Cherne Const. v. Posso

Decision Date31 March 1987
Docket NumberNo. 860091,860091
Citation735 P.2d 384
PartiesCHERNE CONSTRUCTION, plaintiff employer and Wausau Insurance Company, plaintiff insurer, Plaintiffs, v. William Michael POSSO, Defendant.
CourtUtah Supreme Court

Robert W. Brandt, Michael K. Mohrman, Salt Lake City, for defendant.

Sherlynn White Fenstermaker, Springville, for plaintiffs.

HOWE, Justice:

Plaintiffs seek review of an Industrial Commission order awarding workers' compensation benefits to defendant.

Defendant William Michael Posso was employed as a laborer at the Intermountain Power Plant (IPP) near Delta, Utah, by Cherne Construction. On Saturday, August 4, 1984, defendant, although he did not usually work Saturdays, worked from 7:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. to perform some special tasks for his employer. When he finished, he handed in his employee identification badge, got on his motorcycle, and left the plant to go home to Delta. Although there were two other routes available, he normally proceeded east along Brush Wellman Road to Highway 6. This route was paved, while the other two were graveled roads. Brush Wellman Road had been widened to four lanes where it fronted IPP to accommodate traffic pulling out of and turning into the plant.

When he left the plant, traffic was light. He proceeded east toward Highway 6, traveling in the lane next to the center stripes. Approximately two miles east of the plant gate, a Plymouth automobile in his lane slowed almost to a stop some one hundred and fifty yards in front of him. Defendant was going approximately forty-five miles per hour. There was a Chevy Blazer traveling parallel immediately to his right. Rather than attempting to stop or change lanes, defendant attempted to pass the Plymouth on the left by crossing the double center lines into the westbound traffic lanes. As he did so, the Plymouth turned left at the entrance to the employee camp, known locally as the "man camp." Defendant struck the Plymouth, his motorcycle caught fire, and he lost control and crashed. Suffering from broken bones, a severed tendon, and second- and third-degree burns, he was transported to a hospital where he underwent treatment for nearly three months.

Defendant filed a claim for workers' compensation benefits. An administrative law judge found that although there were other routes available, defendant was following his "normal route," that the route subjected him to the "special hazard" of heavy traffic outside the plant on Brush Wellman Road, and that there was "a distinct and causal connection between the condition under which the [defendant] had to leave the premises and the occurrence of the injury." The judge held that the accident arose out of defendant's employment and was therefore compensable. The Industrial Commission denied plaintiffs' motion for review and affirmed the administrative law judge's award. Plaintiffs, who are his employer and its insurance carrier, seek review.

U.C.A., 1953, § 35-1-45 provides for compensation for employees who are injured by accidents "arising out of or in the course of" employment. The general rule is that an employee is not in the course of his employment while traveling to and from work. State Tax Commission v. Industrial Commission, 685 P.2d 1051 (Utah 1984); Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Industrial Commission, 79 Utah 189, 8 P.2d 617, 618 (1932). One exception to the rule, carved out in Cudahy Packing Co. v. Industrial...

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