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MILTON L. HARRISON, Employee-Plaintiff, v. TOBACCO TRANSPORT, INC.,
Employer, NON-INSURED, Defendant, and/or CNA INSURANCE COMPANIES, Carrier;
Defendants
No. COA99-1058
(Filed 15 August 2000)
1. Workers' Compensation--Kentucky policy--Kentucky law--no North
Carolina coverage
The Industrial Commission did not err by not applying Kentucky law to
determine whether a workers' compensation insurance policy provided
coverage for plaintiff's injury where defendant-employer was a Kentucky
corporation with its principal place of business in Kentucky, plaintiff was
hired in North Carolina by a supervisor for defendant, plaintiff testified
that he sometimes worked for the supervisor but did not know the name of
the supervisor's employer or that the employer was located in Kentucky, and
plaintiff resided in North Carolina, performed his work here, was injured
here, and never traveled outside of North Carolina. Although defendant
argued that Kentucky's full coverage statute applied, plaintiff's injuries
were not subject to this chapter under the plain language of that
statute.
2. Workers' Compensation--Kentucky policy--language of policy--no North
Carolina policy
A workers' compensation insurance carrier was properly dismissed from
a workers' compensation proceeding where the plain language of the policy
provided competent evidence sufficient to uphold the Commission's
determination that the policy did not provide workers' compensation
insurance to defendant in North Carolina. No states were listed where
required for coverage by the plain language of the Other States Insurance
provision; that subparagraph was not altered by an amendatory endorsement;
the amended version also referred to the section in which no other states
were listed; and defendant did not meet the requirements for the amended
subparagraph to apply.
3. Workers' Compensation--attorney fees--employer's dispute with insurer-
-refusal to compensate
The Industrial Commission did not abuse its discretion in a workers'
compensation action by awarding attorney fees where it was undisputed that
plaintiff suffered a compensable injury in 1994; compensation for that
injury is the ultimate responsibility of the employer, defendant; and
defendant's refusal to compensate plaintiff pending the outcome of its
litigation with the insurer prevented plaintiff from receiving the full
amount of his compensation for about six years.
4. Workers' Compensation--Kentucky policy--no North Carolina coverage--
employer fined
The Industrial Commission did not err by assessing a fine against
defendant where it had been determined in the same workers' compensation
action that a Kentucky policy did not provide worker's compensation
insurance for plaintiff's North Carolina injuries. Defendant failed to
procure necessary insurance for its North Carolina operations and thus
violated N.C.G.S. § 97-94.
5. Appeal and Error--cross-assignment of error--issues not providing
alternate basis for judgment--not considered
A workers' compensation plaintiff's cross-assignments of error
concerning a Kentucky insurance policy which did not provide North Carolina
coverage and the failure to assess a late payment penalty were not
preserved for appeal where they would not have provided an alternative
basis in law for upholding the order and award of the Industrial
Commission. Plaintiff should have filed a cross-appeal.
Appeal by defendant Tobacco Transport, Inc., from opinion and award
entered 16 April 1999 by the North Carolina Industrial Commission. Heard in
the Court of Appeals 17 May 2000.
Stephen N. Camak for plaintiff-appellee.
Maupin Taylor & Ellis, P.A., by M. Keith Kapp and Kevin W. Benedict, for
defendant-appellant Tobacco Transport, Inc.
Teague, Campbell, Dennis & Gorham, L.L.P., by Thomas M. Clare and Tracey
L. Jones, for defendant-appellee CNA Insurance.
MARTIN, Judge.
In October 1994 plaintiff Milton L. Harrison (plaintiff) was employed
by defendant Tobacco Transport, Inc. (Tobacco Transport) for the unloading
of tobacco bales from trucks. On 10 October 1994 plaintiff was unloading a
truck for Tobacco Transport in Kinston, North Carolina, when he fell
approximately 20 feet onto a concrete surface, sustaining serious injuries.
Plaintiff has incurred substantial expenses for medical treatment and has
been unable to work since the date of the accident.
