McNair v. Lend Lease Trucks , 95 F.3d 325 ( 1996 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    CATHERINE MCNAIR, Ancillary
    Administratrix for the Estate of
    Edward Earl McNair,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    and
    EDWARD EARL MCNAIR, deceased,
    Plaintiff,
    v.
    No. 93-2528
    LEND LEASE TRUCKS, INCORPORATED;
    LEND LEASE DEDICATED SERVICES,
    INCORPORATED,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    ROBERT MONROE, Administrator of
    the Estate of Thomas Paul Jones;
    THOMAS PAUL JONES, deceased,
    Defendants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of North Carolina, at Raleigh.
    Franklin T. Dupree, Jr., Senior District Judge.
    (CA-93-305-5-D)
    Argued: January 30, 1996
    Decided: September 10, 1996
    Before WILKINSON, Chief Judge, RUSSELL, WIDENER, HALL,
    MURNAGHAN, ERVIN, WILKINS, NIEMEYER, HAMILTON,
    LUTTIG, WILLIAMS, MICHAEL, and MOTZ, Circuit Judges, and
    PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Hall wrote the
    majority opinion, in which Chief Judge Wilkinson and Judges
    Murnaghan, Ervin, Wilkins, Luttig, Williams, Michael, and Motz
    joined. Judge Widener wrote a separate concurring opinion. Senior
    Judge Phillips wrote a dissenting opinion in which Judges Russell,
    Niemeyer and Hamilton joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Donald Haskell Beskind, BLANCHARD, TWIGGS,
    ABRAMS & STRICKLAND, P.A., Raleigh, North Carolina, for
    Appellant. John C. Millberg, MAUPIN, TAYLOR, ELLIS &
    ADAMS, P.A., Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellees. ON BRIEF:
    Karen M. Rabenau, BLANCHARD, TWIGGS, ABRAMS &
    STRICKLAND, P.A., Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellant. Rich-
    ard N. Cook, MAUPIN, TAYLOR, ELLIS & ADAMS, P.A., Raleigh,
    North Carolina, for Appellees.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    HALL, Circuit Judge:
    Catherine McNair, administratrix of the estate of Edward Earl
    McNair, brought an action in state court against Thomas Paul Jones
    and his employer, Lend Lease,1 seeking damages for the wrongful
    death of her intestate. The action was removed on diversity grounds,
    and default judgment was entered against Jones. The court ruled that
    Jones was outside the scope of his employment at the time of the acci-
    dent and, therefore, McNair had failed to state a claim against the
    employer under the doctrine of respondeat superior. Lend Lease's
    Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss was granted, and McNair appeals.
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 In the complaint, Jones is described as an employee of both corporate
    defendants, Lend Lease Trucks, Inc., and Lend Lease Dedicated Ser-
    vices, Inc. In this opinion, these defendants are referred to collectively
    as "Lend Lease."
    2
    I
    On appeal from an order granting a motion to dismiss under Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), we accept as true the facts alleged in the com-
    plaint. Doe v. Doe, 
    973 F.2d 237
    , 238 (4th Cir. 1992). These facts are
    that Thomas Paul Jones was employed by Lend Lease to drive a truck
    on interstate routes. On May 25, 1991, "before dusk,"2 he stopped his
    truck on the side of a highway in North Carolina and walked across
    the highway to the Dry Dock Lounge. While there,"he began to con-
    sume alcoholic drinks." At 11:15 P.M., he left and began to cross the
    highway "in order to enter the tractor trailer" when he "suddenly
    darted in front of the motorcycle being operated by Plaintiff's dece-
    dent." The two collided, and McNair and Jones were killed. It was
    later determined that Jones' blood alcohol level was.28%, almost
    three times the legal limit for someone operating a motor vehicle.3
    The court held that Jones had deviated from the scope of his employ-
    ment when he first stopped his truck or, alternatively, when he
    embarked on his drinking spree, and, further, that he had not returned
    to the scope at the time of the accident.
    II
    The plaintiff contends that Jones' negligence was the proximate
    cause of her decedent's death and that his negligence should be
    imputed to Lend Lease under the doctrine of respondeat superior.
