Opinion
Plаintiff Susan Oliva’s coworkers became defendants by injuring her in a prank at work. The coworkers filed a motion for summary judgment, contending the action was barred by the general rule that workers’ compensation is plaintiff’s exclusive remedy (Lab. Code, § 3601 1 ). The trial court agreed and granted the summary judgment motion. Contending that pranks cannot be within the scope of the coworkers’ *928 employment under section 3601, plaintiff appeals. 2 We reject the contention and affirm the judgment.
Undisputed Facts
Plaintiff was employed as a cashier at the First Financial Federal Credit Union on February 13, 1986. Defendants Heath, Hayward and Walter were her coemployees. According to plaintiff, she arrived at work at 1:30 p.m. and attempted to sit in her desk chair. The chair had been lowered from its normal height, and plaintiff “fell into [the] chair, rather abruptly,” injuring her back. 3 Defendant Heath admitted she lowerеd the chair an inch as a prank.
The parties agree that plaintiff’s injuries were compensable under section 3600 because they arose out of and were sustained in the course of her employment. Plaintiff subsequently received workers’ compensation benefits for her injuries.
Statutory Background
Section 3600 defines the conditions of compensability under the workers’ compensation lаw. Generally, it provides that an employer is liable, without regard for negligence, for injuries sustained by an employee arising out of and in the course of the employment.
Section 3601 provides that, when the conditions of compensability stated in section 3600 exist, workers’ compensation is the exclusive remedy “against any other employee of the employer acting within the scope of his or her employment,” except for cases of willful and unprovoked physical acts of aggression by the coworker or injuries caused by the intoxication of the coworker. 4
Section 3852 preserves the employee’s right of action against “any person other than the employer.” It also provides that the employer may recover against the third person.
*929 Case Background
In
Saala
v.
McFarland
(1965)
McIvor
v.
Savage
(1963)
The court also held that the phrase “scope of his [or her] employment” as used in section 3601 characterizes the act which was the cause of the injury.
(McIvor
v.
Savage, supra,
*930 The Trial Court’s Decision
The trial court, cоnsidering the above factors, initially denied the motion for summary judgment. It found that, although the defense declarations were sufficient to support a finding that defendants were acting within the scope of employment, the plaintiff’s declarations sufficiently contradicted the defendants’ declarations to create a triable issue of fact. The trial court specifically focused on the lack of independent evidence as to whether the pranks were conduct in the normal course of the credit union’s business.
Faced with this ruling, defense counsel suggested that defendants take a deposition of the employer on this issue and then supplement the motion with the deposition. The court agreed this could be a useful procedure. Defendants thеn took the deposition of á supervising employee that strongly supported the contention that pranks and practical jokes were condoned and encouraged by management to promote morale and camaraderie among the employees. The deposition was filed and the summary judgment motion was reheard.
The trial court considered the suрervisor’s deposition and found that there were no material factual issues, and the legal issue presented by the undisputed facts was whether defendants were acting within the scope of their employment under section 3601. Since pranks and practical jokes were condoned and encouraged by management, the trial court found that defendants were acting within the scope of their employment under section 3601. Accordingly, it granted the motion for summary judgment.
Discussion
Plaintiff contends the trial court erred because (1) factual issues existed which defeat summary judgment and (2) the trial court erred in its determination of the scope of employment issue.
The disputed issue of fact asserted by plaintiff is “whether or not office jokes or pranks were ubiquitous, and whethеr the injured employee, Susan, participated in or knew of said jokes or pranks . . . .” Plaintiff refers to her supplemental declaration in which she states that “[o]ur employer did not authorize us to perform these practical jokes. Further, I do not believe that our employer condoned these practical jokes.” She also stated: “I do not recall that I had ever participated in said practical jokes. Moreover, said jokes were not commonplace in our office.” These statements contradicted defendants’ declarations and the supervisor’s deposition testimony. However, plaintiff also testified in her deposition that she was aware of other incidents in the office involving such pranks as taping desk drаwers shut.
*931 The first issue is whether these contradictions create material factual issues which render summary judgment improper. We agree with the trial court that they did not. Plaintiff’s declaration and deposition testimony only state her knowledge on the questions of whether the jokes and pranks were common and whether they were condoned by management. Since plaintiff only worked part time in the afternoons, she would not witness practical jokes in the mornings, and she would not necessarily be aware of the participation of supervisors in those incidents.
The question of whether practical jokes were condoned by management was unequivocally answered by a company supervisor who testified in his deposition that he encouraged such activities as a means of building morale.
We agree with the trial court that no material factual issues were raised by plaintiff’s declarations or deposition testimony that she was unaware of such approval by management. Whether or not plaintiff knew such activities were condoned by management, the unequivocal testimony is that they were condoned. Plaintiff producеd no contrary third person evidence sufficient to raise a factual issue regarding condonation. We therefore find that the trial court did not err in concluding that there were no material factual issues sufficient to defeat summary judgment.
(Munyon
v.
Ole’s, Inc.