Tobacco Transport is a Kentucky corporation with its principal place of
business in Milltown, Kentucky. Plaintiff was hired in North Carolina to
perform work for Tobacco Transport by Freddy Todd, a Tobacco Transport
supervisor. Plaintiff testified that he sometimes worked for Mr. Todd, and
that he did not know the name of Mr. Todd's employer or that the employer was
located in Kentucky. Plaintiff resided in North Carolina, was hired in North
Carolina, performed his work for Tobacco Transport in this State, and was
injured here. Plaintiff never performed work for Tobacco Transport in
Kentucky; indeed, he testified that he had never traveled outside of North
Carolina.
Plaintiff filed this workers' compensation claim in North Carolina on 20May 1996. At the time of plaintiff's accid
ent, Tobacco Transport carried
workers' compensation insurance under a policy issued by defendant CNA
Insurance Companies (CNA). With respect to coverage for injuries sustained
outside of Kentucky, the policy contains the following relevant provisions:
Information Page
ITEM 3.A. Workers' Compensation Insurance: Part One of
the policy applies to Workers' Compensation Law of the
states listed here:
16-Kentucky
C. Other
States Insurance: Part Three of the Policy applies to the
states, if any, listed here:
[none listed]
Part Three--Other States Insurance
A. How This Insurance Applies  
;
1. This other
states insurance applies only if one or more states are
shown in Item 3.C. of the Information Page.
The policy also contains an endorsement amending the Other States
Insurance provision. The endorsement provides as follows:
2. If you begin work in any one of those states after
the effective date of the policy and are not insured or
are not self-insured for such work, all provisions of the
policy will apply as though that state were listed in
Item 3.A. of the Information Page.
4. If you have work
on the effective date of this policy in any state not
listed in Item 3.A. of the Information Page, coverage
will not be afforded for that state unless we are
notified within thirty days.
All parties have stipulated that plaintiff sustained a compensable
injury on 10 October 1994. CNA, however, declined coverage, contending its
policy does not provide coverage for injuries sustained by Tobacco
Transport's workers employed in North Carolina. On 30 April 1998, the deputycommissioner issued an opinion and award in favor of CNA, and
on 16 April
1999 the Full Commission affirmed, concluding that the policy did not provide
Tobacco Transport with coverage in North Carolina. The Commission dismissed
CNA from the action, ordered Tobacco Transport to pay compensation and
reasonable medical expenses to plaintiff, and, in addition, to pay
plaintiff's reasonable attorney's fees and a fine in the amount of $50.00 per
day each day past 10 October 1994 for its failure to provide workers'
compensation insurance in North Carolina. Tobacco Transport appeals.
______________
By its five assignments of error, Tobacco Transport contends the
Commission erred in ruling that the CNA policy does not provide coverage for
its North Carolina operations, in dismissing CNA as a party, in requiring
Tobacco Transport to pay plaintiff's attorney's fees; and in imposing a fine
against Tobacco Transport for its failure to provide plaintiff with workers'
compensation benefits. We affirm.
The standard of appellate review of decisions of the Industrial
Commission consists of a determination of whether the Full Commission's
findings of fact are supported by competent evidence, and whether its
conclusions of law are supported by those findings.
Calloway v. Memorial
Mission Hosp., 137 N.C. App. 480, 528 S.E.2d 397 (2000). Under the first
inquiry, the findings of fact are conclusive on appeal so long as they are
supported by any competent evidence, even if other evidence would support
contrary findings.
Id.;
see also Lewis v. Sonoco Products Co., 137 N.C. App.
61, 526 S.E.2d 671 (2000).
I.
[1]Tobacco Transport assigns error to the Commission's determination
that the CNA policy does not provide coverage for plaintiff's North Carolinainjuries. Specifically, Tobacco Transport argues that the Comm
ission should
have applied Kentucky's full coverage statute to conclude that plaintiff's
injuries were covered by the CNA policy, but that in any event, the plain
language of the amendatory endorsement to the Other States Insurance
provision of the policy clearly extends coverage to North Carolina.
