Plаintiff-appellant Martha Locke filed suit against her employer, SunTrust Bank, for injuries she sustained when a robber shot her during a bank robbery of the SunTrust branch where she worked. The district court dismissed Locke’s complaint with prejudice, concluding: (1) that Locke’s negligence claim against her employer was barred by the exclusivity provisions of Florida’s workers’ compensation laws; and (2) that Locke’s complaint failed to state a claim for an intentional tоrt by her employer. After review and oral argument, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND 1
A. Locke’s complaint
Locke’s complaint alleges that on January 8, 2002, she was working as a manager at SunTrust’s Recker Highway bank branch in Winter Haven, Florida (the “bank”). Two men entered the bank — one armed with a can of mace and one armed with a handgun — and proceeded to rob the bank. The gunman stood by the teller’s window, while the other robber stood by the vault door. The gunman eventually fired twice at two women behind the tеller’s window. Because the teller’s window glass was bulletproof, the bullets ricocheted off the glass. According to Locke’s complaint, this “enraged” the gunman, and he walked toward Locke in anger and shot Locke point-blank in the face. The gunman then stepped on Locke and stole her purse.
Locke’s complaint contains two counts: (1) negligence and (2) intentional tort. Count 1 alleges that SunTrust had a duty to protect Locke and breached its duty by failing to provide sufficient security at its bank branch. Count 2 alleges that Sun-Trust knew of the presence of unsafe working conditions at its bank branch, failed to provide sufficient security despite that knowledge, and thereby engagеd in conduct so “outrageous as to go beyond all bounds of decency, and to be regarded as odious and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.”
B. Dismissal order
SunTrust filed a motion to dismiss Locke’s complaint, which the district court granted with prejudice. As to Count 1 (negligence), the district court concluded that Locke’s claim was barred by the exclusivity provisions of the Florida workers’ compensation laws because her injuries were causally related to her emрloyment as a bank manager. As to Count 2 (intentional tort), the district court concluded that Locke’s allegations, even if proven, would not support an intentional tort claim against SunTrust. The district court determined that because Locke did not allege “any additional facts to support a cause of action ... leave to amend ... would be futile.” Locke appealed.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction
Preliminarily, we address our jurisdiction over Locke’s appeal. Thе parties do not dispute that Locke’s Notice of Appeal was filed more than thirty days after the entry of the district court’s dismissal order on April 10, 2006. See Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(1)(A) (thirty-day rule). Locke’s Notice of Appeal was due on or before May 10, 2006.
On May 15, 2006, Locke filed a Motion to Extend Time to appeal, in which her counsel asserted that a legal assistant at his firm had miscalculated the thirty-day deadline. On May 22, 2006 (seven days later), the district court granted Locke’s Motion to Extend Time, finding “excusable neglect.” Locke then filed this appeal on the same day.
Under Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(5)(A), a district court may extend the time to file a Notice of Appeal if: (i) a party moves to extend no later than thirty days after the time originally prescribed expires; and (ii) the movant “shows excusable neglect or good cause.” Locke moved for an extension five days after the original deadline expired. This Court previously hаs recognized that the phrase “excusable neglect” may include, when appropriate, late filings caused by inadvertence, mistake, or carelessness under certain circumstances.
See Advanced Estimating Sys. v. Riney,
B. Count 1 (negligence)
Under Florida law, an employer shall pay an employee workers’ compensation benefits “if the employee suffers an accidental injury or death arising out of work performed in the course and the scope of employment.” Fla. Stat. Ann. § 440.09 (2001).
3
As a general matter, the workers’ compensation liability of an employer “shall be exclusive and in place of all other liability of such emplоyer .... ”
Id.
§ 440.11. This is sometimes known as the workers’ compensation exclusivity bar.
See Fla. Power & Light Co. v. Huwer,
The Florida courts have established a two-part, work-connectedness test
for
whether the exclusivity bar applies, which requires that a work-related injury must both (1) arise out of and (2) occur in the course of employment.
Byrd v. Richardson-Greenshields Sec., Inc.,
The parties do not contest that the second part of Florida’s test is met here, insofar as it is undisputed that Locke was shot in the face at her bank branch and while working. Instead, Locke contends that the first part of the test is absent here. After a review of Florida law, we disagree because Florida courts have repeatedly concluded that injuries sustained during robberies in the workplace “arise out of’ emрloyment under Florida law and have granted workers’ compensation immunity to defendant-employers in several cases with facts closely analogous to this one.
