Relationships between Principal and Agent
Cases
Creation of Agency: Liability of Parent for Contracts Made by "Agent" Child
Weingart v. Directoire Restaurant, Inc.
333 N.Y.S.2d 806 (N.Y., 1972)
KASSEL, J.
The
issue here is whether defendant restaurant by permitting an individual
to park patrons' cars thereby held him out as its "employee" for such
purposes. Admittedly, this individual, one Buster Douglas, is not its
employee in the usual sense but with the knowledge of defendant, he did
station himself in front of its restaurant, wore a doorman's uniform and
had been parking its customers' autos. The parties stipulated that if
he were held to be defendant's employee, this created a bailment between
the parties [and the "employer" would have to rebut a presumption of
negligence if the customer's property was not returned to the customer].
On
April 20, 1968, at about 10 P.M., plaintiff drove his 1967 Cadillac
Coupe de Ville to the door of the Directoire Restaurant at 160 East 48th
Street in Manhattan. Standing in front of the door was Buster Douglas,
dressed in a self-supplied uniform, comprised of a regular doorman's cap
and matching jacket. Plaintiff gave the keys to his vehicle to Douglas
and requested that he park the car. He gave Douglas a $1.00 tip and
received a claim check. Plaintiff then entered defendant's restaurant,
remained there for approximately 45 minutes and when he departed,
Douglas was unable to locate the car which was never returned to
plaintiff.
At the time of this occurrence, the restaurant had
been open for only nine days, during which time plaintiff had patronized
the restaurant on at least one prior occasion.
Defendant did not
maintain any sign at its entrance or elsewhere that it would provide
parking for its customers (nor, apparently, any sign warning to the
contrary).
Buster Douglas parked cars for customers of
defendant's restaurant and at least three or four other restaurants on
the block. He stationed himself in front of each restaurant during the
course of an evening and was so engaged during the evening of April 20,
1968. Defendant clearly knew of and did not object to Douglas'
activities outside its restaurant. Defendant's witness testified at an
examination before trial:
Q. Did anybody stand outside your restaurant in any capacity whatsoever?
A.
There was a man out there parking cars for the block, but he was in no
way connected with us or anything like that. He parked cars for the
Tamburlaine and also for the Chateau Madrid, Nepentha and a few places
around the block.
Q. Did you know that this gentleman was standing outside your restaurant?
A. Yes, I knew he was there.
Q. How did you know that he was standing outside your restaurant?
A.
Well, I knew the man's face because I used to work in a club on 55th
Street and he was there. When we first opened up here, we didn't know if
we would have a doorman or have parking facilities or what we were
going to do at that time. We just let it hang and I told this Buster,
Buster was his name, that you are a free agent and you do whatever you
want to do. I am tending bar in the place and what you do in the street
is up to you, I will not stop you, but we are not hiring you or anything
like that, because at that time, we didn't know what we were going to
use the parking lot or get a doorman and put on a uniform or what.
These
facts establish to the court's satisfaction that, although Douglas was
not an actual employee of the restaurant, defendant held him out as its
authorized agent or "employee" for the purpose of parking its customers'
cars, by expressly consenting to his standing, in uniform, in front of
its door to receive customers, to park their cars and issue receipts
therefor - which services were rendered without charge to the
restaurant's customers, except for any gratuity paid to Douglas.
Clearly, under these circumstances, apparent authority has been shown
and Douglas acted within the scope of this authority.
Plaintiff
was justified in assuming that Douglas represented the restaurant in
providing his services and that the restaurant had placed him there for
the convenience of its customers. A restaurateur knows that this is the
impression created by allowing a uniformed attendant to so act. Facility
in parking is often a critical consideration for a motorist in
selecting a restaurant in midtown Manhattan, and the Directoire was
keenly aware of this fact as evidenced by its testimony that the
management was looking into various other possibilities for solving
customers' parking problems.
There was no suitable disclaimer
posted outside the restaurant that it had no parking facilities or that
entrusting one's car to any person was at the driver's risk. It is
doubtful that any prudent driver would entrust his car to a strange
person on the street, if he thought that the individual had no
authorization from the restaurant or club or had no connection with it,
but was merely an independent operator with questionable financial
responsibility.