Tobacco Transport first argues that because plaintiff was employed by
Tobacco Transport and was working on its payroll with the knowledge and
consent of Tobacco Transport's president, Kentucky's full coverage statute
applies to mandate coverage for plaintiff's injuries. With insurance
contracts the principle of
lex loci contractus mandates that the substantive
law of the state where the last act to make a binding contract occurred,
usually delivery of the policy, controls the interpretation of the contract.
Fortune Ins. Co. v. Owens, 351 N.C. 424, 428, 526 S.E.2d 463, 466 (2000)
(citation omitted).
The full coverage provision of Kentucky's Workers' Compensation Act
provides that [e]very policy or contract of workers' compensation insurance
under this chapter, issued or delivered in this state, shall cover the entire
liability of the employer for compensation to each employee subject to this
chapter . . . . K.R.S. 342.375 (1998). While the CNA policy was indeed
issued to Tobacco Transport in Kentucky, Tobacco Transport's argument ignores
the plain language of this provision that requires an employee to be subject
to this chapter in order for the full coverage provision to apply. Whether
an employee working in another state is subject to Kentucky's Workers'
Compensation Act, and thus, the full coverage provision, is determined by the
following provisions set forth in section 342.670 of the Kentucky Act:
(1) If an employee, while working outside the territorial
limits of this state, suffers an injury on account of
which he . . . would have been entitled to the benefits
provided by this chapter had that injury occurred within
this state, that employee . . . shall be entitled to the
benefits provided by this chapter, if at the time of the
injury:
(a) His employment is principally localized in this
state, or
(b) He is working under a contract of hire made in this
state in employment not principally localized in any
state, or
(c) He is working under a contract of hire made in this
state in employment principally localized in another
state whose workers' compensation law is not applicable
to his employer, or
(d) He is working under a contract of hire made in this
state for employment outside the United States and
Canada.
K.R.S. 342.670 (1998).
In the present case, plaintiff's employment with Tobacco Transport was
not localized in Kentucky; plaintiff had never been to Kentucky, nor did
plaintiff know that he was working for a Kentucky corporation. Rather,
plaintiff's contract of hire was entered into in North Carolina, and all of
plaintiff's employment duties with Tobacco Transport were executed in North
Carolina. Under the plain language of K.R.S. 342.670, plaintiff's injuries
are not subject to this chapter containing Kentucky's full coverage
provision, and the Commission therefore did not err in failing to apply
Kentucky law.
[2]Tobacco Transport also argues that, applying North Carolina rules of
contract interpretation, the plain language of the CNA policy provides
coverage for plaintiff's injuries; alternatively, it contends the policy
language is ambiguous, requiring that the policy be interpreted in favor of
providing coverage. Both North Carolina and Kentucky apply the principle of
construction that where the language of an insurance policy is clear and
unambiguous, the language must be accorded its plain meaning.
See Nationwide
Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Grady, 130 N.C. App. 292, 502 S.E.2d 648 (1998);
Pierce
v. West American Ins. Co., 655 S.W.2d 34 (1983). Ambiguity in the terms of
the policy is not established simply because the parties contend fordiffering meanings to be given to the language. Non-technical words ar
e to
be given their meaning in ordinary speech unless it is clear that the parties
intended the words to have a specific technical meaning.
Allstate Ins. Co.
v. Runyun Chatterton, 135 N.C. App. 92, 95, 518 S.E.2d 814, 816-17 (1999)
(citations omitted),
disc. review denied, 351 N.C. 350, __ S.E.2d __ (2000).
In the present case, the Commission found that the relevant policy
provisions are not ambiguous and must be accorded their plain and ordinary
meaning. The Commission found that under section 3.C. of the Information
Page, the policy clearly states that the Other States Insurance provision
applies only to those states listed under section 3.C., which, in Tobacco
Transport's policy, listed no states. The Commission also found that
subparagraph 1 of the Other States Insurance provision clearly states that
the provision only applies if one or more states are listed under section
3.C.
