Lincoln Hockey, LLC, d/b/a Washington Capitals, petitions for review of the District of Columbia Department of Employment Services’ (DOES) award of workers’ compensation benefits to Jamie Huscroft, a former player in the Capitals’ professional hockey organization. Huscroft was injured while playing in a regular-season game for the Portland Pirates, a Capitals minor-league affiliate. He filed a claim for unemployment benefits under the District of Columbia Workers’ Compensation Act (WCA), and DOES granted his claim. The Capitals contend that DOES erred in finding that Huscroft’s claim came within the jurisdiction of the WCA and in declining to limit Huscroft’s award according to the work life expectancy of a professional hockey player. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm. 1
I.
Huscroft was signed by the Capitals in 1999 to a two-year, “two way” contract to play professional hockey. Under this “two way” contract, Huscroft could be assigned to play for the Capitals in thе National Hockey League (NHL) or for its minor
After the 2000-2001 season ended, when his contract expired, Huseroft filed a claim under the WCA, D.C.Code § 32-1501 et seq. (2001), seeking temporary total disability benefits from May 1, 2001, to July 31, 2001, and temporary partial disability benefits from August 1, 2001, “to the present and continuing.” On September 7, 2007, an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) issued a Compensation Order finding that an employer/employee relationship existed, that Huscroft’s injury was causally related to the accident in the October 2000 hockey game, and that Huseroft was entitled to temporary total disability benefits from May 1, 2001, to July 31, 2001, and temporary partial disability payments from August 1, 2001, to the completion of his work-life expectancy.
On the Capitals’ petition for review, the Compensation Review Board (CRB) reversed and remanded the ALJ’s Order on the ground that substantial evidence did not support the ALJ’s finding that the claim came within the jurisdiction of the WCA. The CRB specifically observed that the WCA covers injuries occurring outside the District of Columbiа only “if, at the time of the injury or death, the employment is localized principally in the District of Columbia.” D.C.Code § 32-1503(a)(2) (2001). The CRB remanded, concluding that “a determination is required as to the nature of Respondent’s employment relationship with the District at the time of his injury, and whether that relationship constitutes a set of substantial and legitimate contacts with the District more significant here than elsewhere.”
On remand, the ALJ considered anew the jurisdictional issue, and on February 29, 2008, it issued a Compensation Order on Remand, again finding that the claim came within the jurisdiction of the WCA. The ALJ found that the Capitals’ principal business was playing professional hockey games, that their arena was located in the District of Columbia, that Huseroft was hired principally to play in NHL games, and that ultimately, his participation in AHL games was “ancillary to preparing for NHL games” for the Capitals. The ALJ also rejected an argument that D.C.Code § 32-1508(3)(W) mandated Hus-croft’s award be limited by his work-life exрectancy as a professional athlete. The ALJ awarded temporary total disability benefits from May to July of 2001 and temporary partial disability benefits from August of 2001 “to the present and continuing.”
On June 10, 2008, the CRB reversed and remanded a second time. The CRB concluded that under the WCA, an award of temporary partial disаbility benefits may not be of an indefinite duration but must be limited to not more than five years, citing D.C.Code § 32-1508(5). The CRB also remanded for renewed findings of fact with respect to the causal relationship between the injury and the disability. The
II.
We may not disturb a DOES compensation award unless “it is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.”
Children’s Nat’l Med. Ctr. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
Because Huscroft’s injury was incurred outside the District, the WCA only covers his claim if at the time of the injury, his employment was “localized principally in the District of Columbia.” D.C.Code § 32-1503(a)(2) (2001). In
Hughes v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
1) The place(s) of the employee’s business office(s) or faeility(ies) at which or from which the employee performs the principal service(s) for which he was hired; or
2) If there is no such office or facility at which the employee works, the employee’s residеnce, the place where the contract is made and the place of performance; or
3) If neither (1) nor (2) is applicable, the employee’s base of operations.
Id.
at 569. In
Petrilli v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
In analyzing Huscroft’s claim, DOES relied upon our decision in
Pro-Football, Inc. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
In the present case, the ALJ similarly found that the principal duty for which Huscroft was hired was to play in regularly scheduled NHL games for the Capitals. Despite the fact that Huscroft actually spent more time in Portland than in the District, the ALJ found his activities with the Portland Pirates, including playing in AHL games, were “ancillary to prepаring for NHL games.” In support of this finding, the ALJ cited the testimony of Frank Provenzano, the Assistant General Manager for the Capitals at the time. Provenza-no, who negotiated Huscroft’s contract, testified that Huscroft was a good defensive hockey player, one who could step in and provide a veteran presеnce for the Capitals at the NHL level. Further, while Provenzano hoped Huscroft could also provide a winning environment for the Portland Pirates, he indicated that he “wanted a winning environment at the affiliate to obtain a winning environment at the ... NHL level.” Indeed, Provenzano testified at the hearing that the AHL is “primarily a development league for the [NHL].”