The fact that Douglas received no compensation
directly from defendant is not material. Each party derived a benefit
from the arrangement: Douglas being willing to work for gratuities from
customers, and the defendant, at no cost to itself, presenting the
appearance of providing the convenience of free parking and doorman
services to its patrons. In any case, whatever private arrangements
existed between the restaurant and Douglas were never disclosed to the
customers.
Even if such person did perform these services for
several restaurants, it does not automatically follow that he is a
freelance entrepreneur, since a shared employee working for other small
or moderately sized restaurants in the area would seem a reasonable
arrangement, in no way negating the authority of the attendant to act as
doorman and receive cars for any one of these places individually.
The
case most analogous to the instant one is Klotz v. El Morocco, and plaintiff here relies on it. That case similarly
involved the theft of a car parked by a uniformed individual standing in
front of defendant's restaurant who, although not employed by it,
parked vehicles for its patrons with the restaurant's knowledge and
consent. Defendant here attempts to distinguish this case principally
upon the ground that the parties in El Morocco stipulated that the
‘doorman' was an agent or employee of the defendant acting within the
scope of his authority. However, the judge made an express finding to
that effect: ‘* * * there was sufficient evidence in plaintiff's case on
which to find DiGiovanni, the man in the uniform, was acting within the
scope of his authority as agent of defendant." Defendant here also
points to the fact that in Klotz DiGiovanni placed patrons' car keys on a
rack inside El Morocco; however, this is only one fact to be considered
in finding a bailment and is, to me, more relevant to the issue of the
degree of care exercised.
When defendant's agent failed to
produce plaintiff's automobile, a presumption of negligence arose which
now requires defendant to come forward with a sufficient explanation to
rebut this presumption. The matter should be set down for
trial on the issues of due care and of damages.
Case Questions
- Buster Douglas was not the restaurant's employee. Why did the court determine his negligence could nevertheless be imputed to the restaurant?
- The plaintiff, in this case, relied on Klotz, very similar in facts, in which the car-parking attendant was found to be an employee. The defendant, necessarily, needed to argue that the cases were not very similar. What argument did the defendant make? What did the court say about that argument?
- The restaurant here is a bailee - it has rightful possession of the plaintiff's (bailor's) property, the car. If the car is not returned to the plaintiff, a rebuttable presumption of negligence arises. What does that mean?
Employee versus Independent Contractor
Vizcaino v. Microsoft Corp.
97 F.3d 1187 (9th Cir. 1996)
Reinhardt, J.
Large
corporations have increasingly adopted the practice of hiring temporary
employees or independent contractors as a means of avoiding payment of
employee benefits, and thereby increasing their profits. This practice
has understandably led to a number of problems, legal and otherwise. One
of the legal issues that sometimes arises is exemplified by this
lawsuit. The named plaintiffs, who were classified by Microsoft as
independent contractors, seek to strip that label of its protective
covering and to obtain for themselves certain benefits that the company
provided to all of its regular or permanent employees. After certifying
the named plaintiffs as representatives of a class of "common-law
employees," the district court granted summary judgment to Microsoft on
all counts. The plaintiffs…now appeal as to two of their claims: a) the
claim…that they are entitled to savings benefits under Microsoft's
Savings Plus Plan (SPP); and b) that…they are entitled to stock-option
benefits under Microsoft's Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP). In both
cases, the claims are based on their contention that they are common-law
employees.
Microsoft, one of the country's fastest growing and
most successful corporations and the world's largest software company,
produces and sells computer software internationally. It employs a core
staff of permanent employees. It categorizes them as "regular employees"
and offers them a wide variety of benefits, including paid vacations,
sick leave, holidays, short-term disability, group health and life
insurance, and pensions, as well as the two benefits involved in this
appeal. Microsoft supplements its core staff of employees with a pool of
individuals to whom it refuses to pay fringe benefits. It previously
classified these individuals as "independent contractors" or
"freelancers," but prior to the filing of the action began classifying
them as "temporary agency employees." Freelancers were hired when
Microsoft needed to expand its workforce to meet the demands of new
product schedules. The company did not, of course, provide them with any
of the employee benefits regular employees receive.