For instance, in
Sullivan v. Atlantic Federal Savings & Loan Association,
Similarly, in
Winn Dixie Stores, Inc. v. Parks,
The Florida Supreme Court’s decision in
Strother
is also noteworthy. In
Strother,
the plaintiff-employee Strother was a cashier at a cafeteria. Although it was not part of her regular duties, Strother drove the cafeteria manager on two occasions to the bank to deposit the day’s receipts. On the two days prior to the incident in which she was injured, Strother noticed two men in the cafeteria who were neither employees nor customers. On the evening of the incident, Strother noticed the same ■ two men enter the cafeteria. Strother left work and drove directly home (a flfteen-to twenty-minute drive), at which point she was assaulted and had her purse taken by one of the men whom she had observed in the cafeteria.
See Strother,
Here, Locke’s complaint alleges that she was a bank manager shot in the face inside her bank branch and during a robbery of the bank branch. Moreover, her complaint alleges that customers were present during the robbery; i.e., the robbery took place during normal business hours. Given the allegations of the complaint, and the above Florida authority, we have little difficulty concluding that Lockе’s injury arose out of her employment with SunTrust under Florida law. As such, Locke’s negligence claim is barred by Florida’s workers’ compensation exclusivity bar.
Locke’s main arguments against application of the exclusivity bar are based primarily on
Professional Telephone Answering Service, Inc. v. Groce,
In
Groce,
the plaintiff-employee Groce, a telephone answering service operator, claimed that she was sexually assaulted in the workplace by a third party (non-employee) as a result of her employer’s negligence.
Groce,
Reversing on appeal, the Florida appellate court concluded that the workers’ compensation exclusivity bar was available as a defense. Id. at 610-11. After concluding that the exclusivity bar could be plеd as a defense to Groce’s claims, the Florida appellate court then decided that “[w]hether the sexual assault in this case was a risk inherent in the nature of the work remains a question to be determined by the fact-finder.” Id. at 611.
Locke’s first argument is that Groce narrowed the broad definition of what can constitute an injury “arising out of’ employment by examining whether the injury was caused by “a risk inherent in the nature of the work” in question. Id. (emphasis added). We reject Locke’s claim that the “risk inherent” language in Groce, a sexual assаult case, somehow narrowed Florida’s expansive view of what constitutes a work-related injury, at least in the context of an employee’s injury suffered in the workplace during a robbery of the workplace. The Florida robbery cases discussed above are strikingly similar to this case and support the district court’s conclusion that Locke’s injuries as alleged in the complaint “arose out of’ Locke’s job as a SunTrust bank manager. 4
Locke also stresses the
Groce
court’s statement that “[wjhether the sexual assault in this case was a risk inherent in the nature of the work remains a question to be determined by
the fact-finder.” Groce,
C. Count 2 (intentional tort)
Notwithstanding the general tort immunity for employers, the Florida Supreme Court has recognized an intentional tort exception to the workers’ compensation exclusivity bar. Specifically, if an employer engages in an “ ‘intentional act designed to result in or that is substantially certain to result in injury or death to the employee,’ ” the workers’ compensation exclusivity bar does not apply.
Turner v. PCR, Inc.,
Here, Locke does not contend that SunTrust deliberately intended to injure her. Instead, she argues only that the district court erred in concluding that SunTrust’s conduct, as alleged in the complaint, did not amount to conduct “substantially certain to result in [her] injury or death.”
We disagree with Locke and affirm the district court. The allegations of Locke’s complaint do not rise to the level of “indiffеrence to employee safety” found in Florida cases in which the intentional tort exception has been held to apply.
Bourassa v. Busch Entm’t Corp.,
The allegations of Locke’s complaint material to the “substantially certain” issue are: (1) prior to the date of the robbery, SunTrust knew that a teller had been pistol-whipped by a bank robber at her bank branch; (2) prior to the date of the robbery, “several incidents of aggravated assault had taken place at” her bank branch; (3) after the pistol-whipping incident, Sun-Trust hired a security guard; (4) Locke was told that SunTrust had hired a security guard and that the guard would be in place; and (5) the guard was not in place on the date of the robbery, for economic reasons.
