to file his claim against the city and not against Pawelski or Groceryland, as permitted by the statute, constitutes an unprecedented and unwarranted judicial extension of statutory liability for workers' injuries."
This court would find the city's argument persuasive if Cooper had injured himself while stocking shelves or performing other work at Groceryland unrelated to his work as a Dayton police officer. As we will explain more fully below, however, Cooper was acting as a police officer at the time of his injury. Consequently, we conclude that the city of Dayton, not Groceryland or Pawelski, was Cooper's "employer" for workers' compensation purposes. As a result, we find R.C.
The city's reliance upon the statute ignores the role Cooper's status as a Dayton police officer played in his conduct. Contrary to the city's argument, the trial court did not impose "employer" status upon the city merely because of its employment of Cooper "at other times" or because he elected to file his claim against the city. Instead, as we will explain, the trial court properly imposed employer status on the city because, at the time of his injury, Cooper was performing his duty as an officer of the police department.
In a second argument, the city contends that the trial court erred by relying upon Lord v. Daugherty (1981),
We begin our resolution of the city's argument with a brief review of the Ohio Supreme Court's Lord and Fisher opinions. In those two cases, the court attempted to clarify R.C.
"Ohio's workers' compensation statute, as do those of the vast majority of states, contains the basic coverage formula: `in the course of, and arising out of,' employment. A leading scholar in this area of the law, Professor Larson, has noted that `[t]he heart of every compensation act, and the source of most litigation in the compensation field, is the coverage formula. * * * Few groups of statutory words in the history of law have had to bear the weight of such a mountain of interpretation as has been heaped upon this slender foundation. *41
* * *' 1 Larson, The Law of Workmen's Compensation (1984) 3-1 to 3-3, Section 6.10." Fisher, supra,
The significance of the two phrases stems from the Ohio Supreme Court's longstanding recognition that "[a]n injury sustained by an employee is compensable under the Workers' Compensation Act only if it was `received in the course of, and arising out of, the injured employee's employment.'" Id. at 276,
In Lord v. Daugherty, supra, the Ohio Supreme Court addressed the "arising out of" element, finding that the phrase imposed a causal-connection requirement. The court then applied a "totality of the circumstances" test to determine the existence of a causal connection between an employee's injury and his employment:
"[W]hether there is a sufficient `causal connection' to justify the injured party's right to participate in the Workers' Compensation Fund depends upon the `totality of the facts and circumstances' regarding the accident. Such circumstances include: (1) the proximity of the scene of the accident to the place of employment, (2) the degree of control the employer had over the scene of the accident, and (3) the benefit the employer received from the injured employee's presence at the scene of the accident." Lord, supra,
The Fisher court explained, however, that the foregoing factors are "illustrative" rather than "exhaustive." Fisher,supra,
In its brief to this court, the city first argues that bothFisher and Lord are factually distinguishable from the present case. Specifically, the city notes that both cases involved "single-employment" situations, whereas employer status in the present case arguably could fall upon two or more entities. The city also faults the trial court for its failure to consider the "totality of the circumstances" and to apply the Lord causation factors to Pawelski. The city insists that applying the Lord factors to Pawelski would result in Pawelski being Cooper's employer for workers' compensation purposes. Finally, the city argues that proper application of the Lord and Fisher analysis does not support the trial court's conclusion. *42
Initially, we note our agreement with the city's argument that Lord and Fisher are factually distinguishable from the present case. In both cases, the identity of the injured worker's employer was undisputed. The only issue was whether the injury "arose out of" the employment relationship and occurred "in the course of" employment. In the present case, however, employer status arguably could rest with the city of Dayton, Pawelski or, through R.C.
Notwithstanding this distinction, we remain convinced that the Lord-Fisher analysis provides a viable analytical framework to resolve the present dispute. In reaching this conclusion, we note that the Ohio Supreme Court's two-prong test for determining workers' compensation employer status is flexible and intended to apply to a variety of factual scenarios. InFisher, supra, the court explained:
"[W]hen applying the analysis set forth above, a reviewing court must examine the separate and distinct facts of each case. Historically, similar fact patterns have promulgated their own set of rules. For example, the recreational activity cases have developed a unique group of tests, as well as the so-called `coming and going' cases. Professor Larson's treatise on workers' compensation categorizes the cases in his discussion as to the fact patterns involved. This is because workers' compensation cases are, to a large extent, very fact specific. As such, no one test or analysis can be said to apply to each and every factual possibility. Nor can only one factor be considered controlling. Rather, a flexible and analytically sound approach to these cases is preferable. Otherwise, the application of hard and fast rules can lead to unsound and unfair results."Fisher, supra,
Unfortunately, Ohio's common law includes no category of cases involving off-duty police officers injured under the present circumstances. This court's research has revealed little Ohio case law applicable to the topic. After reviewing the circumstances surrounding Cooper's injury, the Lord-Fisher two-part "employer" test, and relevant case law from other jurisdictions, however, we conclude that Cooper acted as a city employee at the time of his injury.