    The district court ruled that, as a matter of law, Jones was outside the
    scope of his employment at the time of the collision, and, therefore,
    Lend Lease could not be held vicariously liable. We review this ruling
    de novo. Revene v. Charles County Comm'rs , 
    882 F.2d 870
    , 872 (4th
    Cir. 1989). With respect to questions of law, we must predict how the
    _________________________________________________________________
    2 Based on the complaint's allegations of stopping "before dusk" in late
    May, the court took judicial notice that this made out a claim that Jones
    initially stopped between 7:00 and 8:00 P.M.
    3 We adopt that portion of Judge Phillips' opinion for the panel major-
    ity that explained why it is proper to consider the fact of Jones'
    intoxication--a fact not appearing on the face of the complaint--in this
    appeal from a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal. See McNair v. Lend Lease Trucks,
    Inc., 
    62 F.3d 651
    , 655-56 (4th Cir. 1995).
    3
    Supreme Court of North Carolina would rule. Doe , 973 F.2d at 240.4
    The sufficiency of the pleadings, however, is a procedural matter to
    which federal law applies, and our longstanding rule has been "that
    a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim should not be granted
    unless it appears to a certainty that the plaintiff would be entitled to
    no relief under any state of facts which could be proved in support of
    his claim." Rogers v. Jefferson-Pilot Life Ins. Co., 
    883 F.2d 324
    , 325
    (4th Cir. 1989) (quoting Johnson v. Mueller, 
    415 F.2d 354
    , 355 (4th
    Cir. 1969)). Our task, then, is to first ascertain the substantive state
    law and then to apply it to determine whether, on the record before
    the district court, the plaintiff could prove any set of facts that would
    permit a finding of respondeat superior liability.
    III
    The fundamental principle of respondeat superior is simply stated:
    An employer is liable for his employee's torts that occur while the
    employee is "acting in the scope of his employment or about his mas-
    ter's business." Parrott v. Kantor, 
    6 S.E.2d 40
    , 43 (N.C. 1939). An
    employer can escape liability, however, under an equally well estab-
    lished rule: An employee who deviates from his work to engage "in
    some pursuit of his own" is not acting within the scope of his employ-
    ment. 
    Id. The deviation,
    however, must be complete:
    Not every deviation from the strict execution of his duty is
    such an interruption of the course of employment as to sus-
    pend the master's responsibility; but if there is a total depar-
    ture from the course of the master's business, the master is
    no longer answerable for the servant's conduct. . . . The
    departure commences when the servant definitely deviates
    from the course or place where in the performance of his
    duty he should be.
    Hinson v. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Corp., 
    53 S.E.2d 448
    , 452
    (N.C. 1949) (internal citations omitted). Scope questions have been
    characterized as mixed questions of law and fact. Sandy v. Stackhouse
    _________________________________________________________________
    4 We note, as we have previously, that North Carolina is the only state
    in the Fourth Circuit that does not allow federal courts to certify ques-
    tions of state law to its highest court. See 
    Doe, 973 F.2d at 240
    n.2.
    4
    Inc., 
    128 S.E.2d 218
    , 221 (N.C. 1962). With these basic principles in
    mind, we turn to the facts.
    A
    The district court held that Jones left the scope of employment
    when he stopped on the side of the road and left the cab of his truck
    to walk to the lounge. We disagree with the court's view that Jones
    "was on a mission of his own and was not in the course and scope of
    his employment" as soon as he left the truck to eat. During arguments
    on the motion to dismiss, Lend Lease's lawyer conceded that a truck
    driver on an extended trip is "probably within the scope of his
    employment" when he takes "any reasonable breaks [ ] for meals or
    to rest or for whatever reason or purpose."
    The district court cited as a general rule that an employee driving
    his own or even his employer's vehicle to a place where he intends
    to eat is not ordinarily within the scope of his employment until he
    resumes his job duties. This is indeed the general rule, the theory
    being that the employee furthers no interests of his employer during
    a lunch break and is free to pursue his own interests during the allot-
    ted period. See generally W.E. Shipley, Annotation, Employer's Lia-
    bility for Employee's Negligence in Operating Employer's Car in
    Going To or From Work or Meals, 
    52 A.L.R. 2d 350
    , 381 § 11 (1957).
    In Sandy, decedent was on a line crew that was working out of town
    repairing hurricane damage. After the day's work was completed and
    he had returned to his motel, he decided to go for beer and soda at
    a store 1/4 mile from the motel. As he was returning to the motel, he
    was killed in an automobile accident. He was denied workers' com-
    pensation on the ground that he was off duty and the accident did not
    happen while the employee was "engaged in the discharge of some
    function or duty which he [was] authorized to undertake and which
    [was] calculated to further, directly or indirectly, the master's busi-
    ness." 
