Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court
Pryor v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 2015 IL App (2d) 130874WC
Appellate Court LANYON PRYOR, Appellant, v. ILLINOIS WORKERS’
Caption COMPENSATION COMMISSION et al. (Cassen Transport,
Appellee).
District & No. Second District
Docket No. 2-13-0874WC
Filed February 20, 2015
Held In proceedings on a claim for the lower back injury a truck hauler
(Note: This syllabus suffered while loading his personal suitcase into his private car in
constitutes no part of the preparation for his drive to his employer’s terminal to pick up his
opinion of the court but car-hauling truck to start delivering cars to various dealerships, the
has been prepared by the arbitrator’s findings that claimant failed to prove that he suffered an
Reporter of Decisions accident that arose out of and in the course of his employment, that he
for the convenience of was not acting as a “traveling employee” when he was injured, and
the reader.) that his injuries were not causally connected to his employment were
affirmed by the Workers’ Compensation Commission based on the
conclusions that the risk resulting in claimant’s injury was a personal
risk, not a risk peculiar to his work, and that claimant had not started
his travel for work when he was injured, and the appellate court upheld
the Commission’s decision on the ground that the finding that
claimant’s injury did not arise out of or in the course of his injury was
not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Winnebago County, No.
Review 12-MR-821; the Hon. J. Edward Prochaska, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Brad A. Reynolds, of Gesmer Law Offices, P.C., of Rockford, for
Appeal appellant.
Sam J. Cerniglia and Maria Merman, both of Roddy, Leahy, Guill &
Zima, Ltd., of Chicago, for appellee.
Panel PRESIDING JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE delivered the judgment of the
court, with opinion.
Justices Hoffman, Hudson, Harris, and Stewart concurred in the
judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 The claimant, Lanyon Pryor, filed an application for adjustment of claim under the
Workers’ Compensation Act (Act) (820 ILCS 305/1 et seq. (West 2008)), seeking benefits
for an injury to his lower back which he sustained on July 21, 2008, while he was employed
by Cassen Transport (employer). After conducting a hearing, an arbitrator found that the
claimant had failed to prove that he sustained an accident that arose out of and in the course
of his employment. In so ruling, the arbitrator rejected the claimant’s argument that he was
acting as a “traveling employee” at the time he was injured. The arbitrator also found that the
claimant failed to prove that the injuries he sustained, if any, were causally connected to his
employment.
¶2 The claimant appealed the arbitrator’s decision to the Illinois Workers’ Compensation
Commission (Commission), which unanimously affirmed and adopted the arbitrator’s
decision. The Commission found that the risk which resulted in the claimant’s alleged injury
was a personal risk that was “not sufficiently connected to [his] employment in order to be a
risk peculiar to his work.” Moreover, like the arbitrator, the Commission also found that the
claimant’s “travel for work had not yet begun when the accident occurred.”
¶3 The claimant then sought judicial review of the Commission’s decision in the circuit
court of Winnebago County, which confirmed the Commission’s decision. This appeal
followed.
¶4 FACTS
¶5 The employer delivers new automobiles to various car dealerships for Chrysler. The
claimant works for the employer as a car hauler. His responsibilities include loading
automobiles onto an 18-wheel car-hauling truck at the employer’s terminal in Belvidere,
Illinois, driving the truck to various dealerships, and unloading the cars at those dealerships.
Sometimes the claimant picks up vehicles on his return trip, loads them on the truck, and
delivers them to another location on his way back to Belvidere. The claimant usually drives
his personal vehicle from his home to the employer’s Belvidere terminal and back.
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¶6 One to two nights per week, the claimant spends the night at a hotel while he is on the
road delivering cars to dealerships. The employer provides each car hauler with a list of
motels so he can book an overnight stay at one of those hotels while he is on the road. When
the claimant anticipates that he will be staying overnight at a hotel, he packs a suitcase with a
change of clothes. The claimant usually drives to the employer’s terminal in his personal
vehicle, takes the suitcase out of his vehicle, and puts it into an 18-wheeler. He then loads the
18-wheeler with cars and drives it to the various dealerships where he delivers the cars.