In reaching this conclusion, we look first to Cooper's responsibilities as (1) a loss-prevention specialist and (2) a city police officer. As a loss-prevention specialist, Cooper's responsibilities typically did not include arresting shoplifters. In fact, the city acknowledges that Groceryland loss-prevention specialists called on-duty police officers to arrest and transport shoplifting suspects. This procedure is consistent with R.C.
Conversely, in his role as a peace officer, R.C.
Application of the Lord-Fisher analysis to the present case supports our conclusion. As we recognized above, an injury sustained by an employee is compensable under workers' compensation statutes only if it was "received in the course of, and arising out of," the employee's employment. Fisher, supra,
After reviewing the record and the foregoing criteria, we conclude that Cooper acted "in the course of" his city employment and that the injury "arose out of" that employment. In reaching this conclusion, we first acknowledge that theLord-Fisher analysis works best when an employee holds only one job and the sole issue is whether the employee's injury stemmed from his employment. In the present case, however, Cooper worked full-time as a police officer and moonlighted as a loss-prevention specialist. The two jobs admittedly share some similar characteristics. Nevertheless, after applying the appropriate factors and considering the totality of the circumstances, we find Cooper's injury more closely related to his city employment than his Groceryland work.
Cooper sustained an injury after pursuing a suspected shoplifter outside Groceryland. Just before his injury, Cooper had identified himself as a police officer, displayed his badge, and drawn his revolver. Given Cooper's mandatory R.C.
In opposition to this conclusion, the city cites Evans v.Smith (1994),
We find the city's reliance upon Evans unpersuasive. InEvans, the court recognized that the officer's authority to arrest and detain the suspect without a warrant "[arose] under either R.C.
The city also relies upon State v. Glover (1976),
"A duly commissioned police officer holds a public office upon a continuing basis. The officer here remained an officer of the law, and his obligation to preserve the peace was not nullified by the fact he was working for Kroger in this case. Notwithstanding, the officer, even though acting as a private security policeman, had the right and duty to arrest and detain a person who was violating *46
the law of this state or an ordinance of the city of Columbus until a warrant could be obtained. Therefore, it was not error for the trial court to find appellant guilty of resisting arrest within the facts and circumstances of this particular case."Id. at 38, 6 O.O.3d at 22,
Initially, we stress our agreement with the Glover court's recognition of an off-duty police officer's ever-present responsibility to stop crime. To the extent the opinion suggests such an officer always would be acting in both his official police capacity and his private security capacity when making an arrest, however, we disagree. In so doing, we note that the legal issue in Glover did not require the court to decide whether the officer was acting as a police officer and a private guard simultaneously. Rather, the court needed to find only that the officer acted in his official police capacity to sustain the appellant's resisting arrest conviction. The narrower issue — whether the officer acted as a private security guard at thesame time — was not before the court. In any event, as we explained above, the officer's off-duty security work provided no legal basis for him to conduct a warrantless arrest. Such statutory authority necessarily resulted solely from his status as a peace officer.
Furthermore, we find the legal issue in the present case — workers' compensation responsibility — significantly different from the issue in Glover — criminal responsibility for resisting arrest. In Fisher, supra, the Ohio Supreme Court recognized the difficulty in applying "hard and fast rules" to the often unique facts surrounding employment-related injuries. As a result, the court stressed that "no one test or analysis can be said to apply to each and every factual possibility. Nor can only one factor be considered controlling. Rather, a flexible and analytically sound approach to these cases is preferable."Id.,
Applying this same flexible approach, and considering the totality of the circumstances, we also find that Cooper's injury arose out of his city employment. Once again, however, the specific Lord-Fisher factors designed to assist in this determination prove somewhat difficult to apply. The first factor considers the proximity of the accident scene to the place of employment. In the present case, however, the accident occurred outside Groceryland in close proximity to the store. However, given Cooper's statutory responsibility as a peace officer to stop crime, his "place of employment" for law enforcement purposes reasonably could be viewed as anywhere he lawfully exercises his authority.7 Consequently, the *47 proximity factor is consistent with both Cooper's private employment and his police work.