The
plaintiffs…performed services as software testers, production editors,
proofreaders, formatters and indexers. Microsoft fully integrated the
plaintiffs into its workforce: they often worked on teams along with
regular employees, sharing the same supervisors, performing identical
functions, and working the same core hours. Because Microsoft required
that they work on site, they received admittance card keys, office
equipment and supplies from the company.
Freelancers and regular
employees, however, were not without their obvious distinctions.
Freelancers wore badges of a different color, had different
electronic-mail addresses, and attended a less formal orientation than
that provided to regular employees. They were not permitted to assign
their work to others, invited to official company functions, or paid
overtime wages. In addition, they were not paid through Microsoft's
payroll department. Instead, they submitted invoices for their services,
documenting their hours and the projects on which they worked, and were
paid through the accounts receivable department.
The plaintiffs
were told when they were hired that, as freelancers, they would not be
eligible for benefits. None has contended that Microsoft ever promised
them any benefits individually. All eight named plaintiffs signed
[employment agreements] when first hired by Microsoft or soon
thereafter. [One] included a provision that states that the undersigned
"agrees to be responsible for all federal and state taxes, withholding,
social security, insurance and other benefits." The [other one] states
that "as an Independent Contractor to Microsoft, you are self-employed
and are responsible to pay all your own insurance and benefits." Eventually, the plaintiffs learned of the various benefits being
provided to regular employees from speaking with them or reading various
Microsoft publications concerning employee benefits.
In 1989 and
1990, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)[,]…applying common-law
principles defining the employer-employee relationship, concluded that
Microsoft's freelancers were not independent contractors but employees
for withholding and employment tax purposes, and that Microsoft would
thereafter be required to pay withholding taxes and the employer's
portion of Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA) tax. Microsoft
agreed.…
After learning of the IRS rulings, the plaintiffs sought
various employee benefits, including those now at issue: the ESPP and
SPP benefits. The SPP…is a cash or deferred salary arrangement under §
401k of the Internal Revenue Code that permits Microsoft's employees to
save and invest up to fifteen percent of their income through
tax-deferred payroll deductions.…Microsoft matches fifty percent of the
employee's contribution in any year, with [a maximum matching
contribution]. The ESPP…permits employees to purchase company stock
[with various rules].
Microsoft rejected the plaintiffs' claims
for benefits, maintaining that they were independent contractors who
were personally responsible for all their own benefits.…
The plaintiffs brought this action, challenging the denial of benefits.
Microsoft
contends that the extrinsic evidence, including the [employment
agreements], demonstrates its intent not to provide freelancers or
independent contractors with employee benefits[.]…We have no doubt that
the company did not intend to provide freelancers or independent
contractors with employee benefits, and that if the plaintiffs had in
fact been freelancers or independent contractors, they would not be
eligible under the plan. The plaintiffs, however, were not freelancers
or independent contractors. They were common-law employees, and the
question is what, if anything, Microsoft intended with respect to
persons who were actually common-law employees but were not known to
Microsoft to be such. The fact that Microsoft did not intend to provide
benefits to persons who it thought were freelancers or independent
contractors sheds little or no light on that question.…
Microsoft's
argument, drawing a distinction between common-law employees on the
basis of the manner in which they were paid, is subject to the same vice
as its more general argument. Microsoft regarded the plaintiffs as
independent contractors during the relevant period and learned of their
common-law-employee status only after the IRS examination. They were
paid through the accounts receivable department rather than the payroll
department because of Microsoft's mistaken view as to their legal
status. Accordingly, Microsoft cannot now contend that the fact that
they were paid through the accounts receivable department demonstrates
that the company intended to deny them the benefits received by all
common-law employees regardless of their actual employment status.
Indeed, Microsoft has pointed to no evidence suggesting that it ever
denied eligibility to any employees, whom it understood to be common-law
employees, by paying them through the accounts receivable department or
otherwise.
We therefore construe the ambiguity in the plan
against Microsoft and hold that the plaintiffs are eligible to
participate under the terms of the SPP.
