62 Pa. Commw. 132 | Pa. Commw. Ct. | 1981
Opinion by
In this workmen’s compensation appeal, the claimant
The employer was aware of employee use of the lot, having posted a notice detailing complaints from U.S. Steel and the municipal authorities as to the employees’ haphazard manner of parking.
Because the claimant was not actually working at the time of his fall, his eligibility depends upon whether or not the incident occurred on the employer’s premises.
In Epler, the employee’s widow was awarded compensation when her husband was struck by a car while
That critical element is absent here. Although the employer was aware that some of its employees parked in the U.S. Steel lot, it did not require them to use that lot either directly or through failure to provide company-owned parking facilities.
The employer’s posted notice, set forth in a footnote above, essentially constituted a communication relaying the complaints of others concerning the exercise of parking privileges those others had extended, rather than an assertion or assumption by the employer adopting the TJ..S. Steel lot as part of its own business complex.
The relationship between the employee’s use of the lot and the employer’s business operations is too tenuous to warrant characterization of the area as an integral part of the employer’s premises.
We therefore affirm.
Order
And Now, October 7, 1981, the order of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board No. A-77804, dated October 23, 1980, affirming a referee’s denial of compensation to claimant, is hereby affirmed.
Meredith M. Naugle.
Section 301(c)(1) of The Pennsylvania Workmen’s Compensation Act, Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §411 (1), details two categories of compensable injuries arising in the course of employment. The first is an injury sustained by an employee while engaged in the business or affairs of the employer, whether or not the employee is on the employer’s premises. The second is an injury sustained by an employee on the employer’s premises caused by the condition of the premises or by the operation of the employer’s business or affairs thereon, provided that the employee’s presence is required thereon by the nature of his em
The notice, posted January 31, 1979, stated:
THE FERNDALE POLICE AND BOROUGH OFFICIALS ARE COMPLAINING ABOUT PENN MACHINE COMPANY EMPLOYEES PARKING ACROSS THE RAILROAD TRACKS IN A MANNER WHICH PREVENTS THE BOROUGH SALT TRUCK AND HIGHLIFT TO ENTER THIS AREA TO PICK UP SALT.
EACH OF YOU HAVE BEEN NOTIFIED BEFORE ABOUT PARKING YOUR VEHICLES IN AN ORDERLY MANNER TO ALLOW U.S. STEEL TRUCKS AND OTHER BOROUGH VEHICLES TO ENTER AND LEAVE THIS PREMISE.
NATIONAL BENDING COMPANY AND U.S. STEEL HAVE CAUTIONED THIS OFFICE SEVERAL TIMES ABOUT THE ERRATIC PARKING OF PENN MACHINE COMPANY EMPLOYEES’ VEHICLES ON THEIR PRIVATE PROPERTY AND HAVE THREATENED TO POST ‘NO TRESPASSING' SIGNS OR TO ERECT A FENCE ACROSS THE PROPERTY TO PREVENT ANYONE FROM PARKING IN THIS AREA.
*135 I AM ASKING EACH ONE OF YOU WHO PARK IN THIS AREA TO PARK IN AN ORDERLY FASHION TO PERMIT OTHER VEHICLES TO ENTER AND LEAVE THIS PROPERTY WITHOUT PROBLEMS.
THERE IS ADDITIONAL PARKING AREA BETWEEN THE HYDRAULIC SHOP AND THE RAILROAD TRACKS IF YOU SO DESIRE.
ONLY YOUR FULL COOPERATION ON THE ABOVE MATTER CAN PREVENT THE LOSS OF YOUR PARKING PRIVILEGES ACROSS THE RAILROAD TRACKS. (Emphasis in original.)
The notice was submitted as an exhibit by the employer.
Section 301(c)(1), 77 P.S. §411(1) describes as the employer’s premises “premises occupied by or under the control of the employer, or upon which the employer’s business or affairs are being carried on. . . .”
The municipality in which the employer’s plant was located had banned on-street parking in the vicinity of the plant and required the employer to provide off-street parking. The employer then established a parking priority allowing managerial and supervisory personnel to park at a lot closer to the plant while relegating other classes of employees, including Epler, to a non-contiguous lot located across the public road.
A survey of recent cases reveals that Pennsylvania courts have held that areas essentially used as a means of ingress or egress to the entrance or exit of an employee’s place of employment, even though accessible to public use, are integrally related to the employer’s business. See, e.g., Interstate United Corp. v. Workmen’s men’s Compensation Appeal Board, Pa. Commonwealth Ct.
For a comprehensive review of cases dealing with the issue of parking lots as part of the employer’s premises, see footnote 2 of Justice Pomeroy’s concurring opinion in Epler.