STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Defendant-appellant, Ski World, Inc. (Ski World), appeals an interlocutory order of the Bartholomew Circuit Court denying its Motion to Dismiss. The Motion contends that because the dispute at issue involves a personal injury claim by an employee against her employer, the trial court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to hear the case. Ski World concludes that the Industrial Board, pursuant to IND.CODE 22-38-1-1 et seq., has exclusive jurisdiction over such disputes.
We reverse.
STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
Ski World operates a ski resort in southern Indiana. Crystal Fife (Crystal), em ployed in the resort's food service area, suffered a personal injury while "tubing" down a ski slope on Ski World's premises. The tubing activity took place while Crystal was attending an after-hours employees' party sponsored by Ski World. Crystal and her mother filed suit in Cireuit Court seeking damages suffered as a result of both Crystal's personal injury and her mother's loss of services. Ski World filed motions pursuant to Ind. Rules of Procedure, Trial Rules 12(B)(1) and (6), contending a lack of subject matter jurisdiction. It asserted that under the Workmen's Compensation Act {Act), IND.CODE 22-8-1-1 et seq., ex-elusive jurisdiction over personal injury claims brought by an employee against his employer is vested with the Industrial Board (Board), the Act's administrative body. The trial court disagreed. It apparently held that although the dispute involves a personal injury claim by an employee against her employer, it has subject matter jurisdiction since the injury did not arise out of and in the course of Crystal's employment with Ski World.
ISSUE
Pursuant to Ind. Rules of Procedure, Appellate Rule 4(B)(6), Ski World, appealing the trial court's interlocutory order, presents the sole issue of whether the trial court properly exercised subject matter jurisdiction over Crystal's personal injury claim and over her mother's loss of services claim.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Ski World first contends that Crystal's personal injury claim is within the exclu
The jurisdictional test utilized prior to Evans, though never specifically articulated, was alluded to in Skinner v. Martin (1983), Ind.App.,
In order for the Industrial Board to obtain jurisdiction over a dispute, the following must be established:
(1) The dispute must involve a claim by an employee against his employer;
(2) The claim must be for damages arising from an accidental physical injury or death to the employee; and
(8) The accident must have arisen out of and in the course of the employee's employment with the employer.
Thus the "pre-Evans test" requires the establishment of all three of the above elements before the Board may exercise jurisdiction over the dispute. If any one of the elements is missing, then the claim is merely a common civil action over which trial courts have exclusive jurisdiction. Ski World urges us to abandon this test and adopt that which the majority of the Fourth District set out in Evans.
The Evans jurisdictional test has only two requirements: (1) that the dispute involve a claim by an employee against his employer, and (2) that the claim be for damages resulting from accidental personal injury or death. The additional requirement found in the pre-Evans test, that the injury or death emanate from an accident arising out of and in the course of the claimants' employment, is not treated as a jurisdictional element in the Evans analysis. Instead it is viewed as the factor determining the compensability of the injury or death.
Proper statutory construction requires that each section of a statute be considered with reference to the other see-tions. Barr v. State (1980), Ind.App.,
Ski World, asserting lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, filed a Motion to Dismiss under Ind. Rules of Procedure, Trial Rules 12(B)(1) and (6). The trial court, apparently under the impression that, pursuant to T.R. 12(B), the Motion to Dismiss had been converted into a motion for summary judgment, held a summary judgment hearing. It appears that the hearing should have been treated as one for dismissal rather than one for summary judgment despite the fact that matters outside the pleadings were submitted and considered. See 1 W. HARVEY, INDIANA PRACTICE p. 19 (Supp.1984). However, since neither party addressed the issue, we will proceed directly to the merits.
For an injury or death to arise out of and in the course of employment it must oceur within the period of employment, at a place or area where the employee may reasonably be and while the employee is engaged in an activity at least incidental to his employment. Wayne Adams Buick, Inc. v. Ference (1981), Ind.App.,
Courts in many jurisdictions, including our own, have struggled with the question of whether injuries received at employer sponsored recreational activities arise out of and in the course of employment. Until 1957, case law in this state answered that question negatively. See Tom Joyce 7-Up Co. v. Layman (1942),
In Noble, the owners of a car dealership decided to hold a regularly scheduled management meeting at their summer cottage on Lake Freeman. Attendance was obligatory. The change in location from a downtown motel to the cottage was made to accomodate the attendants. The plans for the meeting included a meal, and swimming and boating. The attending employees were encouraged to bring their spouses or significant others. After the meeting itself concluded, several of the attendants, including one of the owners, went down to the boathouse at lakeside. The owner had recently installed a new propeller on his rented cabin cruiser. He expressed concern as to whether he had installed it properly. The decedent offered to enter the water to inspect the propeller. The owner acquiesced. After donning his swimsuit, the decedent dove into the water in such a manner so as to fracture a cervical vertebra. He subsequently died from his injury. The Industrial Board awarded compensation and the court of appeals reversed. See Noble v. Zimmerman (1956), Ind.App.,
Although the court suggested that Noble is distinguishable from the earlier cases in that in those cases the employee's attendance or participation was not obligatory or expected, the court's emphasis was not on that issue, but rather on the nexus or the flow between work and after hours recreation.