[Next, regarding the
ESPP] we hold that the plaintiffs…are covered by the specific provisions
of the ESPP. We apply the "objective manifestation theory of
contracts," which requires us to "impute an intention corresponding to
the reasonable meaning of a person's words and acts." Through
its incorporation of the tax code provision into the plan, Microsoft
manifested an objective intent to make all common-law employees, and
hence the plaintiffs, eligible for participation. The ESPP specifically
provides:
It is the intention of the Company to have the Plan
qualify as an "employee stock purchase plan" under Section 423 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1954. The provisions of the Plan shall,
accordingly, be construed so as to extend and limit participation in a
manner consistent with the requirements of that Section of the Code.
[T]he ESPP, when construed in a manner
consistent with the requirements of § 423, extends participation to all
common-law employees not covered by one of the express exceptions set
forth in the plan. Accordingly, we find that the ESPP, through its
incorporation of § 423, expressly extends eligibility for participation
to the plaintiff class and affords them the same options to acquire
stock in the corporation as all other employees.
Microsoft next
contends that the [employment agreements] signed by the plaintiffs
render them ineligible to participate in the ESPP. First, the label used
in the instruments signed by the plaintiffs does not control their
employment status. Second, the employment instruments, if construed to
exclude the plaintiffs from receiving ESPP benefits, would conflict with
the plan's express incorporation of § 423. Although Microsoft may have
generally intended to exclude individuals who were in fact independent
contractors, it could not, consistent with its express intention to
extend participation in the ESPP to all common-law employees, have
excluded the plaintiffs. Indeed, such an exclusion would defeat the
purpose of including § 423 in the plan, because the exclusion of
common-law employees not otherwise accepted would result in the loss of
the plan's tax qualification.
Finally, Microsoft maintains that
the plaintiffs are not entitled to ESPP benefits because the terms of
the plan were never communicated to them and they were therefore unaware
of its provisions when they performed their employment services.…In any
event, to the extent that knowledge of an offer of benefits is a
prerequisite, it is probably sufficient that Microsoft publicly
promulgated the plan. The plaintiff was unaware of the
company's severance plan until shortly before his termination. The
Oklahoma Supreme Court concluded nonetheless that publication of the
plan was "the equivalent of constructive knowledge on the part of all
employees not specifically excluded."
We are not required to
rely, however, on the [this] analysis or even on Microsoft's own
unwitting concession. There is a compelling reason, implicit in some of
the preceding discussion, that requires us to reject the company's
theory that the plaintiffs' entitlement to ESPP benefits is defeated by
their previous lack of knowledge regarding their rights. It is "well
established" that an optionor may not rely on an optionee's failure to
exercise an option when he has committed any act or failed to perform
any duty "calculated to cause the optionee to delay in exercising the
right." "[T]he optionor may not make statements or
representations calculated to cause delay, [or] fail to furnish
[necessary] information.…" Similarly, "[I]t is a principle of
fundamental justice that if a promisor is himself the cause of the
failure of performance, either of an obligation due him or of a
condition upon which his own liability depends, he cannot take advantage
of the failure."
Applying these principles, we agree
with the magistrate judge, who concluded that Microsoft, which created a
benefit to which the plaintiffs were entitled, could not defend itself
by arguing that the plaintiffs were unaware of the benefit, when its own
false representations precluded them from gaining that knowledge.
Because Microsoft misrepresented both the plaintiffs' actual employment
status and their eligibility to participate in the ESPP, it is
responsible for their failure to know that they were covered by the
terms of the offer. It may not now take advantage of that failure to
defeat the plaintiffs' rights to ESPP benefits. Thus, we reject
Microsoft's final argument.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated, the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Microsoft and denial of summary judgment in favor of the plaintiffs is REVERSED and the case REMANDED for the determination of any questions of individual eligibility for benefits that may remain following issuance of this opinion and for calculation of the damages or benefits due the various class members.
Case Questions
- In a 1993 Wall Street Journal article, James Bovard asserted that the IRS "is carrying out a sweeping campaign to slash the number of Americans permitted to be self-employed - and to punish the companies that contract with them…IRS officials indicate that more than half the nation's self-employed should no longer be able to work for themselves." Why did Microsoft want these employees to "be able to work for themselves"?