¶7 On July 21, 2008, the claimant arose at 4 a.m. to get ready for work. He testified that he
planned to drive to the Belvidere terminal that morning to “start [his] work.” Because he
anticipated being out of town overnight for work that evening, the claimant packed a suitcase
with a change of clothes and other items for the trip. The claimant carried the packed suitcase
to his personal car, opened the car door, reached down to pick up the suitcase, and “bent and
turned to the back seat of the car.” At that moment, the claimant felt an “unbearable” pain
through his back and down his legs which caused him to drop to his knees. The claimant
stated that he had to “crawl into [his] house screaming for [his] wife” because he “thought
[he] was paralyzed.”
¶8 Later that day, the claimant’s wife drove the claimant to his chiropractor, Dr. Irshad
Kassim. Dr. Kassim’s July 21, 2008, treatment record reflects that the claimant reported
“severe,” “sharp,” and “burning” pain in his lower back radiating into his right leg. The
claimant rated the pain as a 10 on a scale of 0 to 10. Dr. Kassim’s treatment record notes that
“since his last visit, [the claimant’s] lower back pain has been worse.” 1 The claimant
reported feeling a sharp burning pain in his lower back “while he was picking up a suitcase to
go to work.” Dr. Kassim noted that the claimant was “acutely inflamed and needed assistance
to walk.” The doctor recommended that the claimant go to the emergency room. He also
noted that the claimant should “continue with the prescribed home care.”
¶9 The claimant’s wife then drove him to the emergency room at St. Alexis Hospital. At the
emergency room, the claimant was given an injection for pain relief and told to follow up
with his family doctor, Dr. Pocholo Florentino. On July 23, 2008, Dr. Florentino examined
the claimant and ordered an MRI, which revealed disc bulging at L2-L5. The following day,
Dr. Florentino reexamined the claimant and prescribed medication and physical therapy.
During the initial physical therapy session, the therapist instructed the claimant in a home
exercise program.2 After performing these exercises at home, the claimant returned to Dr.
Florentino, who released the claimant for work as of August 18, 2008. The claimant returned
1
The claimant had been treating with Dr. Kassim for lower back pain beginning on July 15, 2008.
The claimant testified that this pain was triggered when he strained his back at work on July 10, 2008,
while chaining a car onto a car-hauling truck. However, Dr. Kassim’s July 15 and 17 medical records
do not make any note of a work-related accident, and the claimant did not report a work-related injury
to the employer until July 25, 2008. The claimant testified that he did not think that the July 10, 2008,
work injury was serious and he was hoping to resolve it without involving the employer and without
missing time at work. The claimant’s alleged July 10, 2008, work injury was the subject of a separate
claim. Although that claim was consolidated with the instant claim, the arbitrator issued a separate
decision addressing the former claim which is not included in the record.
2
The claimant did not undergo any additional physical therapy sessions because he was denied
insurance coverage for those sessions.
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to work on that date. During the arbitration hearing on March 14, 2011, the claimant testified
that his lower back was “fine.”
¶ 10 The claimant testified that he never had lower back pain before July of 2008. However,
Dr. Kassim’s June 4, 2005, medical record indicates that, “[o]n this visit, [the claimant]
stated that he was experiencing constant mild to moderate lower back pain which was sharp
in quality.” According to Dr. Kassim’s June 4, 2005, medical record, the claimant’s pain was
radiating into his left leg, and the claimant rated the pain as a 5 on a scale of 0 to 10. Dr.
Kassim diagnosed the claimant with “lumbar somatic dysfunction” and sciatica and
prescribed biweekly chiropractic treatments. Dr. Kassim’s June 10, 2005, medical record
reflects that, although the claimant’s lower back pain was getting better, the claimant was
still experiencing “constant mild to moderate diffuse lower back pain which was sharp and
tingling in quality.” Dr. Kassim’s June 24, 2005, medical record notes that the claimant’s
“lower back pain has remained unchanged.”
¶ 11 The employer presented the evidence deposition of Charles Anderson, the employer’s
operations manager. Anderson testified that the claimant called in sick on July 14, 15, and 16
2008, and left a message stating that he was having “sciatic nerve problems due to a
motorcycle ride.” The claimant testified that he spoke with his employer on July 16, 2008,
and reported that he had hurt his back while loading cars at work. However, when asked on
cross-examination “[i]f the note or Mr. Anderson *** would testify that you called him and
told him you were having sciatic nerve problems due to a motorcycle ride and you need to be
off a couple days[,] would that be incorrect?” the claimant responded “I am not—I don’t
recall that. It could be and I don’t remember because we are talking two and a half or three
years ago.” The claimant admitted that he rode his motorcycle approximately 250 miles to
Wisconsin and back on July 12, 2008.