Locke’s allegations are analogous to those in the case of
Garrick v. Publix Super Markets, Inc.,
The Florida court in
Garrick
held that the plaintiffs’ allegations did not state a claim for intentional tort under
Turner. Garrick,
• If anything, Locke’s allegations are weaker than those of the Garrick plaintiffs. In Garrick, the plaintiffs claimed that Brinks knew of an actual (albeit unspecified) pending armed robbery of a Brinks vehicle аt a Publix store in Boynton Beach and nevertheless did nothing to prevent it. By contrast, there is no allegation in this case that SunTrust had any knowledge of a plan (even an unspecific plan) to rob the Recker Highway branch at any point in time.
Locke focuses on the alleged prior incidents at her bank branch, as well as Sun-Trust’s decision to hire (and subsequently remove) a security guard. Where Florida courts have applied the intentional tort exceрtion to the workers’ compensation exclusivity bar, they have attached significance to both employers’ prior knowledge of earlier incidents and employers’ decisions to remove safety mechanisms.
See Pendergrass v. R.D. Michaels, Inc.,
Locke urges that this case is essentially indistinguishable from
EAC USA
in which the plaintiff, Kawa, worked as a pressman on a printing press owned by Roberts Quality Printing, Inc.
EAC USA
The present case is materially distinguishable from EAC USA because there is no allegation that SunTrust intentionally instructed Locke to engage in any specific type of dangerous work practice after removing the security guard. For instance, SunTrust did not instruct Locke to guard the bank at midnight in the absence of the security guard or to confront bank robbers if and when they came to the bank. Moreover, the “dangerous condition” created in EAC USA upon the removal of the safety device was far more “substantially certain” to result in the injury of Kawa or another Roberts employee, given that Roberts was instructing its employees to engage in the precise type of conduct that the safety device was designed to prevent. Id. In this case, SunTrust’s removal of the security guard may well have increased the likelihood of a bank robbery at the Recker Highway branch, but — particularly in the absence of some prior warning of a specific robbery, as in Garrick — we cannot say that there was a “substantial certainty” that it would result in injury or death to Locke. Instead, a third party intervened to cause the bank robbery that injured Locke. Accordingly, we agree with the district court’s decision to dismiss Count 2 of Locke’s complaint for failure to state a claim.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s order of dismissal.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We review
de novo
the district court’s order granting SunTrust’s motion to dismiss and take all facts alleged in Locke’s complaint as true.
See Owens v. Samkle Auto. Inc.,
. This Court reviews excusable neglect decisions for abuse of discretion.
See Riney,
77
. The parties agree that Locke’s claims herein are governed by the Florida Workers’ Compensation Law as in effect on the date of the robbery, January 8, 2002. All citations to the Florida Workers’ Compensation Law are to sections of the statute as it was in effect on January 8, 2002.
. The Florida Supreme Court has established one exception to Florida's generally expansive view of workers' compensation immunity: employees' civil lawsuits against employers based on sexual harassment by a co-employee.
See Byrd,
It is noteworthy that
Groce
concluded that
Byrd
is restricted to sexual harassment by an employee, which is by public policy the direct responsibility of the employer.
See Groce,
. This "substantially certain” standard was superseded by statute in 2003 when the Florida legislature amended the Florida Workers’ Compensation Law to codify the intentional tort exception to the exclusivity bar.
See Feraci,
The parties agree that the pre-2003 "substantially certain” test governs this case because the injuries at issue occurred in January 2002, and accordingly, we will apply the "substantially certain” test and not discuss the matter further.
See also Pendergrass v. R.D. Michaels, Inc.,
. We note that Locke alleges that she was "told” a security guard would be in place and that "upon information and belief,” the guard was removed for economic reasons. But the complaint contains no allegation that Sun-Trust’s decision to remove the guard was concealed from Locke. Moreover, Locke does not argue or discuss concealment in her brief on appeal, and there is no reason whatsoever to think that SunTrust even could have concealed the presence of the security guard (or lack thereof) from Locke, given that she not only worked at the bank branch in question, but also managed it.