- Why did the employees accept employment as independent contractors?
- It seems unlikely that the purpose of the IRS's campaign was really to keep people from working for themselves, despite Mr. Bovard's assumption. What was the purpose of the campaign?
- Why did the IRS and the court determine that these "independent contractors" were in fact employees?
Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Bacon v. Volvo Service Center, Inc.
597 S.E.2d 440 (Ga. App. 2004)
Smith, J.
[This
appeal is] taken in an action that arose when two former employees left
an existing business and began a new, competing business.…Bacon and
Johnson, two former employees of Volvo Service Center, Inc. (VSC), and
the new company they formed, South Gwinnett Volvo Service, Ltd. (SGVS),
appeal from the trial court's denial of their motion for judgment
notwithstanding the jury's verdict in favor of VSC.…
VSC filed
suit against appellants, alleging a number of claims arising from the
use by Bacon, who had been a service technician at VSC, of VSC's
customer list, and his soliciting Johnson, a service writer, and another
VSC employee to join SGVS. SGVS moved for a directed verdict on certain
claims at the close of plaintiff's evidence and at the close of the
case, which motions were denied. The jury was asked to respond to
specific interrogatories, and it found for VSC and against all three
appellants on VSC's claim for misappropriation of trade secrets. The
jury also found for plaintiff against Bacon for breach of fiduciary
duty,…tortious interference with business relations, employee piracy,
and conversion of corporate assets. The jury awarded VSC attorney fees,
costs, and exemplary damages stemming from the claim for
misappropriation of trade secrets. Judgment was entered on the jury's
verdict, and appellants' motion for j.n.o.v. was denied. This appeal
ensued. We find that VSC did not meet its burden of proof as to the
claims for misappropriation of trade secrets, breach of fiduciary duty,
or employee piracy, and the trial court should have granted appellants'
motion for j.n.o.v.
Construed to support the jury's verdict, the
evidence of record shows that Bacon was a technician at VSC when he
decided to leave and open a competing business. Before doing so, he
printed a list of VSC's customers from one of VSC's two computers.
Computer access was not password restricted, was easy to use, and was
used by many employees from time to time.
About a year after he
left VSC, Bacon gave Johnson and another VSC employee an offer of
employment at his new Volvo repair shop, which was about to open. Bacon
and Johnson advertised extensively, and the customer list was used to
send flyers to some VSC customers who lived close to the new shop's
location. These activities became the basis for VSC's action against
Bacon, Johnson, and their new shop, SGVS.…
1. The Georgia Trade Secrets Act of 1990, defines a "trade secret" as
information,
without regard to form, including, but not limited to,…a list of actual
or potential customers or suppliers which is not commonly known by or
available to the public and which information:
(A) Derives
economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to,
and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other persons
who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use; and
(B) Is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy.
If
an employer does not prove both prongs of this test, it is not entitled
to protection under the Act. Our Supreme Court held for instance, that information was not a trade secret within the
meaning of the Act because no evidence showed that the employer "made
reasonable efforts under the circumstances…to maintain the
confidentiality of the information it sought to protect."
While a
client list may be subject to confidential treatment under the Georgia
Trade Secrets Act, the information itself is not inherently
confidential. Customers are not trade secrets. Confidentiality is
afforded only where the customer list is not generally known or
ascertainable from other sources and was the subject of reasonable
efforts to maintain its secrecy.…
Here, VSC took no precautions
to maintain the confidentiality of its customer list. The information
was on both computers, and it was not password-protected. Moreover, the
same information was available to the technicians through the repair
orders, which they were permitted to retain indefinitely while Bacon was
employed there. Employees were not informed that the information was
confidential. Neither Bacon nor Johnson was required to sign a
confidentiality agreement as part of his employment.
Because no
evidence was presented from which the jury could have concluded that VSC
took any steps, much less reasonable ones, to protect the
confidentiality of its customer list, a material requirement for trade
secret status was not satisfied. The trial court should have granted
appellants' motion for j.n.o.v.