(1982)
Plaintiff’s second contention is that the trial court nevertheless erred in making the legal decision that pranks and practical jokes arе within the scope of employment under section 3601. In addition to the
Saala
and
Mclvor
cases discussed above, plaintiff cites
Hendy
v.
Losse
(1991)
Hendy
also discussed the 1959 amendments to section 3601 and followed
Saala,
holding that the limited immunity of section 3601 “protects employees from damage actions by coemployees, but only if the defendant was acting within the scope of employment when that defendant’s conduct injured the plaintiff.”
(Hendy
v.
Losse, supra,
Hendy thus does not aid plaintiff. If pranks and practical jokes are within the scope of employment, plaintiff’s exclusive remedy is provided by the workers’ compensation laws.
However, plaintiff contends that pranks and practical jokes are not within the scope of employment because “it cannot be seriously argued that such conduct [practical joking] is beneficial to one’s employer.”
Defendants make just such an argument, asserting that the conduct benefitted the employer. They primarily rest on the deposition testimony that strongly stated the supervisor’s belief that jokes or pranks were beneficial to the employer becausе they promoted harmonious working conditions. They therefore argue that “[defendants] were acting within the scope of their employment when they played certain jokes or pranks on Oliva because a ‘condoned’ activity is considered a hazard associated with employment.”
Defendants’ latter argument rests on the cases regarding the compensability of horseplay under section 3600. Those cases generally state that participants in horseplay are generally not entitled to workers’ compensation. However, injuries to a nonparticipating employee resulting from a coworker’s horseplay are compensable.
(Pacific Emp. Ins. Co.
v.
Ind. Acc. Com.
(1945)
Thus, in
Hodges
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1978)
*933 Defendants conclude that the pranks and practical jokes here were within the scope of employment under section 3601 because plaintiff was a nonparticipant and because the employer condoned the pranks and practical jokes. They note that the Workers’ Cоmpensation Appeals Board agreed that the injuries to plaintiff were compensable under section 3600 because she actually received workers’ compensation benefits for her injuries.
Defendants ignore the differences between the application of the foregoing cases to determine compensability under section 3600 and the situation here. The cases address the question of compensability for the employee’s injuries under the “arising out of and in the course of the employment” rule of section 3600. None of the foregoing cases address the issue of the liability of a coworker for horseplay under the “scope of employment” rule of section 3601.
We have found no direct case authority on this issue. Hоwever, even though the
Saala
and
Mclvor
cases relied on by plaintiff define the term “scope of his or her employment” under section 3601 more narrowly than the term “arising out of and in the course of the employment” under section 3600, and differentiate between the two terms, we find no reason why different horseplay rules should apply under the two sections. (Cf.
Church
v.
Arko
(1977)
We therefore hold that the horseplay cases used to determine compensability under section 3600 are equally applicable to determination of whether pranks and practical jokes were within the coworkers’ “scope of his or her employment” under section 3601.
Accepting the relevancy of the horseplay cases, we are led to the conclusion that defendants were acting within the scope of their employment. Under the section 3600 cases, horseplay which is specifically condoned by the employer is compensable. Since the pranks and practical jokes here were specifically condoned by the employer, they were within the coworkers’ scope of employment under section 3601. Since the condoned pranks and practical jokes were within the scope of defendants’ employment, and the specific exceptions of section 3601 are inapplicable, the coworkers are immune from negligence liаbility.
In addition to the result that follows from the application of the horseplay cases to the “scope of his or her employment” rule under section 3601, the general principles of section 3601 lead to the same conclusion.
Hendy
*934
defines “scope of employment” under section 3601 by quoting
Saala:
“' “Conduct is within the scope of employment only if the servant is actuated to some extent by an intent to serve his master.” ’ ”
(Hendy
v.
Losse, supra,
In other words, “. . . an injured worker cannot recovеr damages from a coemployee if the employer would have been liable for the coemployee’s tort had the injured person not also been an employee.” (Peyrat, Cal. Workers’ Damages Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1985) § 3.35, p. 68.) Under this test, we think it clear that the injury resulted from a risk created by the employer when it urged its employees to engage in pranks and prаctical jokes. “Had the injured person been a stranger rather than a coemployee, there would be little doubt that the employer could have been held vicariously liable for defendant’s conduct.”
(Brittell
v.
Young
(1979)
Thus defendants are immune from negligence liability under both the specific horseplay cases and general application of the respondeat superior rule.
*935 Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Dabney, Acting P. J., and McKinster, J., concurred.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all further stаtutory references are to the Labor Code.
Plaintiff’s husband joined in the suit and asserted a loss of consortium claim. All references to plaintiff are to Mrs. Oliva.
Plaintiff previously had back surgery in December 1984.
The difference between horseplay and an altercation is that horseplay is characterized by an absence of animosity.
(Argonaut Ins. Co.
v.
Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd.
(1967)
Section 2338 provides: “Unless required by or under the authority of law to employ that particular agent, a principal is responsible to third persons for the negligence of his agent in the transaction of the business of the agency, including wrongful acts committed by such agent in and as a part of the transaction of such business, and for his willful omission to fulfill the obligations of the principal.”