The second factor addresses the employer's degree of control over the accident scene. This inquiry concerns "the amount of control the employer had over the situs of the injury, and not the degree of control the employer had regarding the actions of its employees." Fisher, supra,
The final factor considers the benefit the employer derived from the employee's activity. Here, too, Groceryland, Pawelski (in his private capacity), and the city each benefited from Cooper's conduct. The benefit to Groceryland is obvious — the apprehension of a shoplifter. The benefit to Pawelski is also clear — commendable performance by a worker he recruited and payment from Groceryland. Finally, as the trial court recognized, the city benefited from the apprehension of a criminal and the prevention of harm to citizens or property.
In Manchester v. Huard (1973),
"In making an arrest, [the officer] was performing the functions and duties of a police officer. * * * His action related as much to preserving the general public safety as it did to the benefit of Mrs. Bea's [restaurant]. The city had a sufficient continuing interest in what he was doing to make it liable for the injuries he received while he was doing it. * * * The city had a duty to preserve order and the use of police officers for off-duty jobs such as this merely shifted the financial *48
burden to others." Id.
Similarly, in the present case, we conclude that the city received at least as much benefit from Cooper's conduct as did Groceryland, which presumably recovered the stolen meat, or Pawelski, who received the satisfaction of recruiting a dedicated loss-prevention specialist and money from Groceryland for his efforts.
In short, when considering the unusual facts and circumstances of this case, we cannot deny the existence of a causal connection between Cooper's city employment and his injury outside Groceryland. Consequently, we hold that Cooper's injury arose out of his employment with the city of Dayton. While we concede that the Lord-Fisher factors do not mesh neatly into the facts before us, we again recognize the Ohio Supreme Court's endorsement of an "analytically sound approach" to workers' compensation cases rather than "the application of hard and fast rules." Guided by the general principles articulated in Lord andFisher, as well as the totality of the circumstances, we find that Cooper's injury was received in the course of, and arose out of, his employment as a Dayton police officer.
This conclusion is consistent with case law from other jurisdictions. In Phoenix v. Indus. Comm. of Arizona (App. 1987),
While working off-duty at a Sixpence Inn, officer John Robertson observed a man in the motel parking lot at approximately 8:45 p.m. The officer asked the man for identification after recognizing him as a person he previously had warned for trespassing. Id.,
Based upon the foregoing facts, the Arizona appellate court stated:
"In this case, it was stipulated by the parties, and found by the Commission, that the deceased was in the line of duty as a City police officer when he was shot. His on-duty status began when the robbery victim yelled to him that he had been robbed by the subject being questioned. Although the deceased was performing a function of his role as an independent contractor security guard at the time he stopped the subject for questioning, that role ceased as soon as he had reason to believe a felony had been committed. At that point, he became solely an officer of the police department. The evidence is clear that Sixpence Inn had no right to exercise control over his actions when he was engaged in such a function. While we recognized the benefit to Sixpence of the officer's security guard function in stopping and questioning the subject, we find that this was separate and distinct from his obligations as a City of Phoenix police officer and that these roles were not co-existent." Id.,
While some factual differences exist, we find the court's reasoning in Phoenix v. Indus. Comm. of Arizona, supra,
persuasive. Cooper acted as either an independent contractor or an employee of Pawelski while performing his off-duty work as a loss-prevention specialist.9 Although he was performing in his loss-prevention capacity when he observed and followed the shoplifting suspect, Cooper's police officer status began when he identified himself as a police officer, displayed his badge, drew his service revolver, and ordered the suspects to place their hands in the air. At that point, his actions were consistent only with his employment as a Dayton police officer. Neither Groceryland nor Pawelski, in his private capacity, had any authority to control Cooper's conduct at that time. Furthermore, as did the Arizona court, we too recognize the benefit Groceryland received from Cooper's presence. Nevertheless, his conduct as a Dayton police officer was separate and distinct from his conduct as a loss-prevention specialist. See Manchester v. Huard, supra; Hialeah v. Weber
(Fla.App. 1986),
In reaching this conclusion, we find insignificant Cooper's lack of a police uniform when injured. Like wearing a police uniform, Cooper's display of his badge constituted a public demonstration of his police authority. Furthermore, regardless of his civilian clothes, Cooper orally identified himself as a Dayton police officer when he attempted to stop the suspects.