2. To prove tortious interference
with business relations, "a plaintiff must show defendant: (1) acted
improperly and without privilege, (2) acted purposely and with malice
with the intent to injure, (3) induced a third party or parties not to
enter into or continue a business relationship with the plaintiff, and
(4) caused plaintiff financial injury." But "[f]air
competition is always legal." Unless an employee has
executed a valid non-compete or non-solicit covenant, he is not barred
from soliciting customers of his former employer on behalf of a new
employer.
No evidence was presented that Bacon acted
"improperly," that any of VSC's former customers switched to SGVS
because of any improper act by Bacon, or that these customers would have
continued to patronize VSC but for Bacon's solicitations. Therefore, it
was impossible for a jury to calculate VSC's financial damage, if any
existed.
3. With regard to VSC's claim for breach of fiduciary
duty, "[a]n employee breaches no fiduciary duty to the employer simply
by making plans to enter a competing business while he is still
employed. Even before the termination of his agency, he is entitled to
make arrangements to compete and upon termination of employment
immediately compete." He cannot solicit customers for a rival
business or do other, similar acts in direct competition with his
employer's business before his employment ends. But here, no evidence
was presented to rebut the evidence given by Bacon and Johnson that they
engaged in no such practices before their employment with VSC ended.
Even assuming, therefore, that a fiduciary relationship existed, no
evidence was presented showing that it was breached.
4. The same
is true for VSC's claim for employee piracy. The evidence simply does
not show that any employees of VSC were solicited for SGVS before Bacon
left VSC's employ.…
Judgment reversed.
Case Questions
- Why was it determined that the defendants were not liable for any breach of trade secrecy?
- What would have been necessary to show tortious interference with business relations?
- The evidence was lacking that there was any breach of fiduciary duty. What would have been necessary to show that?
- What is "employee piracy"? Why was it not proven?
Workers' Compensation: What "Injuries" Are Compensable?
Wolfe v. Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Co.
330 N.E.2d 603 (N.Y. 1975)
Wachtler, J.
This
appeal involves a claim for workmen's compensation benefits for the
period during which the claimant was incapacitated by severe depression
caused by the discovery of her immediate supervisor's body after he had
committed suicide.
The facts as adduced at a hearing before the
Workmen's Compensation Board are uncontroverted. The claimant, Mrs.
Diana Wolfe, began her employment with the respondent department store,
Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Co. in February, 1968. After working for some
time as an investigator in the security department of the store she
became secretary to Mr. John Gorman, the security director. It appears
from the record that as head of security, Mr. Gorman was subjected to
intense pressure, especially during the Christmas holidays. Mrs. Wolfe
testified that throughout the several years she worked at Sibley's Mr.
Gorman reacted to this holiday pressure by becoming extremely agitated
and nervous. She noted, however, that this anxiety usually disappeared
when the holiday season was over. Unfortunately, Mr. Gorman's nervous
condition failed to abate after the 1970 holidays.…
Despite the
fact that he followed Mrs. Wolfe's advice to see a doctor, Mr. Gorman's
mental condition continued to deteriorate. On one occasion he left work
at her suggestion because he appeared to be so nervous. This condition
persisted until the morning of June 9, 1971 when according to the
claimant, Mr. Gorman looked much better and even smiled and ‘tousled her
hair' when she so remarked.
A short time later Mr. Gorman called
her on the intercom and asked her to call the police to room 615. Mrs.
Wolfe complied with this request and then tried unsuccessfully to reach
Mr. Gorman on the intercom. She entered his office to find him lying in a
pool of blood caused by a self-inflicted gunshot wound in the head.
Mrs. Wolfe became extremely upset and was unable to continue working
that day.
She returned to work for one week only to lock herself
in her office to avoid the questions of her fellow workers. Her private
physician perceiving that she was beset by feelings of guilt referred
her to a psychiatrist and recommended that she leave work, which she
did. While at home she ruminated about her guilt in failing to prevent
the suicide and remained in bed for long periods of time staring at the
ceiling. The result was that she became unresponsive to her husband and
suffered a weight loss of 20 pounds. Her psychiatrist, Dr. Grinols
diagnosed her condition as an acute depressive reaction.
