This case asks the Court to determine whether a school qualifies as a category two statutory employer. This case also asks the Court to determine whether the summary judgment order based on statutory employer immunity can be affirmed on the alternate ground that the injured party was a borrowed employee. We reverse.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Appellant, Vanessa Lynn Cordova, began working for Idaho Falls School District No. 91 (District 91) in 1996 as a behavioral counselor. In 2002 Cordova joined a team called the Behavioral Support Division and began traveling to various schools. Cordova spent Mondays and Tuesdays at Telford Academy, an alternative junior high school in Bonneville County Joint School District No. 93 (District 93). Students at Telford Academy include students from District 93 and from District 91.
Cordova agreed to accompany a group of students from Telford Academy and District 93 employees on a field trip to Pine Basin Lodge, a former ski lodge that is subject to a 99 year lease agreement between District 93 and the U.S. Forest Service. It is used during the school year for various activities and for a summer youth program. On the day of the field trip, October 24, 2002, District 93 used Pine Basin Lodge to conduct a “ropes/eonfidenee” course designed to build cohesiveness and trust among the students. An employee of District 93 directed the activities for the ropes/confidence course. Cordova was injured while helping to catch a student during a “trust fall” exercise.
Cordova received worker’s compensation benefits from District 91 and filed a personal injury lawsuit against District 93 alleging that District 93 was negligent and liable for her injuries. The district court held that District 93 was not entitled to summary judgment on the ground that Cordova was a borrowed employee but granted District 93’s Motion for Summary Judgment on the ground that it was Cordova’s statutory employer and thus immune from tort suit under I.C. § 72-223. The district court denied Cordova’s Motion for Reconsideration. Cordova then timely appealed to this Court.
II. ANALYSIS
“This Court’s review of a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary judgment is the same standard used by the trial court in originally ruling on the motion.”
Robison v. Bateman-Hall, Inc.,
The two main issues in this ease are whether District 93 is the statutory employer of Cordova and whether the summary judgment order can be affirmed on the alternate ground that Cordova was District 93’s borrowed employee. We turn first to the statutory employer analysis.
A. Statutory employer
Cordova is suing District 93 in tort. If District 93 is Cordova’s statutory employer, the case must be dismissed since under Idaho’s Worker’s Compensation Law Cordova’s exclusive remedy is recovery through worker’s compensation. I.C. §§ 72-209(1), 72-211.
Idaho Code § 72-223 provides a limited exception to the worker’s compensation exclusive remedy rule. This statute states that even if an injured employee is entitled to compensation under the Worker’s Compensation Law, a third party may still have a legal liability to pay damages. I.C. § 72-223(1). The statute specifically excludes two categories of employers from third party liability. Category one is not at issue. Category two consists of “the owner or lessee of premises, or other person who is virtually the proprietor or operator of the business there carried on, but who, by reason of there being an independent contractor or for any other reason, is not the direct employer of the workmen there employed.” Id.
Cordova argues that a statutory employer determination is a question of fact and so was improperly decided by the trial court, that she was a volunteer and not an employee, and that District 93 does not qualify as a virtual proprietor because the type of work done did not pertain to the business of District 93 and because District 93 did not carry on a business for pecuniary gain. 1 Each issue will be discussed in turn.
1. District 93’s status as a statutory employer is a question of law in this instance.
First, Cordova argues that it was improper to grant summary judgment because whether someone is a statutory employer is a question of fact. However, “[i]f the evidence reveals no disputed issues of material fact, what remains is a question of law, over which this Court exercises free review.”
Robison,
In this case, there are no disputed material facts preventing summary judgment. Both parties agree that Cordova was an employee of District 91, who spent part of her time at a District 93 school. Furthermore, the parties agree that on the day of the accident, she was on premises leased by District 93 as a field trip supervisor, supervising both District 91 and District 93 students. Therefore, whether District 93 was Cordova’s statutory employer is an issue of law.
See Rhodes v. Sunshine Mining Co.,
Cordova argues that because she . received no extra compensation and because her attendance at the field trip was optional she was a volunteer and so was not an employee under I.C. § 72-223. That statute governs potential remedies of “workmen.” I.C. § 72-223(1). A workman, which is synonymous with employee, “means any person who has entered into the employment of, or who works under contract of service ... with, an employer.” I.C. § 72-102(12). For purposes of section 72-223 it is well settled that an employee can have more than one employer.
