Griffin, Douglas v. Alâ??s Liquor Store, D/B/A Frugal McDoogals , 2015 TN WC 76 ( 2015 )


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  •                  COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS
    AT NASHVILLE
    DOUGLAS GRIFFIN                            )
    Employee,                          )     Docket No.: 2015-06-0020
    )
    v.                                         )     State File No.: 77527-2014
    )
    AL’S LIQUOR STORE, D/B/A FRUGAL            )     Date of Injury: SEPT. 27, 2014
    MCDOOGALS,                                 )
    )     Judge: BAKER
    Employer,                     )
    )
    And                                        )
    )
    NORGUARD INS. CO.                          )
    EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER
    THIS CAUSE came before the Court upon the Request for Expedited Hearing
    filed on May 19, 2015, by Douglas Griffin, the employee, pursuant to Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 50-6-239. Mr. Griffin asked the Court to review the file and issue a
    decision without a hearing. The employer, Al’s Liquor Store d/b/a Frugal McDoogals
    (McDoogals), requested an evidentiary hearing. The Court convened an in-person
    evidentiary hearing on June 17, 2015. Attorney Cully Ward represented Mr. Griffin, and
    attorney Allen Callison represented McDoogals. Upon review of Mr. Griffin’s request for
    expedited hearing, the evidence presented at the hearing, and in consideration of the
    applicable law, the Court finds that Mr. Griffin is entitled to temporary disability and
    medical benefits.
    ANALYSIS
    Issue
    Whether Mr. Griffin’s September 27, 2014 workplace accident arose primarily out
    of and in the course and scope of his employment for McDoogals.
    Evidence Submitted
    The Court admitted the following exhibits into evidence:
    Exh. A Medical records of Douglas Griffin (150 pages) and table of contents (1
    page)
    Exh. B Affidavit of Douglas Griffin dated May 18, 2015 (2 pages)
    Exh. C Affidavit of Dr. Keith Caruso dated April 29, 2015, and attached
    documentation (27 pages)
    Exh. D Affidavit of Trena Smith dated May 23, 2015 (2 pages)
    Exh. E Wage Statement.
    The Court designated the following as the technical record:
       Form C-23, Notice of Denial of Claim for Compensation, April 9, 2015
       Petition for Benefit Determination, April 10, 2015
       Dispute Certification Notice, May 13, 2015
       Request for Expedited Hearing, May 19, 2015, with attachments
       Mr. Griffin’s Expedited Hearing Pre-hearing Brief
       McDougal’s letter Objecting to Hearing on Record with attachments, May
    25, 2015
       Mr. Griffin’s Reply to Employer’s Statement of Response, May 27, 2015,
    with attachment
       McDougal’s letter to Ms. Shrum in response to Employee’s Reply, May 28,
    2015
       McDougal’s Pre-Hearing Brief
       McDougal’s Witness List
       McDougal’s Exhibit List.
    The Court did not consider attachments to the above filings unless admitted into
    evidence during the Expedited Hearing. The Court considered factual statements in the
    above filings, or any attachments to them, as allegations unless established by the
    evidence.
    History of Claim
    Mr. Griffin is a fifty-five- (55) year-old resident of Davidson County, Tennessee,
    who worked as a cashier for McDoogals. His duties included ringing up items for
    purchase, helping customers find items in the store, retrieving stock from the warehouse
    and assisting customers in loading items into their cars. Mr. Griffin testified that he did
    not have a written job description or instruction concerning his job duties. He further
    testified that he was not given written instruction on dealing with shoplifters.
    2
    On September 27, 2014, Mr. Griffin arrived at McDoogals at 8:00 a.m. to start his
    shift. Around 11:30 a.m., Mr. Griffin was checking out customers at the “fourth”
    register, approximately thirty-to-forty feet (30’-40’) from the front doors, while his co-
    employees, Samantha and Trena Smith, worked the “first” and “second” registers, located
    closer to the front doors.1 The store was very busy.
    Mr. Griffin stated that he saw Samantha walk out of the store and begin speaking
    with a man just outside the front doors. Approximately fifteen (15) seconds later, Mr.
    Griffin saw Ms. Smith leave her register, and the waiting customers, and walk out the
    front doors as well. Mr. Griffin thought it odd that Ms. Smith and Samantha had left the
    store. He stated that he did not know why they left but continued to cash out customers.
    Shortly after Ms. Smith and Samantha left the store, Mr. Griffin noticed more
    activity by the front doors. To Mr. Griffin, it appeared that the man with which
    Samantha had been talking had gotten into his car and was now “kind of shaking” Ms.
    Smith and Samantha. In his affidavit, Mr. Griffin stated that he saw “glimpses of arms
    flailing.” (Exh. B). Mr. Griffin then heard “two female voices yelling and screaming for
    help, very seriously.” When asked whether he knew it was his co-employees who were
    “involved,” Mr. Griffin responded “yes.” Mr. Griffin stated that at that point in time, he
    had no idea what was happening but knew he had to help Ms. Smith and Samantha.
    Mr. Griffin then left his register and made his way through the crowded store to
    the front doors. When he arrived outside, Mr. Griffin testified that “there was no one
    there, the car was gone; the people were gone.” Mr. Griffin took a few steps off the curb
    and then stopped and looked to the left. At that point Mr. Griffin was standing in the
    parking lot of McDoogals immediately in front of a car.
    Mr. Griffin testified that he recognized the car as the one driven by the man who
    had been talking with Samantha and Ms. Smith. The man stared at Mr. Griffin from
    inside the car as he “gripped” the steering wheel and “clenched” his jaw. At that
    moment, Mr. Griffin testified that he knew the man intended to run him over.