The general rule regarding an employer's liability for injuries incurred during
" 'Generally, injuries suffered by an employee while watching, participating in, or going to or coming from recreational activities sponsored in whole or in part by the employer, are not compensable, since such injuries are usually sustained while the employee is not performing any duty for which he has been either expressly or impliedly employed. In other words the injury cannot ordinarily be said to have resulted from an accident arising out of and in the course of the employment.
A distinction is made, however, in those cases where the recreation which caused the injury, either directly or indirectly, was sponsored by the employer as a matter of business and not because of altruistic motives. That is, the employer exercised control or domination over the recreation for the purpose of developing better service and greater efficiency among the employees, thereby reaping a direct business benefit from the recreations sponsored.' "
Schneider's Workmen's Compensation Law, Vol. 6, ch. 25, p. 519.
As indicated in Noble, the distinction between business and recreational activities 'may become blurred:
"[In recent years it has become increasingly evident that employers are more and more utilizing recreational programs for their employees, and properly so, in aiding and promoting better business relations with persons in their employ, calculating the same to benefit the employers' best business interests."
Id. at 569-570. Recognizing this development, the court used rather broad lan-. guage in holding that the activity resulting in the decedent's death, ie. diving into the water, was incidental to his employment. Noting from the Record that the only reason the meeting was held at the lakeside cottage was "because of the heat in town it would be pleasanter [sic] to hold the meeting at Lake Freeman," the court rhetorical ly asked:
"How could it be made to appear more clearly that the employers' sponsored recreation at the latter's lakeside premises was the inducement for a better or more successful business meeting, admittedly held to improve sales and service of employers' business, and necessarily intended to aid the employers' business so as to be incidental to the employment?" (Our emphasis.)
Enbancing the breadth and significance of the Noble decision is the court's citation, with approval, to cases holding likewise in other jurisdictions.
In Jewel Tea Co. v. Industrial Commission (1955),
"While this recreational activity was not a measurable bonus to the employees, it was a more subtle advantage of employment in that it offered employees an opportunity of socializing both with each other and with the district manager and other executives through participation inthis sport. The consequent improvement of employee-employer relations through this activity was a significant if not tangible benefit to the employer."
Id. at 705.
In O'Leary v. Brown-Pacific-Mazon, Inc. (1951),
Fagen v. Albany Evening Union Co. (1941),
"It is obvious that the picnic was one of the activities maintained by the employer for the purpose of developing better service and greater interest on the part of the newspaper carriers and for its own benefit."
Id.,
Given Noble and the authorities cit ed therein, it is clear that Crystal's injury arose out of and in the course of her employment with Ski World. Ski World employed Crystal in its food service area in the ski lodge. Crystal suffered personal injury while participating in a planned recreational event at an after hours Ski World sponsored employees' party. Ski World owned and controlled the premises upon which the employees' party was held. Ski World encouraged and therefore presumably expected its employees to attend the party. Ski World provided the food, the refreshments, the entertainment and the recreational equipment. Finally, and most significantly, Ski World believed that holding such an event would be in its best business interests. Uncontradicted testimony reveals that Ski World had two dis-tinet purposes for holding the party: (1) to boost employee moral in anticipation of increasing enthusiasm in the workplace, thereby increasing efficiency and productivity; and (2) to allow employees in one area of the resort's operations to observe the entire operation, thus familiarizing each employee with other jobs being performed, in an attempt to increase the flexibility of its workforce. Here, just as in Noble, there is a clear nexus between work activities and after hours recreational activities-the one flowed directly from the other.
It having been stipulated that Crystal was an employee at the time of the accident and that her claim is against Ski World for personal injury damages arising from an accidental injury, and it being clearly established that Crystal's personal injury arose out of and in the course of her employment with Ski World, the Board, pursuant to IND.CODE 22-3-1-1 et seq., has exclusive jurisdiction over both Crystal's and her mother's claim. See also McDonald v. Miner (1941),
For the reasons above, the order denying defendant's Motion to Dismiss is reversed.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
. Having determined the proper jurisdictional analysis to be followed, we note that litigation over the jurisdictional issue may be initiated either before the Board or in trial court since both the Board and the trial courts have the authority, subject to review, to determine their respective jurisdictions. Should the authority before which the claimant initially filed his claim, fe. the trial court or the Board, decline jurisdiction, then the claim can be filed in the alternative forum.
. For reasons unknown, the case was never reported in the Indiana Appellate Court Reports.