¶ 12 The arbitrator found that the claimant had failed to prove that he sustained an accident
that arose out of and in the course of his employment on July 21, 2008. The arbitrator
concluded that the claimant “would be considered a traveling employee from when he arrives
at [the employer’s] terminal, loads his vehicle, delivers his vehicles to a destination, and
returns to the terminal.” However, the arbitrator found that “lifting an overnight bag is not
sufficient to put [the claimant] in the course of his employment.” In support of this finding,
the arbitrator cited our supreme court’s decision in Orsini v. Industrial Comm’n, 117 Ill. 2d
38 (1987). Summarizing the supreme court’s holding in Orsini, the arbitrator noted that (1)
“[f]or an injury to have arisen out of the employment, the risk of injury must be a risk
peculiar to the work or a risk to which the employee is exposed to a greater degree than the
general public by reason of his employment”; and (2) “[i]f the injury results from a hazard to
which the employee would have been equally exposed apart from the employment, then it
does not arise out of [the employment].”
¶ 13 The arbitrator also found that, “[e]ven arguing that the [claimant’s] activity was ‘arising
out of’ [his employment], *** the [claimant] failed to prove that the low back condition at
the time of this alleged injury was causally connected to a lifting incident on July 21, 2008.”
The arbitrator noted that “the medical records, the [claimant’s] testimony, and the testimony
of Chuck Anderson persuade the Arbitrator to find that [the claimant’s] low back symptoms
were causally connected to activities outside of his employment.” Accordingly, in addition to
his finding that the injuries the claimant suffered on July 21, 2008, did not arise out of and in
the course of his employment, the arbitrator also specifically found that “the [claimant] failed
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to prove that the injuries he sustained on July 21, 2008, if any, were causally connected to his
employment with [the employer].” The arbitrator denied benefits.
¶ 14 The claimant appealed the arbitrator’s decision to the Commission. The claimant disputed
both the arbitrator’s finding that he failed to prove an accident arising out of and in the
course of his employment and the arbitrator’s finding of no causal connection. Regarding the
accident issue, the claimant argued that he was a “traveling employee” because his job
required him to travel. Accordingly, he was acting in the course of his employment from the
moment he left his house, not merely from the time he arrived at the employer’s Belvidere
terminal. Moreover, the claimant argued that his injury arose out of his employment under a
traveling employee analysis because it was reasonable and foreseeable that he would load a
bag into his car in preparation for his upcoming work trip. Regarding the causation issue, the
claimant argued that: (1) the employer had stipulated that the claimant’s current condition of
ill-being is causally connected to the injury he suffered on July 21, 2008; and (2) the claimant
“established his burden of proof regarding causation based upon a chain of events theory.”
¶ 15 The Commission unanimously affirmed and adopted the arbitrator’s decision. The
Commission expressly noted that it had considered the issues of “accident” and “causal
connection,” among other issues. Although the Commission did not separately comment on
the arbitrator’s causation finding, it explained its finding on the accident issue as follows:
“The Commission separately notes that *** [the claimant] admits that his accident
occurred when he lifted his personal suitcase into his personal vehicle–[the claimant]
had not left his home at the time of the accident. The risk of injury in this case was a
personal risk, and was not sufficiently connected with the employment in order to be
a risk peculiar to his work. [The claimant’s] travel for work had not yet begun when
the accident occurred.”
¶ 16 The claimant then sought judicial review of the Commission’s decision in the circuit
court of Winnebago County. Although the claimant asked the circuit court to reverse the
Commission’s decision “in its entirety,” his petition for administrative review expressly
referenced only the Commission’s finding that the accident did not arise out of and in the
course of his employment. The employer’s response brief in the circuit court addresses that
issue only and does not ask the court to affirm the Commission’s finding of no causal
connection. The circuit court affirmed the Commission’s decision. The circuit court’s order
discusses only the traveling employee issue (i.e., the “arising out of” issue) and does not
address the causation issue. This appeal followed.
¶ 17 ANALYSIS
¶ 18 The issue raised by the parties to this appeal is whether the lower back injury that the
claimant suffered on July 21, 2008, arose out of and in the course of his employment.