With respect to the effect of the amendatory endorsement to the Other
States Insurance provision, the Commission found that, under subparagraph 2
as amended, had Tobacco Transport begun work after the effective date of the
policy in any of those states listed under section 3.C., the policy would
have covered injuries sustained in those states. However, because no states
were listed under section 3.C., the Commission found that the policy could
not cover North Carolina. The Commission declined to adopt Tobacco
Transport's interpretation that those states refers to the list of states
to which the amendatory endorsement applies, but rather, found that the
phrase clearly refers to those states listed under section 3.C.
Regarding the amended subparagraph 4, the Commission found that, if
Tobacco Transport had worked in North Carolina on 1 December 1993, the
effective date of the policy, coverage would have existed for plaintiff's
injuries so long as Tobacco Transport had notified CNA within 30 days of itsNorth Carolina operations. However, the Commission found that
Tobacco
Transport was not working in North Carolina on 1 December 1993. The
Commission concluded that the CNA policy provides coverage for Kentucky only.
While the Commission's findings regarding the interpretation of the
policy language are mixed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and thus
fully reviewable,
see Royster v. Culp, Inc., 343 N.C. 279, 470 S.E.2d 30
(1996), we nevertheless agree with the Commission's interpretation of the
policy language, and hold that it supports the conclusion of law that on 10
October 1994 Tobacco Transport was not covered for workers' compensation
insurance in North Carolina. We agree with the Commission that the language
of subparagraph 1 of the Other States Insurance provision unambiguously
states that the provision applies only if one or more states are shown in
item 3.C. of the Information Page. This subparagraph was not altered by the
amendatory endorsement, and no states were listed under section 3.C.
We further agree with the Commission that the plain language of
subparagraph 2 of Other States Insurance, as amended, appears to refer to
those states listed under section 3.C. of the policy, where no states were
listed. Moreover, for amended subparagraph 4 to apply to North Carolina, the
language unambiguously requires that Tobacco Transport must have worked in
North Carolina on the effective date of the policy, and that it have notified
CNA of such work within 30 days of that date. The Commission found, and the
evidence supports the finding that Tobacco Transport did not meet these
requirements.
The plain language of the policy provides competent evidence sufficient
to uphold the Commission's determination that the CNA policy did not provide
workers' compensation insurance to Tobacco Transport in North Carolina.
Thus, CNA was properly dismissed as a party to this action.
II.
[3]Tobacco Transport next assigns error to the Commission's award of
attorney's fees to plaintiff. Under G.S. § 97-88.1, the Commission may award
attorney's fees if it determines that any hearing has been brought,
prosecuted, or defended without reasonable ground. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-88.1
(1999). In addition, the Commission may award fees where the party
instituting the proceeding has reasonable grounds to do so, if as a result of
the proceeding, the party is ordered to make or continue making benefit
payments to the injured worker.
Lewis v. Sonoco Products Co. at 69, 526
S.E.2d at 676. The decision of whether to make such an award, and the amount
of the award, is in the discretion of the Commission, and its award or denial
of an award will not be disturbed absent an abuse of discretion.
Id. at 71,
526 S.E.2d at 677 (citation omitted). An abuse of discretion results only
where a decision is manifestly unsupported by reason or is so arbitrary that
it could not have been the result of a reasoned decision.
Long v. Harris,
137 N.C. App. 461, 465, 528 S.E.2d 633, 635 (2000).
In the present case, the Commission found as follows:
21. Defendant-employer has defended this case on
unreasonable grounds. Although there was a genuine issue
as to whether defendant-carrier was on the risk,
defendant-employer is responsible for plaintiff's work
injury. Defendant-employer has not raised credible
evidence to dispute the nature and extent of plaintiff's
compensable injury. Plaintiff should not go without any
workers' compensation benefits while defendants litigate
the coverage issue. Defendant-employer's failure to pay
plaintiff the benefits to which he is entitled, pending
resolution of the coverage dispute, constitutes unfounded
litigiousness, entitling plaintiff to reasonable
attorney's fees.