After
attempting to treat her in his office Dr. Grinols realized that the
severity of her depression mandated hospitalization. Accordingly, the
claimant was admitted to the hospital on July 9, 1971 where she remained
for two months during which time she received psychotherapy and
medication. After she was discharged, Dr. Grinols concluded that there
had been no substantial remission in her depression and ruminative guilt
and so had her readmitted for electroshock treatment. These treatments
lasted for three weeks and were instrumental in her recovery. She was
again discharged and, in mid-January, 1972, resumed her employment with
Sibley, Lindsay & Curr.
Mrs. Wolfe's claim for workmen's
compensation was granted by the referee and affirmed by the Workmen's
Compensation Board. On appeal the Appellate Division reversed citing its
opinions, [concluding]…that mental injury precipitated
solely by psychic trauma is not compensable as a matter of law. We do
not agree with this conclusion.
Workmen's compensation, as
distinguished from tort liability which is essentially based on fault,
is designed to shift the risk of loss of earning capacity caused by
industrial accidents from the worker to industry and ultimately the
consumer. In light of its beneficial and remedial character the
Workmen's Compensation Law should be construed liberally in favor of the
employee.
Liability under the act is predicated on
accidental injury arising out of and in the course of
employment.…Applying these concepts to the case at bar we note that
there is no issue raised concerning the causal relationship between the
occurrence and the injury. The only testimony on this matter was given
by Dr. Grinols who stated unequivocally that the discovery of her
superior's body was the competent producing cause of her condition. Nor
is there any question as to the absence of physical impact. Accordingly,
the focus of our inquiry is whether or not there has been an accidental
injury within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Law.
Since
there is no statutory definition of this term we turn to the relevant
decisions. These may be divided into three categories: (1) psychic
trauma which produces physical injury, (2) physical impact which
produces psychological injury, and (3) psychic trauma which produces
psychological injury. As to the first class our court has consistently
recognized the principle that an injury caused by emotional stress or
shock may be accidental within the purview of the compensation law. Cases falling into the second category have uniformly
sustained awards to those incurring nervous or psychological disorders
as a result of physical impact. As to those cases in the
third category the decisions are not as clear.…
We hold today
that psychological or nervous injury precipitated by psychic trauma is
compensable to the same extent as physical injury. This determination is
based on two considerations. First, as noted in the psychiatric
testimony there is nothing in the nature of a stress or shock situation
which ordains physical as opposed to psychological injury. The
determinative factor is the particular vulnerability of an individual by
virtue of his physical makeup. In a given situation one person may be
susceptible to a heart attack while another may suffer a depressive
reaction. In either case the result is the same - the individual is
incapable of functioning properly because of an accident and should be
compensated under the Workmen's Compensation Law.
Secondly,
having recognized the reliability of identifying psychic trauma as a
causative factor of injury in some cases and the reliability by
identifying psychological injury as a resultant factor in other cases,
we see no reason for limiting recovery in the latter instance to cases
involving physical impact. There is nothing talismanic about physical
impact.
We would note in passing that this analysis reflects the
view of the majority of jurisdictions in this country and England.
Accordingly, the order appealed from should be reversed and the award to the claimant reinstated, with costs.
Case Questions
- Why did the appeals court deny workers' compensation benefits for Wolfe?
- On what reasoning did the New York high court reverse?
- There was a dissent in this case (not included here). Judge Breitel noted that the evidence was that Mrs. Wolfe had a psychological condition such that her trauma "could never have occurred unless she, to begin with, was extraordinarily vulnerable to severe shock at or away from her place of employment or one produced by accident or injury to those close to her in employment or in her private life." The judge worried that "one can easily call up a myriad of commonplace occupational pursuits where employees are often exposed to the misfortunes of others which may in the mentally unstable evoke precisely the symptoms which this claimant suffered." He concluded, "In an era marked by examples of overburdening of socially desirable programs with resultant curtailment or destruction of such programs, a realistic assessment of impact of doctrine is imperative. An overburdening of the compensation system by injudicious and open-ended expansion of compensation benefits, especially for costly, prolonged, and often only ameliorative psychiatric care, cannot but threaten its soundness or that of the enterprises upon which it depends." What is the concern here?