Whether a claimant’s injury arose out of or in the course of his employment is typically a
question of fact to be resolved by the Commission, and the Commission’s determination will
not be reversed unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence. Kertis v. Illinois
Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 2013 IL App (2d) 120252WC, ¶ 13; Cox v. Illinois
Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 406 Ill. App. 3d 541, 546 (2010). However, when the facts
are undisputed and susceptible of but a single inference, as in this case, the question is one of
law subject to de novo review. Kertis, 2013 IL App (2d) 120252WC, ¶ 13; Joiner v.
Industrial Comm’n, 337 Ill. App. 3d 812, 815 (2003).
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¶ 19 An employee’s injury is compensable under the Act only if it arises out of and in the
course of the employment. 820 ILCS 305/2 (West 2008). “ ‘The general rule is that an injury
incurred by an employee in going to or returning from the place of employment does not
arise out of or in the course of the employment and, hence, is not compensable.’ ” The
Venture—Newberg-Perini, Stone & Webster v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n,
2013 IL 115728, ¶ 16 (quoting Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 86 Ill. 2d
534, 537 (1981)). The rationale for this rule is that that the employee’s trip to and from work
is the product of his own decision as to where he wants to live, a matter in which his
employer ordinarily has no interest. The Venture—Newberg-Perini, Stone & Webster, 2013
IL 115728, ¶ 16.
¶ 20 An exception applies, however, when the employee is a “traveling employee.” Id. ¶ 17. A
“traveling employee” is one whose work duties require him to travel away from his
employer’s premises. Id.; see also Kertis, 2013 IL App (2d) 120252WC, ¶ 16. Courts
generally regard traveling employees differently from other employees when considering
whether an injury arose out of and in the course of employment. The
Venture—Newberg-Perini, Stone & Webster, 2013 IL 115728, ¶ 17; Hoffman v. Industrial
Comm’n, 109 Ill. 2d 194, 199 (1985). A traveling employee is deemed to be in the course of
his employment from the time that he leaves home until he returns. Kertis, 2013 IL App (2d)
120252WC, ¶ 16; Mlynarczyk v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 2013 IL App (3d)
120411WC, ¶ 14; Cox, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 545. An injury sustained by a traveling employee
arises out of his employment if he was injured while engaging in conduct that was reasonable
and foreseeable, i.e., conduct that “might normally be anticipated or foreseen by the
employer.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Robinson v. Industrial Comm’n, 96 Ill. 2d 87,
92 (1983); see also Kertis, 2013 IL App (2d) 120252WC, ¶ 16; Cox, 406 Ill. App. 3d at
545-46.
¶ 21 Whether a traveling employee was injured while engaging in conduct that was reasonable
and foreseeable to his employer is normally a factual question to be resolved by the
Commission, and where the facts or inferences are in dispute, we should affirm the
Commission’s determination unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence. Kertis,
2013 IL App (2d) 120252WC, ¶ 17. However, where the relevant facts and inferences are
undisputed, as here, we review this issue de novo. Id.; see generally Joiner, 337 Ill. App. 3d
at 815.
¶ 22 In this case, the claimant argues that he is a traveling employee. It is undisputed that his
job duties required him to travel away from his employer’s premises at the Belvidere
terminal to deliver cars to various dealerships and that he typically stayed overnight at a
motel from one to two nights per week while he was traveling for work. What is less clear is
whether the claimant was traveling for work at the time of his injury. An injury suffered by a
traveling employee is compensable under the Act if the injury occurs while the employee is
traveling for work, i.e., during a work-related trip. However, the work-related trip at issue
must be more than a regular commute from the employee’s home to the employer’s premises.
Otherwise, every employee who commutes from his home to a fixed workplace owned or
controlled by his employer on a daily basis would be deemed a “traveling employee,” and the
exception for traveling employees would swallow the rule barring recovery for injuries
incurred while traveling to and from work. Thus, the threshold question in this case is: had
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the claimant embarked on a work-related trip at the time he was injured on July 21, 2008, or
was he merely beginning his regular commute to his employer’s premises at that time?
¶ 23 The claimant argues that his work accident occurred in the course of his employment
because he was injured after he had left his home and begun his work-related trip. In support
of this argument, the claimant relies principally on our decisions in Mlynarczyk and in
Complete Vending Services, Inc. v. Industrial Comm’n, 305 Ill. App. 3d 1047 (1999). We
will address each of these cases in turn.
