On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals
Wе granted certiorari in this ease to review the Utah Court of Appeals’ decision in
Drake v. Industrial Commission,
The facts in this ease are undisputed. At the time of her accident, Drake was employed by FHP as a referral coordinator 1 in its Salt Lake City office. At some point during her employment, but several months before Drake’s accident, FHP began to experience delays with its normal courier in the delivery of referrals to Salt Lake from various offices around the state. Because Drake lived in Ogden, Drake’s supervisor asked her to pick up the referrals from the Ogden office two or three days a week on her way home. At the same time, she was also directed to deliver any completed referrals going to Ogden. On the days she made deliveries, Drake took a five- to six-mile detour from her normal route home. Drake was never compensated for her mileage in making these deliveries, nor was she given any extra compensation when the deliveries required her to work more than her eight-hour work day. 2
On August 14, 1991, shortly after Drake had dropped off the referrals at the Ogden office, as she was on her way to pick up her children at their child-care center, Drake was involved in an automobile accident, causing her substantial injuries. Upon denial of cov
After a hearing, the administrative law judge (ALJ) for the Industrial Commission found that Drake’s injuries arose out of and in the course of her employment. The ALJ found that although workers’ compensation benefits are generally denied for injuries sustained on the way to or from work, Drake was on a “special errand” and had deviated from her normal route home for the benefit of her employer; therefore, she was still within the сourse of her employment at the time of her accident. Accordingly, the ALJ granted Drake’s claim for benefits.
Upon motion for review, the Industrial Commission reversed the decision of the ALJ. Although the Commission adopted the ALJ’s findings of fact, it determined that Drake was not on a special errand when she delivered the referrals. It concluded that the deliveries were part of Drake’s regular duties because they were “according to routine.” It thus deniеd benefits pursuant to the recognized “going and coming rule,” finding that once Drake left the Ogden office, her activities no longer took place in the course of her employment. 4
On petition for review, the court of appeals reversed. The court began its analysis by stating, “Whether petitioner was injured in the scope and course of her employment presents a question of law which, absent a grant of discretion, this court reviews for correctness.”
Drake,
904
P.2d
at 205 (citing
Morton Int’l, Inc. v. Auditing Div. of State Tax Comm’n,
On certiorari, FHP does not argue that the court of appeals failed to apply the correct legal principles, but contends that it applied the wrong standard of review when it reviеwed the Commission’s determination that Drake’s delivery was not special but was part
Essential to any determination of the appropriate standard of review for an issue on appeal is the characterization of that issue as either a question of fact, a question of lаw, or a mixed question requiring application of the law to the facts. Where the issue is purely factual, appellate review is highly deferential, requiring reversal only if a finding is clearly erroneous.
See State v. Thurman,
In applying these principles to the instant case, although the empirical facts of Drake’s case are reviewable for clear error, the conclusion as to whether those facts qualify Drake for workers’ compensation benefits under the special errand rule is reviewable for correctness. Because the underlying and historical facts of this case were undisputed,
7
Scope-of-employment issues are in general highly fact-dependent. Indeed, our prior case law recognizes that “whether or not the injury arises out of or within the scope of employment depends upon the particular facts of eaсh case.”
State Tax Comm’n,
In addition, this court has had few occasions to addrеss particular fact situations to which the special errand rule arguably applies. It is therefore even more unlikely that we could “spell out in detail a legal rule that will adequately anticipate the facts that should be outcome determinative if the policy of the legal rule is to be served.”
Vincent,
While we are therefore disposed to give heightened deference to the Commission, policy considerations compel us to exercise some scrutiny. The Workers’ Compensation Act was enacted to provide economic protection for employees who sustain injuries arising out of their employment, therefore “alleviating] hardship upon workers and their families.”
Baker v. Industrial Comm’n,
With this standard in mind, we now turn to the instant case and determine whether the court of appeals, despite enunciating the wrong standard of review, nevertheless arrived at the correct result.
As noted previously, this court has had few occasions to review the special errand exception; only one decision offers any lengthy discussion. That ease,
State Tax Commission v. Industrial Commission,
The rule which emerges ... is that 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, any injury suffered while traveling to and from the place of such activity is also within the course of employment and is compensable.
The instant ease, however, presents a different situation than traveling to a training program or educational seminar, which is more appropriately labeled a “special activity” or an “outside activity at employer’s request.” Although an employee should still show that the аctivity was incidental to the employment and that it was undertaken for the benefit and under the direction of the employer, we think more legal guidance must be given when considering whether an actual errand, which has been undertaken two or three times a week for several months, may still be deemed “special.”
Other jurisdictions, in determining whether an errand on the way to or from work was a “special errand,” have focused on the language in sectiоn 16.11 of Larson’s treatise:
When an employee, having identifiable time and space limits on his employment, makes an off-premises journey which would normally not be covered under the usual going and coming rule, the journey may be brought within the course of employment by the fact that the trouble and time of making the journey, or the special inconvenience, hazard, or urgency of making it in the particular circumstances, is itself sufficiently substantial to be viewed as an integral part of the service itself.