    Id. (citation omitted).5
    _________________________________________________________________
    5 Sandy has not been assiduously followed by the North Carolina
    courts. See, e.g., Martin v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 
    167 S.E.2d 790
    , 795
    (N.C. App. 1969) (affirming workers' compensation death benefits to
    survivors of employee who was attending a training seminar out of town
    and was killed while walking to a restaurant).
    5
    A long-haul trucker, however, often has no choice but to stop on
    the road to eat. See Roberts v. Burlington Industries, Inc., 
    364 S.E.2d 417
    , 423 (N.C. 1988) ("We have held that when an employee's duties
    require him to travel, the hazards of the journey are risks of the
    employment.") (citing Hinkle v. City of Lexington, 
    79 S.E.2d 220
    (N.C. 1953)). In Jones' case, where and when he stopped was no
    doubt dictated in large part by the route and length of the driving
    assignment. Moreover, it is likely that government regulation and
    company policy required stops at regular intervals and of some mini-
    mum length. See, e.g., 49 C.F.R. § 395.3 (1990) (I.C.C. requires that
    interstate drivers certify that they have obtained sufficient rest during
    course of driving assignment). It may be, then, that stopping and leav-
    ing his truck when and where he did would not take him outside the
    scope of his employment. If Jones deviated as a matter of law, the
    deviation must be found at some point farther into the evening.
    B
    If stopping and taking a "reasonable break" does not take Jones
    outside the scope, is a 3-4 hour break unreasonable as a matter of
    law? We are unable to say so from the record before us, for many of
    the same reasons that we cannot say that any break does not automati-
    cally remove a driver from the scope. The question of what is reason-
    able must be informed by a host of facts that have yet to be
    developed: What rules and policies applied to his situation? How far
    had he driven that day, and how much farther had he to go? When
    was his last stop, and when would he next have a chance to stop? See,
    e.g., Turnbow v. Hayes Freight Lines, 
    145 N.E.2d 377
    , 380 (Ill. App.
    1957) (holding that an interstate driver en route to motel for rest stop
    required by I.C.C. and by employer rules was within scope of
    employment). The temporal and spatial circumstances of this case do
    not compel a finding that Jones was outside the scope of his employ-
    ment at the time of the accident.
    C
    The next point at which the district court found a departure from
    the scope of his employment was "when [Jones] chose to remain in
    the bar and consume alcoholic beverages until 11:15 p.m. . . ." This
    alternative holding involves a "frolic" that is unlike the usual case of
    6
    an employee's detour from the assigned or most direct route to
    accomplish some purely personal purpose. There are, however, North
    Carolina cases that do involve employees who have caused injuries
    while engaged in what might be characterized as"conduct frolics."
    Although the injury-causing conduct occurred during business hours
    and on the business premises, some frolics have been found to fall
    outside the scope of employment. See, e.g., Medlin v. Bass, 
    398 S.E.2d 460
    (N.C. 1990) (sexual assault on student by school principal
    in his office during school hours); Wegner v. Delly-Land Delicates-
    sen, Inc., 
    153 S.E.2d 804
    (N.C. 1967) (store employee's shooting of
    a customer over personal dispute unrelated to employment); Stanley
    v. Brooks, 
    436 S.E.2d 272
    (N.C. App. 1993) (sexual assault of cus-
    tomer by car salesman during test drive), rev. denied, 
    442 S.E.2d 521
    (1994); but see Edwards v. Akion, 
    279 S.E.2d 894
    , 898 (N.C. App.
    1981) (holding that assault by employee against customer, arising out
    of dispute concerning services that employee was performing, not
    outside scope of employment as a matter of law). Jones' alleged neg-
    ligence is altogether different from the willful assaults in these cases.
    In carving out a "category of intentional tortious acts designed to
    carry out an independent purpose" of the employee, the North Caro-
    lina courts have been careful to note that "[w]here the employee's
    actions are conceivably within the scope of employment and in fur-
    therance of the employer's business, the question is one for the jury."
    
    Medlin, 398 S.E.2d at 463-64
    . We have been unable to uncover any
    cases from North Carolina that hold that an employee who becomes
    intoxicated while otherwise within the scope of his employment is, as
    a matter of law, outside the scope of his employment by reason of
    such intoxication. In the absence of controlling precedent, we are
    unwilling to predict that the Supreme Court of North Carolina would
    extend the rule established in the context of intentional torts to cover
    Jones' situation.