¶ 24 In Mlynarczyk, the employer operated a cleaning service. The claimant and her husband
worked for the employer cleaning churches, homes, and offices in various locations. The
claimant “did not work at a fixed jobsite.” Mlynarczyk, 2013 IL App (3d) 120411WC, ¶ 16.
The employer gave the claimant and her husband a minivan to use while driving to various
jobs and for personal purposes. Id. ¶ 4. On the date of the claimant’s injury, the claimant and
her husband drove the minivan to clean a church and two homes. After they finished (at
approximately 2:30 p.m.), the employer told them that, if they were interested in assisting the
evening crew on another job, they should return to the church at approximately 4:30 p.m.
Id. ¶ 5. The claimant and her husband returned home and had lunch. Shortly after 4 p.m., the
claimant left her house to return to work. As she walked around the rear of the minivan,
which was parked in the driveway of the home where she and her husband resided, the
claimant slipped and fell, fracturing her wrist. The claimant testified that the accident
occurred adjacent to the driveway on a “ ‘public sidewalk’ ” leading from the house to the
driveway. Id. ¶ 6. The employer did not rebut this testimony. We held that the claimant was a
traveling employee. Id. ¶ 16. Applying the special rules applicable to traveling employees,
we held that the claimant’s injury occurred in the course of her employment because the
injury occurred “after she left home, while walking to a vehicle used to transport her to
work.” Id. ¶ 19. Moreover, we held that the conduct leading to the injury was “reasonable
and foreseeable” because: (1) the claimant testified that the accident occurred “as she was
walking to the vehicle used to transport her to a work assignment for [the employer]”; and (2)
the claimant’s walk to the minivan “constituted the initial part of her journey to her work
assignment.” Id.
¶ 25 The employer argued that, even if the claimant was a traveling employee, her injury was
not compensable “because she had not left her private property when the injury occurred and
therefore had not yet been subjected to the hazards of the street or an automobile.” Id. ¶ 20.
In rejecting this argument, we held that “the evidence does not support the premise that
claimant’s fall occurred on private property” because the claimant’s unrebutted testimony
established that the accident occurred on a “ ‘public sidewalk.’ ” We found this testimony
sufficient to establish that the accident “exposed [the] claimant to the hazards of the street.”
Id. Moreover, we noted that the employer had cited no authority in support of its claim that a
traveling employee who has “left the physical confines of his or her home on the way to a job
assignment” and sustained an accident on private property cannot be subject to the hazards of
the street. Id.
¶ 26 In Complete Vending Services, we held that an employee who was injured while driving
from his home to his employer’s office en route to an off-site service call was a traveling
employee whose injury arose out of and in the course of his employment. Complete Vending
Services, 305 Ill. App. 3d at 1050. The claimant worked for the employer as a service
technician. He was on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year to repair the
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employer’s vending machines in his designated service area. Id. at 1048. When he was not
out on service calls, his duties included repairing vending machines and rebuilding
equipment in one of the employer’s shops. Id. The claimant drove a company vehicle to and
from work and for all service calls. The employer paid for gas and the claimant was not
allowed to use the vehicle for any personal uses. Id. The night before the accident, the
employer’s answering service contacted the claimant and informed him that Central Du Page
Hospital needed a machine fixed. Id. The next morning, the claimant left home in the
company vehicle. His intention was to “stop in at the [employer’s] office on the way to Du
Page Hospital to tell [the employer] where he was going and to see if any other service calls
had come in that he could make while [he was] out.” Id. at 1048-49. The office was directly
on the route to the hospital. On the way to the office, the claimant rear-ended a garbage truck
and suffered injuries.
¶ 27 We held that the Commission’s finding that the claimant’s injuries arose out of and in the
course of his employment was not against the manifest weight of the evidence for two
separate and independent reasons: (1) the claimant was a traveling employee who was
injured after he left his home “with the intention of making the service call” even though he
had decided to “stop in” at the office first, which was on the way to the service call, for the
employer’s benefit; and (2) the employer provided the claimant with a means of
transportation to or from work for the employer’s own benefit. Id. at 1049-50. In so holding,
we rejected the dissenting commissioner’s opinion that the claimant was not a traveling
employee at the time of the accident because the claimant’s commute to the office the
morning of the accident was “no different from any other employee’s commute to work or,
for that matter, the claimant’s regular commute to work” and the claimant therefore
“encountered *** risks which were no greater than those encountered by the general public
each day traveling to and from work.” Id. at 1050-51.