1 Arthur Larson, Larson’s Law of Workmen’s Compensation § 16.11, at 4-204 (1996) (citations omitted).
Larson goes on to explain several variables that the ease law indicates may be useful in resolving difficult cases.
Id.
§ 16.13, at 4-208.23 to 4-208.27. First, the court must consider the “relative regularity or unusualness of the particular journey.” Larson explains that “if [the journey] is relatively regular, whether every day, ... or at frequent intervals, ... the case begins with a strong presumption that the employee’s going and coming trip is expected to be no different from that of any other employee with reasonably regular hours and place of work.”
Id.
at 4-208.24 to 4r-208.26. Indeed, in
Lundberg v. Cream O’Weber/Federated Dairy Farms, Inc.,
Second, the relative burden or “onerousness” of the journey on the employee should be compared with the extent of the task to be performed аt the end of the journey. Larson, supra, § 16.13, at 4-208.26. Larson provides the following example:
If a janitor walks five blocks to spend two hours working at a church in the evening, it would be difficult to conclude that the journey is a significant part of the total service. But if a janitor makes a longerjourney merely to spend one instant turning on the lights, it is easier to say that the essence of the service was the making of the journey.
Id The “onerousness” of the journey takes into account not only the length of the journеy, but also any other circumstances under which it is made, e.g., conditions of travel, time of day, or day of week.
Third, although not present in this case, the suddenness of the assignment from the employer should also be considered. Id. For example, if an employee must suddenly drop everything to travel at the employer’s request, then that indicates that the travel itself could be part of the service rendered. Id. Although the urgency of the travel is not decisive on its own, all these factors are to be considered in the overall analysis of “whether the journey was itself a substantial part of the service for which the claimant was employed and compensated.” Id.
FHP contends, and the Commission agreed, that Drake’s delivery of the referrals was insufficiently “special.” The Commission, without elaboration, found that the deliveries were performed according to routine and thus had become a regular рart of her work activities. Under the standard enunciated above, we defer to the Commission’s decision and accord a strong presumption that the deliveries were not “special.”
The court of appeals held, however, that the regularity of the travel was not a conclusive factor. It relied on
State Tax Commission,
The parties in this case have not referenced these sections of Larson’s treatise on deviations, and it is not clear that this issue was a central one for the Commission. In any event, we are persuaded on balance that we should defer to the Commission’s decision that the deliveries were not “special errands” at all but were part of Drake’s regular duties. As a result, she did not “deviate” from her normal route home when she drove to the Ogden office, but rather, on two or three days a week, her normal route home started from there. Moreover, we cannot say that the five or six miles added to the journey were substantial enough to make the journey a significant part of the service. As a result, the injuries that Drake suffered after she left the Ogden offices were those to which any member of the traveling public was subject “rather than any risks or hazards having to do with and originating in the work or business of the employer.” The court of appeals’ decision is therefore reversed.
Notes
. Referrals are documents that authorize clients of FHP’s health care system to seek treatment from physicians outside the FHP system.
. The record is silent as to whether FHP anticipated that Drake would continue to make these deliveries indefinitely or whether it would eventually correct the problem with its existing courier and no longer need her help.
. Section 35-1-45 of the Workers’ Compensation Act provides in part:
Each employee ... who is injured ... by accident arising out of and in the course of his [or her] employment, wherever such injury occurred, if the accident was not purposely self-inflicted, shall be paid compensation for loss sustained on account of the injury, ... and such amount for medical, nurse, and hospital services and medicines ... as provided in this chapter.
. The Commission also held that even if the deliveries did constitute a "special errand," her travel to her children’s child care constituted a personal deviation from this errand and therefore would also exempt her from benefits. On review, the сourt of appeals also reversed this finding. FHP correctly contends, however, that the only issue on certiorari is whether the court of appeals applied the correct standard of review, and we do not address any other issues.
.The court of appeals did recognize, however, that it had recently stated in
VanLeeuwen v. Industrial Commission,
. We recognize that the standard enunciated in
Pena
as applied to an agency's application of the law to a particular set of facts is a departure from our prior decisions. For example, in
State Tax Commission
v.
Industrial Commission,
In determining whether the Commission correctly applied the findings of basic facts to the legal rules governing the case, we will uphold the Commission, so long as its decision was reasonable in light of the language of the statute, the purpose it aims to achieve and the public policy behind it.
However, we believe the Pena standard is a more accurate measure of the degree of deference to be given to an agency, taking into account factors such as policy concerns and an agency's expertise rаther than using undefinable labels such as "reasonableness.”
. We are unpersuaded by FHP's arguments that whether Drake’s errands were part of her ordinary job duties is a pure question of fact. The determination in this case is not, as FHP argues, what Drake did each day, for it is undisputed that Drake actually delivered the referrals two to
. We stated in
Whitehead v. Variable Annuity Life Insurance Co.,