Further, the record shows that even when Huscroft was playing for the Pirates, the Capitals maintained complete control over his activities. His paycheck came directly from the Capitals, he could be called up to the NHL at any time at the Capitals’ discretion, and the Cаpitals “controlled all on[-]ice hockey operations” of the Pirates, including “the full roster, coaches and trainers.” All of this evidence supports the ALJ’s finding that Huscroft’s “participation in AHL games served as the functional equivalent of preparatory practice for NHL games.”
The CRB concluded the ALJ’s findings оn the jurisdiction of the WCA were supported by substantial evidence in the record and resulted from a reasonable application of appropriate legal principles. We agree. The fact that the Capitals signed Huscroft to contribute to the achievement of their business objective of winning hоckey games in the District shows that under the first prong of the
Hughes
test, Hus-croft “performed] the principal services for which he was hired” in the District.
4
Hughes,
The Capitals contend that instead of
Pro-Football,
Huscroft’s case should be controlled by our holding in
Furtick v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
III.
We also find no merit in the Capitals’ other challenge to the compensation award. The Capitals contend that at the time of the accident, Huscroft was either at or near the end of his professional hockey career, and that DOES was required to limit Huscroft’s award according to his work-life expectancy as a professional athlete, pursuant to § 32-1508(3)(W) of the WCA. That subsection provides:
The compensation and remuneration payable to a professional athlete claimant pursuant to subparagraph (V)(ii) of this paragraph shall be detеrmined by referring to the date of the claimant’s disability and a date that is not later than the date on which the claimant’s employment as a professional athlete would have ended, as determined pursuant to § 32-1501(17C), if the disability for which he or she seeks compensation and remuneration pursuant to subpara-graph (V)(ii) of this paragraph had not occurred.
D.C.Code § 32-1508(3)(W) (2001). This subsection, however, applies only to claimants seeking compensation pursuant to § 32-1508(3)(V)(ii), which involves “disabilities partial in character but permanent in quality.” It is therefore inapplicable to Huscroft, who obtained compensation under § 32-1508(5), the subsection dеaling with his “temporary partial disability.” Pursuant to § 32-1508(5), temporary partial disability awards are limited to a period not exceeding five years, a limitation the agency properly applied to Huscroft’s award.
The presence of more specific limiting language in § 32-1508(3)(W), and the absence of that same language in § 32-1508(5), persuades us the legislature chose to limit professional athletes’ awards for “permanent partial” disabilities based on the end of their careers as professional athletes, and that it did not choose to enact the same limitations on athletes’ awards for “temporary partial” disabilities.
See Odemns v. District of Columbia,
Accordingly, the Order awarding workers’ compensation benefits is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Huscroft filed a brief as intervenor, in support of the compensation award. DOES filed a statement in lieu of brief, stating that it would stand on the decisions bеlow and any arguments Huscroft might make.
. Because the employer does not contest DOES’s finding that Huscroft’s disability was causally related to this injury, we need not address the details of the injury here.
. We sustained the agency's determination with respect to ten of the fourteen claimants. We remanded for further findings with respect to thе remaining four, who, the record showed, had never actually appeared in a regular season game at RFK Stadium.
Pro-Football, Inc., supra,
. We have held that it was not necessary to require an employee to work a "majority" of hours in the District in order to invoke the jurisdiction of the WCA, holding instead that performing the principal service for which he or she was hired for a plurality of hours in the District is sufficient.
Shipkey v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
. The Capitals argue that under D.C.Code § 32-1501(17C) the Office of Workers’ Compensation is required to enact rules regarding work-life expectancy for professional athletes in each professional sports franchise in the District, and that thus far that Office has failed to do so. This, the Capitals’ argue, frustrates the purpose of § 32-1508(3)(W), which clearly contemplates limitations to a professional athlete's compensation award based on the end of his or her career under certain circumstances. While we understand the Capitals’ concern as it relates to other cases where the provision relating to work-life expectancy is applicable, that concern is not implicated here.
