On the appeal of Albion E. Morton, a bus driver employed by the Greater Portland Transit District, we review the Workers’ Compensation Commission’s denial of compensation for injuries he sustained in a fall that occurred while he was leaving work on March 18, 1980. Since the employee-appellant on this record demonstrates no reversible error in the commissioner’s decision, we deny his appeal.
Morton testified that when he came to work on the day of the injury he parked his truck on the shoulder of Valley Street adjacent to the Transit District’s property. The Transit District’s property was enclosed with a fence, with only one gate on Valley Street. Morton and other employees used the gate when entering and leaving work. On the particular day in question, Morton had parked very close to the gate. After leaving work through the gate, he approached his truck, stepped onto a pile of snow and ice, slipped and fell.
The commissioner denied compensation, stating:
Based on all the evidence adduced at the hearing, the Commission finds that the employee sustained an injury outside the employers [sic] premises and that said injury was neither in the course of his employment nor did it arise out of his employment.
Though the employee had the right under 39 M.R.S.A. § 99 (Supp.1981) to request findings of fact and conclusions of law, he did not do so.
On appeal the employee does not contest the commissioner’s finding of fact that the injury occurred off his employer’s premises. Rather, the employee argues that the pile of snow and ice on which he slipped and fell, situated as it was close to his employer’s gate, constituted a “special hazard.” The “special hazard” doctrine,
see
1 A. Larson,
Workmen's Compensation Law
§ 15.13 (1978), has not yet been adopted in Maine, although it has been referred to in two opinions.
Oliver v. Wyandotte Industries Corp.,
Me.,
We disagree. Because the employee did not request findings of fact, we
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must resolve all questions of fact in favor of the commissioner’s decision. That decision can be vacated only if it is not supported by any reasonable interpretation of the record.
Merriam v. James River Corp.,
Me.,
Opposite factual conclusions might also have been drawn from the record, but such determination of the facts is not for us. The legislature has given the factfinding responsibility to the commission, and there it must remain.
Dunton v. Eastern Fine Paper Co.,
Me.,
Given the posture of the case, the employee can prevail only if legal error is evident in the decree. The employee urges us to read the decree, quoted above, as saying: The injury took place off the employer’s premises; therefore, it was not in the course of employment, nor did it arise out of the employment. Such a decree would be error even without regard to the “special hazard” doctrine.
See Rawson’s Case,
The entry is:
Pro forma judgment of the Superior Court affirmed.
It is further ordered that the employer pay to the employee an allowance for counsel fees in the amount of $550.00, together with his reasonable out-of-pocket expenses for this appeal.
All concurring.
Notes
. Of course, if the argument was not made to the commissioner, it was waived and we cannot consider it on appeal.
Severy v. S. D. Warren Co.,
Me.,