¶ 28 The claimant argues that Mlynarczyk and Complete Vending Services support his claim in
this case. He contends that, like the claimant in Mlynarczyk, he had left his home and was
injured while approaching the vehicle that he would use to drive to work. Moreover, like the
claimant in Complete Vending Services, the claimant planned to stop at the employer’s
premises (the Belvidere terminal) en route to a job at a different location. In essence, the
claimant argues that, like the injuries at issue in Mlynarczyk and Complete Vending Services,
his injury occurred during the first leg of a continuous work trip to a distant job location
away from the employer’s premises. Moreover, because he was a traveling employee, the
claimant argues that he was acting in the course of his employment from the time he left his
home until the time he returned home, regardless of whether he stopped at the employer’s
premises in the interim. He notes, correctly, that the fact that he was injured while loading his
personal car, rather than a company car, is irrelevant to the traveling employee analysis.3
3
The fact that an employer provides an employee with a company car demonstrates that the
employer “provide[d] [the claimant with] a means of transportation to or from work for the employer’s
own benefit.” Complete Vending Services, 305 Ill. App. 3d at 1049. That constitutes a separate
exception to the general rule that an accident occurring while an employee is traveling to or from work
does not arise out of or in the course of his employment. Id. By contrast, the “traveling employee”
exception is predicated on entirely different facts, namely, facts demonstrating that the employee’s job
duties required him to travel away from the employer’s premises. See, e.g., The
Venture—Newberg-Perini, Stone & Webster, 2013 IL 115728, ¶ 16.
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Thus, the claimant argues that the Commission erred as a matter of law in finding that his
injury did not occur in the course of his employment.
¶ 29 We disagree. Even assuming that the claimant had “left home” at the time of his injury,
(which is not entirely clear), he was preparing to begin his regular commute to his
employer’s premises at that time. Unlike the claimants in Mlynarczyk and Complete Vending
Services, the claimant in this case did not drive to his various work locations directly from
his home; rather, he was required to drive to the employer’s Belvidere facility first, load an
18-wheeler truck with cars located at the employer’s facility, and then drive the truck to
various dealerships from there. Thus, when he drove to the Belvidere terminal, he was not
making a brief and unnecessary stop at his employer’s premises that was directly en route to
his ultimate work destination (as was the claimant in Complete Vending Services). Rather, he
was making a regular commute to a fixed jobsite as a necessary precondition to any
subsequent work-related travel. This fact also distinguishes the claimant in this case from the
claimant in Mlynarczyk, who had “no fixed job site” and who traveled directly from her
home to the various homes and churches that she cleaned. Unlike the claimants in
Mlynarczyk and Complete Vending Services, the claimant’s trip to the Belvidere facility was
not part of a continuous trip from his home to a jobsite away from the employer’s premises.4
Nor was the claimant injured during a trip from his employer’s premises to a distant work
location (as in Kertis and other cases) or during a trip from a remote jobsite to his home (as
in Cox). Rather, the claimant was injured during a regular commute from his home to his
employer’s premises, before he embarked upon a work trip away from his employer’s
premises. Thus, the Commission’s finding that the claimant’s injury did not arise out of or in
the course of his employment was not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
¶ 30 Because we uphold the Commission’s decision on this basis, we do not need to address
whether the action the claimant was performing while he was injured was reasonable and
foreseeable to the employer or whether the Commission erred in finding that the claimant
failed to prove causation.
¶ 31 CONCLUSION
¶ 32 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Winnebago
County, which confirmed the Commission’s decision.
¶ 33 Affirmed.
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Moreover, Mlynarczyk is distinguishable for the additional reason that the injury in Mlynarczyk
occurred on a “ ‘public sidewalk’ ” in front of the claimant’s house, thereby exposing the claimant to
the “hazards of the street.” Mlynarczyk, 2013 IL App (3d) 120411WC, ¶ 20. Further, we note that our
holding in Mlynarczyk was based on a unique set of facts that is unlikely to recur.
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