Likewise, we find relatively insignificant Cooper's failure to secure permission to work at Groceryland despite department policy requiring officers to obtain prior approval for off-duty work. A copy of the off-duty employment request form Cooper should have completed is included in the record. The form requires officers to acknowledge that they must use sick leave, not injury leave, for injuries sustained while engaged in off-duty work. However, the issue of an officer taking sick leave or injury leave for a moonlighting injury is clearly distinct from the issue of workers' compensation liability. The form is silent regarding an off-duty employer's workers' compensation responsibility.
A separate city personnel policy, however, attached to the city's motion for summary judgment as part of Exhibit K, does address the city's worker's compensation responsibility for off-duty work injuries. The policy statement, dated June 20, 1989, provides:
"The City of Dayton will not be liable for the injury of any employee resulting from, or arising out of, employment with another employer. City employees who are employed during their off-duty hours for a private concern, and who are injured as a result of said employment with such concern, should file Workers' Compensation claims against such private concern."
Under the circumstances of this case, we find the foregoing provision inapplicable. As we explained above, Cooper's injury did not arise out of or result from his off-duty employment. Rather, Cooper sustained his injury while exercising his statutory obligation as a city police officer. Thus, Cooper's injury was received in the course of, and arising out of, his employment with the city. Furthermore, we note that with respect to workers' compensation claims for *51
injuries sustained outside the scope of an officer's official duties, the policy statement has no effect. Pursuant to R.C.
Finally, to the extent the city might construe the form as shifting all workers' compensation liability to private employers for injuries officers sustain in the line of duty, such an argument would raise substantial Fourteenth Amendment questions. In Bowman v. Twp. of Pennsauken (D.N.J. 1989),
"It is not a legitimate [state] interest, however, to attempt to shift liability and litigation exposure in all cases, even those where it is judicially determined that the officer was acting in an official capacity." Id. See, also, Benelli v. NewOrleans (La.App. 1985),
Given our conclusion, however, that the city personnel provision does not shift responsibility for injuries sustained in the course of, and arising out of, an officer's city employment, we need not address potential constitutional issues. Having determined that Cooper's injury was sustained in the course of, and arising out of, his city employment, we overrule the city's first assignment of error.
In its second assignment of error, the city contends that the trial court erred by failing to grant its summary judgment motion. Given our determination that the city bears workers' compensation responsibility for Cooper's injury, however, the city is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Accordingly, we overrule this assignment of error.
In its third assignment of error, the city claims that the trial court erred by awarding Cooper $2,500, the statutory maximum, for attorney fees without granting the city an opportunity to be heard and without adequate evidence to justify the award.
The record reveals that Cooper filed the motion for attorney fees on October 16, 1996 at 3:05 p.m. The motion included a certificate of service stating that Cooper's counsel sent the city a copy of the motion by "regular U.S. mail on the date of filing." On October 17, 1996, at 3:23 p.m., the trial court filed a decision and judgment entry granting Cooper's motion for the statutory maximum attorney *52 fees. Under these circumstances, the city obviously had no opportunity to respond to the motion.
Furthermore, an affidavit from Cooper's attorney, James A. Hensley, Jr., accompanied the motion but stated only (1) that Hensley charged $100 per hour for his services and (2) that his present charges for work on Cooper's case were $2,500. InPerry v. LTV Steel Co. (1992),
We find the Perry court's reasoning particularly applicable in the present case, where the city did not receive even an opportunity to respond to the motion. Additionally, as the city notes, the trial court decided the present case on summary judgment after considering primarily evidence Cooper already had submitted in the administrative proceedings before the Industrial Commission. Given the lack of notice to the city and Cooper's attorney's failure to demonstrate that the statutory maximum award was reasonable, we sustain the city's third assignment of error. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's judgment awarding attorney fees and remand this cause for an evidentiary hearing solely on the issue of appropriate fees.
Judgment affirmed in part,reversed in partand cause remanded.
WOLFF and GRADY, JJ., concur.
In a final argument, the city contends that dismissing this action for its failure to timely appeal the BWC administrator's order is "patently unjust, harsh, and nonsensical." In support of this contention, the city cites Singer Sewing Machine Co. v.Puckett (1964),