Based on this finding, the Commission concluded that [p]laintiff is entitled
to reasonable attorney fees for defendant-employer's unreasonable defense of
plaintiff's injury by accident. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-88.1.
We do not believe the Commission's award of attorney's fees was
manifestly unsupported by reason, or so arbitrary that it could not havebeen the result of a reasoned decision. It
is undisputed that plaintiff
suffered a compensable injury in 1994, compensation for which is the ultimate
responsibility of the employer under North Carolina's workers' compensation
laws. Tobacco Transport's refusal to compensate plaintiff pending the
outcome of its litigation with CNA with respect to coverage has, for
approximately six years, prevented plaintiff from receiving the full amount
of compensation to which he is entitled under the laws of this State. Under
these circumstances, we hold the Commission's award of attorney's fees was
neither arbitrary nor unreasoned. This assignment of error is overruled.
III.
[4]Tobacco Transport also assigns error to the Commission's assessment
of a fine against it in the amount of $50.00 per each day past 10 October
1994. The order was based on the following findings:
19. As of 10 October 1994, defendant-employer had failed
to secure workers' compensation insurance for accidents
in the State of North Carolina. Plaintiff's accident on
that date occurred in Kinston, North Carolina; plaintiff
is a North Carolina resident; defendant-employer has a
North Carolina registered office address of 1042
Washington Street, Raleigh, North Carolina and employed
three (3) or more employees in North Carolina in 1994.
20. On 10 October 1994, defendant-employer was engaged
in interstate commerce through its business of
transporting of tobacco, yet only contracted and paid for
workers' compensation insurance for accidents arising
under Kentucky law. Therefore, defendant-employer is
subject to the penalty provisions of N.C. Gen. Stat. §
97-94.
Based on these findings, the Commission concluded that Tobacco Transport is
subject to the penalty provision of G.S. § 97-94. G.S. § 97-94 provides,
in pertinent part:
(b) Any employer required to secure the payment of
compensation under this Article who refuses or neglects
to secure such compensation shall be punished by a
penalty of one dollar ($1.00) for each employee, but not
less that fifty dollars ($50.00) nor more than one
hundred dollars ($100.00) for each day of such refusal or
neglect, and until the same ceases; and he shall be
liable during the continuance of such refusal or neglect
to an employee either for compensation under this Articleor at law at the election of the injured employee.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-94(b).
Since we have affirmed the Commission's ruling that the CNA policy does
not provide coverage for plaintiff's North Carolina injuries, the Commission
correctly determined that Tobacco Transport had failed to procure necessary
insurance for its North Carolina operations, and thus, that Tobacco Transport
is in violation of G.S. § 97-94. Its order assessing the fine is affirmed.
IV.
[5]By purported cross-assignments of error, plaintiff attempts to argue
that the Commission erred both in concluding that the CNA policy did not
cover plaintiff's North Carolina injuries, and in failing to assess a 10%
late payment penalty against Tobacco Transport pursuant to G.S. § 97-18(g).
N.C.R. App. P. 10(d) provides that an appellee may cross-assign as error any
action or omission of the trial court . . . which deprived the appellee of an
alternative basis in law for supporting the judgment . . . from which appeal
has been taken. Neither of plaintiff's cross-assignments of error, if
sustained, would provide an alternative basis for upholding the order and
award of the Commission. In order to properly present the alleged errors
for appellate review, plaintiff should have filed a cross-appeal.
See
Atlantic Veneer Corp. v. Robbins, 133 N.C. App. 594, 516 S.E.2d 169 (1999);
Cox v. Robert C. Rhein Interest, Inc., 100 N.C. App. 584, 397 S.E.2d 358
(1990). Plaintiff has failed to do so, and we therefore do not consider his
arguments.
See Mann Contractors, Inc. v. Flair with Goldsmith Consultants-
II, Inc., 135 N.C. App. 772, 522 S.E.2d 118 (1999).
Affirmed.
Judges WYNN and McGEE concur.
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