Venters v. Sorrento Delaware, Inc.,
There is no dispute that at the time of the accident, Cordova was an employee of District 91; in fact she collected worker’s compensation from District 91. 2 While at Pine Basin Lodge, she “work[ed] under contract of service” with “an employer,” District 91. 3 This makes her a workman, and since Cordova is a workman under the code, her tort suit against District 93 depends upon whether District 93 is her statutory employer. See I.C. § 72-223.
3. District 93 is not Cordova’s statutory employer.
Under category two, a statutory employer must be both the owner or lessee of the premises and the virtual proprietor or operator of the business there carried on.
Harpole v. State,
District 93 is the lessee of the premises but is not the virtual operator of the “business” there carried on. We exercise free review over the interpretation of a statute.
Carrier v. Lake Pend Oreille Sch. Dist. No. 84,
The plain and ordinary meaning of “business” does not include a non-profit governmental entity. Dictionary definitions of the word “business” include an “[e]mployment, occupation, profession, or commercial activity engaged in for gain or livelihood,” Black’s Law Dictionary 198 (6th ed. 1990), and “a commercial or mercantile activity engaged in as a means of livelihood,” Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 154 (10th ed. 1993). Additionally, our virtual proprietor test looks at whether the alleged statutory employer is carrying on a business for pecuniary gain.
Robison,
Pecuniary gain does not necessarily mean one must be making a profit; we have
In
Harpole,
we looked at whether the State was a virtual proprietor when Harpole was injured while logging timber on State property.
Harpole,
We conclude that District 93 is not conducting a business; it is not engaged in activity for the purposes of “livelihood,” and operating a public school is not a commercial activity. Furthermore, there is no evidence that District 93 is receiving any pecuniary gain in connection with operating the school. Thus, because District 93 is not a “business” in the ordinary meaning of the word, it cannot be Cordova’s category two statutory employer. Hence, District 93 is not entitled to immunity from tort suit under I.C. § 72-223.
B. Borrowed employee
District 93 asserts that the trial court’s order can be affirmed on the alternate ground that Cordova was a borrowed employee, and therefore, District 93 was her statutory employer. Cordova argues that the District Court properly decided there was an issue of fact as to whether Cordova was a borrowed employee. Here, the district court correctly concluded there was a genuine issue of material fact on the borrowed employee claim.
A company is not subject to third party liability when it is the employer of a “loaned employee.”
Lines v. Idaho Forest Indus.,
In this case, it is unclear whether District 93 or District 91 had the right to control Cordova. Since summary judgment is improper when there is an issue of material fact, we decline to affirm on the alternate ground that Cordova was a borrowed employee.
C. District 93 is not entitled to attorney fees
District 93 requests an award of attorney fees under I.C. § 6-918A. Under
III. CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment to District 93. We also decline to award District 93 attorneys’ fees. Costs to Appellant.
Notes
. Cordova also argues that District 93 is not a statutory employer because it made a binding judicial admission that Cordova was not an employee of District 93. However statements in interrogatories and depositions are not "formal act[s] or statement[s] made by a party or attorney, in the course of judicial proceedings, for the purpose, or with the effect, of dispensing with the need for proof by the opposing party of some fact.”
See Strouse v. K-Tek, Inc.,
. There is an issue of fact as to District 93’s claim that Cordova, after receiving worker’s compensation benefits from District 91, would be judicially estopped from now claiming she was not an employee. Judicial estoppel applies when “a litigant, by means of such sworn statements, obtains a judgment, advantage or consideration from one parly____”
Smith v. U.S.R.V. Properties, LC,
. Cordova’s argument that District 93 judicially admitted she was a volunteer lacks sufficient support. Lloyd Becker, the principal of Telford Academy, never said she was a volunteer. Becker merely said all adults on the field trip went on the field trip “voluntarily (without additional compensation).’’ That implies she was receiving some compensation, and hence is not a volunteer. “To be a judicial admission a statement must be a deliberate, clear, and unequivocal statement of a party about a concrete fact within that party’s knowledge.”
Strouse,