    IV
    Even if an employee who spends several hours drinking alcoholic
    beverages can be said to have embarked on a frolic of his own, the
    case is not over. The complaint alleges sufficient facts to permit a
    finding that, even had he left the scope at some point in the evening,
    7
    Jones had returned to the scope of his employment prior to the acci-
    dent.
    In discussing whether Jones might have returned to the scope of his
    employment at some point before the accident, the district court
    located the physical point of return at the cab of the truck. It follows,
    then, that drunk or not, an employee behind the wheel and headed
    toward his assigned destination is "about his master's business."6 We
    agree with the district court to the extent that its holding can be read
    to reject the contention that the level of intoxication alone can define
    when an employee is frolicking. See, e.g., Bejma v. Dental Dev. and
    Mfg. Co., 
    356 F.2d 227
    (6th Cir. 1966) (intoxicated travelling sales-
    man on return trip within scope). We disagree, however, with the
    point of return established as a matter of law by the district court.
    The question devolves to this: Even if it is assumed that Jones had
    deviated from the scope of his employment at some point during his
    drinking spree, is there any set of facts under which it could be found
    that he had returned to the scope of his employment before the acci-
    dent? We predict that the Supreme Court of North Carolina would
    hold that there is.
    One court has developed a two-pronged test to determine whether
    a frolicking employee has re-entered the scope of his employment: (1)
    Had the employee formed the intention to act in furtherance of his
    employer's business, and (2) was such an intention coupled with a
    _________________________________________________________________
    6 Butler v. Baker, 
    628 N.E.2d 98
    (Ohio App. 1993), is instructive. The
    employee in that case drove off the job site to pick up lunch for a work
    crew. Instead of returning promptly, he stayed at the restaurant and drank
    for four and a half hours. When he finally returned to the site after the
    end of the working day, the crew had departed. He had begun to drive
    the truck to the company garage when he caused an accident. The court
    upheld a judgment on the jury verdict finding that the employee was
    within the scope of his employment when the accident occurred. See,
    also, Sloma v. Pfluger, 
    261 N.E.2d 323
    (Ill. App. 1970) (scope issue
    properly given to the jury, where evidence showed that employee left job
    site in his own car at 3:30 P.M. to buy materials for the next day's work,
    stopped first in a tavern for two and a half hours where he consumed five
    or six beers, left the tavern intending to pick up the supplies, and caused
    an accident at 6:45).
    8
    reasonable connection in time and space with the work in which he
    should have been engaged? Prince v. Atchison, T. and S. F. Ry. Co.,
    
    395 N.E.2d 592
    , 596 (Ill. App. 1979). Under this test, which is not
    inconsonant with North Carolina law, the plaintiff has alleged suffi-
    cient facts to survive the motion to dismiss. Jones may well be found
    to have formed the intent to resume his driving duties, an intention
    that conceivably could be found from nothing more than the fact that
    he was walking toward his truck. Such intent, if found, could also be
    found to have been reasonably connected to his assigned task. Jones
    was mere yards away from his truck at the time of the accident, and
    he may have intended to resume driving as soon as he reached the
    truck.
    We are not faced with the common situation in which an employee
    has travelled miles off his assigned route to visit family or friends.
    See, e.g., 
    Hinson, 53 S.E.2d at 448
    . This is not a case in which an
    employee drank too much at a job-related social function and caused
    an accident on the way home. See Camalier v. Jeffries, 
    460 S.E.2d 133
    , 140-41 (N.C. 1995) (affirming summary judgment for
    employer). Jones was not at a social function; he was on that highway
    on that date because that was, presumably, what his employer
    required of him. That he had to stop and stay for as long as he did
    may also have been required. As we have already noted, circum-
    stances may well have dictated that he had to park his truck where he
    did and cross the highway to reach the restaurant. Even if Jones had
    left the scope of his employment by staying too long to drink, we can-
    not say that a set of facts could not be shown to prove that he had
    returned to his master's business when he began walking towards his
    truck.
    The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded for further pro-
    ceedings.
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    WIDENER, Circuit Judge, Concurring:
    I concur in the result.
    9
    PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent for reasons expressed in the vacated panel
    opinion. 
    62 F.3d 651
    (4th Cir. 1995).
    Judge Russell, Judge Niemeyer and Judge Hamilton join in this
    dissent.
    10