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No.
02-049
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2002
MT 221
STEPHEN
BENTZ,
Petitioner
and Respondent,
v.
LIBERTY
NORTHWEST,
Respondent/Insurer
and Appellant, for
ARTCRAFT
PRINTERS,
Employer.
APPEAL
FROM: Workers' Compensation Court, State of Montana
The
Honorable Mike McCarter, Judge presiding.
COUNSEL
OF RECORD:
For
Appellant:
Larry
W. Jones, Attorney at Law, Missoula, Montana
For
Respondent:
Chris
J. Ragar, Attorney at Law, Bozeman, Montana
Submitted
on Briefs: May 23, 2002
Decided:
October 1, 2002
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice Jim
Regnier delivered the Opinion of the Court.
BACKGROUND
STANDARD OF
REVIEW
DISCUSSION
¶14 Liberty
bolsters its contention that Bentz’s travel was of the “going and coming”
variety, not compensable under any portion of the travel provisions, by
comparing the instant case to James , referenced above. In James
, an employee was called from her home to the hotel where she was employed
to repair a computerized mail solicitation program. While en route to
the hotel, the employee was injured in an automobile collision. In James
, we noted that “[n]either [employee] Ms. James, nor any other hotel manager,
had ever submitted claims for, or received reimbursement for, mileage
for travel from their homes to the hotel which was their regular job site.”
; James , 257 Mont. at 352, 849 P.2d at 190. We concluded that
employee James was injured while “going and coming” from her home to the
site of her primary employment, as: “Ms. James was not traveling to another
job site during the course and scope of her work . She was simply traveling
from her home to the hotel in which she normally worked in order to engage
in data entry responsibilities.” James , 257 Mont. at 352, 849
P.2d at 190. Therefore, this Court declined to find James’s travel compensable
under the travel provisions of § 39-71-407(3), MCA (1999), holding that
“the phrase ‘as part of’ in subparagraph (3)(b), does not include travel
to and from the employee’s regular job site.” James, 257 Mont.
at 353, 849 P.2d at 190.
¶15 The
facts from James are clearly distinguishable from those in the
instant case. We determined that the injury in James was not compensable
because the employee was not traveling between job sites, but rather
from her home to her primary job site. Here Bentz was in fact traveling
between two job sites in the course and scope of his regular employment–
his home office and Artcraft’s business office. Therefore, since Bentz
suffered an injury while traveling between two job sites, his travel cannot
be characterized as merely “going and coming” ; to work.
¶16 To
determine the applicability of the travel provisions to the case at bar,
we must first examine whether Bentz was engaged in travel. In Carrillo
v. Liberty Northwest Ins. (1996), 278 Mont. 1, 922 P.2d 1189, an employee
was injured by an automobile while walking to a gift store during a coffee
break provided for by her employer. The Montana Workers’ Compensation
Court held in Carrillo that the one and one-half block journey
that the employee made from her place of employment to the gift store
constituted traveling. Carrillo , 278 Mont. at 5, 922 P.2d at 1192.
We reversed the Workers’ Compensation Court on this issue, stating that
“according to Black’s Law Dictionary 1500 (6th ed. 1990), to
travel is ‘to go from one place to another at a distance; to journey’.
It does not seem to include trips of one and one-half blocks.” Carrillo,
278 Mont. at 8, 922 P.2d at 1194. Although our decision in Carrillo
provides little guidance as to the length of distance necessary to establish
travel, we conclude the three miles which Bentz traveled in the case before
us sufficient to constitute travel. As such, the travel provisions of
§ 39-71-407(3), MCA (1999), apply to this case.
¶17 At
trial, both Liberty and Bentz conceded that the criteria of subsection
(a) of the travel provisions were not satisfied under the facts surrounding
Bentz’s employment with Artcraft. We now turn our attention to subsection
(b) of the travel provisions at § 39-71-407(3), MCA (1999), which provides
that travel by employees is covered by insurance if it “is required by
the employer as part of the employee’s job duties.” Liberty asserts that
Artcraft did not require Bentz to travel to his home office, but rather
that Bentz was doing so to benefit his own personal convenience. Bentz
counters that his travel was directly related to the performance of his
job, as he was required to drive into Artcraft’s office at least once
a week as a condition of his employment.
¶18 The
Workers’ Compensation Court held that Bentz’s travel was required by Artcraft
as a part of his employment. Liberty contests this holding, citing Santa
Rosa Junior College v. W. C. A. B. (Cal. 1985), 708 P.2d 673, a case
in which a college instructor was killed by an automobile on his way home
from the campus. At the time of the accident, the instructor carried with
him student papers that he intended to grade that evening in his home
office, a ritual he performed on a regular basis. The facts of Santa
Rosa are distinguishable from the instant case because while the instructor
in Santa Rosa regularly took work home with him, his employer simply
acquiesced to this practice, it did not expressly permit it. However,
in the case before us, Bentz requested that he be allowed to work out
of his home, and Artcraft specifically agreed to this proposal, only expecting
that Bentz come into the Artcraft office at least once a week. That is,
the exchange between Bentz and Artcraft, in which Bentz would receive
only commission as compensation, and Artcraft would allow Bentz to work
primarily out of his home, was bargained for. The arrangement that Bentz
negotiated with Artcraft to work at home, although convenient for Bentz,
was also a factor of his amended employment status as a straight commission
salesperson. Bentz’s home office became his primary job site under this
new arrangement. Therefore, by constructing Bentz’s job duties such that
several of them necessitated regular performance at the Artcraft office,
Artcraft required Bentz’s travel from his home office to Artcraft's
business office. Accordingly, we agree with the Workers’ Compensation
Court that Bentz’ ;s travel to Artcraft’s office was a required part of
his employment with Artcraft, and as such, the travel is covered under
§ 39-71-407(3)(b), MCA (1999), of the Montana Workers’ Compensation Act.
¶19 For
the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Workers’ Compensation Court
is affirmed.
/S/ JIM REGNIER
We Concur:
/S/ JAMES C.
NELSON
/S/ TERRY N.
TRIEWEILER
/S/ PATRICIA
COTTER
/S/ W. WILLIAM
LEAPHART
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