Wilson v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board

Opinion

CLARK, J.

Applicant seeks review of a Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board decision vacating a referee’s compensation award and holding that her injury did not arise “out of and in the course of employment.” (Lab. Code, § 3600.) We affirm the board’s order.

After driving her children to their school, applicant, a grade school teacher, sustained injury in an automobile accident driving to her school. Her car contained a small bag of thread spools for use in art class, materials graded at home the previous evening, and a few books, including her teaching manual.

The employing school district did not require instructors to commute in their personal cars. The school grounds were unitary and teachers did not travel elsewhere during the day. Public transportation was available and regularly used by at least one teacher. Since the class schedule did not include a specific period for planning lessons or grading papers, instructors commonly performed these duties at school outside class periods or at home in the evening. Teachers could complete class preparation at school but usually chose to work at home for their own convenience.

Although the school libraiy contained a curriculum guide which, among other things, urged teachers to enliven lectures and to awaken pupil imagination with home-gathered sketches, charts, maps and other demonstrational materials, the school district did not require teachers to read the guide or to comply with its suggestions. Moreover, the district supplied adequate quantities of art materials for the children’s use.

The board denied benefits after making the following principal findings: (1) applicant’s home was not a second jobsite because her activities outside school hours were matters of personal choice, (2) only convenience motivated applicant’s automobile trip, and (3) the “transportation of the work-related items was not a major part of the trip, nor even a significant alternative reason for the trip.”

*184The “going and coming” rule provides that workers’ compensation does not ordinarily compensate injuries sustained while the employee travels to or from work. (2 Hanna, Cal. Law of Employee Injuries and Workmen’s Compensation (2d ed. 1975) § 9.03[3], subd. [b].) In Hinojosa v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd. (1972) 8 Cal.3d 150 [104 Cal.Rptr. 456, 501 P.2d 1176], this court stated that the going and coming rule makes noncompensable “the injury that occurs during a local commute enroute to a fixed place of business at fixed hours in the absence of special or extraordinary circumstances. The decisions have thereby excluded the ordinary, local commute that marks the daily transit of the mass of workers to and from their jobs; the employment, there, plays no special role in the requisites of portage except the normal need of the presence of the person for the performance of the work.” (8 Cal.3d at p. 157.)

Applicant contends that, although the accident occurred during her regular commute, she is entitled to exemption from the going and coming rule because exceptional circumstances are established by her performing work at home the night before the accident and by her transporting work-related items—the graded materials and the spools —to class.

Work done at home may exempt- an injury occurring during a regular commute from the going and coming rule if circumstances of the employment—and not mere dictates of convenience to the employee— make the home a second jobsite. If the home becomes a second business situs, the familiar rule applies that injury sustained while traveling between jobsites is compensable. (Western States etc. Co. v. Bayside L. Co. (1920) 182 Cal. 140 [187 P. 735]; State Ins. Fund v. Industrial Comm. (1964) 15 Utah 2d 363 [393 P.2d 397]; 1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 15.14; cf. Pacific Indem. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com. (1946) 28 Cal.2d 329 [170 P.2d 18]; Cal. Cas. Ind. Exch. v. Ind. Acc. Com. (1943) 21 Cal.2d 751 [135 P.2d 158].) However, if work is performed at home for the employee’s convenience, the commute does not constitute a business trip, since serving the employee’s own convenience in selecting an off-premise place to work is a personal and not a business purpose. (1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, supra, § 18.33.)

The record compels the board’s determination that applicant’s home did not constitute a second jobsite warranting exemption from the going and coming rule. The explicit job requirements demanded only that she report to the school grounds—nowhere else. Her employer’s *185implicit requirement to work beyond classroom hours did not require labor at home. Teachers often worked after 3:15 in the school building unless their broad personal freedom vis-a-vis the nature and hours of class preparation led them home for the sake of convenience. There is no claim that facilities at school were not sufficient to permit completion of the preparatory chores.

That applicant’s type of work regularly is performed at home must not disturb the board’s determination. The contemporary professional frequently takes work home. There, the draftsman designs on a napkin, the businessman plans at breakfast, the lawyer labors in the evening. But this hearthside activity—while commendable—does not create a white-collar exception to the going and coming rule.

Because applicant performed work at home for her own convenience, transporting work-related materials to facilitate her work there was also for personal convenience, furnishing no basis for exception from the going and coming rule.

Transporting the spools may have been essential to applicant’s employment, but unless such materials require a special route or mode of transportation or increase the risk of injury—their mere transport does not warrant exception from the going and coming rule. (See Hinson v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd. (1974) 42 Cal.App.3d 246, 251 [116 Cal.Rptr. 792]; State Comp. Ins. Fund v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd. (1973) 29 Cal.App.3d 902, 907 [106 Cal.Rptr. 39]; Humphry v. Safeway Stores Inc. (1935) 4 Cal.App.2d 589, 594-595 [41 P.2d 208]; Eby v. Industrial Acc. Com. (1925) 75 Cal.App. 280, 282 [242 P. 901]; see 1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, supra, § 18.24.) Such cartage is common and must be viewed as incident to the commute rather than as part of the employment.

The small bag of spools did not call for a particular mode or route of transportation nor did it increase the risk of injury. Therefore, the facts of this case show a regular commute without special or extraordinary circumstance warranting exception from the going and coming rule. The decision of the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board is affirmed.

Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Sullivan, J., and Richardson, J., concurred.