    Immediately thereafter, the man drove the car forward into his leg. When the bumper of
    the car contacted his left leg, he stated that he did not have time to get out of the way and
    “. . . had no choice but to just kind of fold over onto the car and just grab on.” After he
    grabbed onto the hood, the driver accelerated out of the parking lot taking Mr. Griffin
    with him. When the driver slowed to make a right hand turn onto Eighth Avenue, Mr.
    Griffin fell off the hood and onto the pavement in the middle of the road.
    The driver who hit Mr. Griffin was ultimately identified as a shoplifter.
    1
    Ms. Smith provided an affidavit identifying her co-employee as “Samantha Atchley.” Throughout his
    testimony, Mr. Griffin referred to her only as “Samantha.”
    3
    McDoogals pursed misdemeanor theft charges against the shoplifter and authorities also
    levied assault charges with Mr. Griffin as the key witness.
    Mr. Griffin has not returned to work for McDoogals, or anyone else, since the day
    of the accident. The authorized treating physician, Dr. Keith Caruso, provided an
    affidavit where he opined that Mr. Griffin suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, as
    well as a major depressive disorder, as a result of the incident. Dr. Caruso further stated
    that Mr. Griffin, because of his psychiatric injury, would not be able to work for a period
    of six (6) months to one (1) year. (Exh. C).
    On cross-examination, Mr. Griffin stated that he thought he heard the voices of
    Samantha and Ms. Smith calling for help when he made his way to the front door.
    However, he was not one hundred percent sure, “in that moment of emergency,” who had
    been crying for help. When asked whether it was a fair statement that “he had been in the
    wrong place at the wrong time,” Mr. Griffin replied, “I can’t argue with that. No.”
    Ms. Smith provided an affidavit that stated the following concerning the events
    that occurred in the parking lot:
    When the car had fully exited the parking spot and the driver
    was shifting the gear into drive, Doug Griffin came running
    out of the store and stood directly in front of the vehicle and
    yelled “No!” at the driver. It was clear he was trying to
    prevent the car from exiting the parking lot. The car inched
    forward as if it was threatening to bump him. However,
    rather than get out of the way, Doug Griffin jumped on the
    hood of the car and held onto the hood near where the
    windshield wipers are. He could have gotten out of the way,
    but intentionally jumped onto the car. The car did not
    accelerate into him as described in the police report.
    (Exh. D).2
    Concerning treatment of shoplifters, Mr. Griffin testified that he saw employees
    chase shoplifters out of the store, tackle them inside the store and take shoplifters to the
    back where McDoogals had a pair of handcuffs. He also was aware that McDoogals’
    employees did not detain some shoplifters. Mr. Griffin testified that he had seen an
    employee who had gotten into a physical altercation with a shoplifter. He further
    testified that the store and warehouse manager had gotten into a fist fight with a
    2
    During the hearing, counsel for McDoogals asked Mr. Griffin whether he had seen a recording of the
    incident. Neither party showed the recording to the Court or entered it as an exhibit. The Court has not
    viewed the recording.
    4
    shoplifter. Additionally, Mr. Griffin witnessed another employee receive a gift certificate
    from “the lady upstairs, Debbie,” after the employee followed a shoplifter out of the store
    and recovered a bottle of “skulls head vodka.” He stated that, instead of reprimanding
    employees who confronted shoplifters, management was “kind of cheering” and telling
    them they had done an “excellent job.”
    Jarrett Bottom, a fifteen- (15) year McDoogals’ employee and the store’s manager,
    testified that only management had the authority to pursue shoplifters. If a shoplifter
    leaves the building with merchandise and flees in a car, Mr. Bottom stated that a cashier’s
    goal should be to get the car’s tag number and be a good witness. Mr. Bottom stated that
    he tries to convey this information to McDoogals’ employees but he is not always in the
    store.
    Concerning the accident involving Mr. Griffin, Mr. Bottom stated that Samantha
    was terminated shortly after the event occurred. Mr. Bottom did not provide any further
    information about her termination. According to Mr. Bottom, neither Samantha nor Ms.
    Smith reported injuries from the incident.
    Mr. Bottom also testified that the area around McDoogals is “very safe.” He
    stated there had been no assaults on McDoogals’ property. Mr. Bottom further testified
    that no one had been struck by a vehicle in the parking lot of McDoogals within the past
    fifteen (15) years prior to the incident involving Mr. Griffin.
    Despite its denial of the claim, McDoogals continued to provide medical benefits
    to Mr. Griffin. McDoogals, however, suspended payment of temporary total disability on
    March 11, 2015.
    Stipulations
    At the outset of the hearing, McDoogals and Mr. Griffin stipulated, only for
    purposes of this Expedited Hearing, that Mr. Griffin’s mental injury arose out of the
    accident itself rather than the physical injury he suffered. Based on this stipulation, and
    because Dr. Keith Caruso, the authorized treating physician, has opined that Mr. Griffin
    cannot work due to his mental injury, the parties agreed that if the Court determines that
    the incident arose primarily out of and in the course and scope of his employment,
    McDoogals would be required to resume paying Mr. Griffin temporary total disability
    benefits and continue providing medical benefits. Specifically, temporary total disability
    benefits would be owed from March 11, 2015, the date McDoogals ceased paying those
    benefits, until Mr. Griffin reaches maximum medical improvement or is released to return
    to work.
    The parties also stipulated that Mr. Griffin earned an average weekly wage of
    $433.53, which yields a compensation rate of $289.02.
    5
    Mr. Griffin’s Contentions
    Mr. Griffin contends that the incident causing his injury arose primarily out of and
    in the course and scope of his employment for McDoogals. Mr. Griffin maintains that he
    went to the aid of co-employees when he heard their cries for help and that a fleeing
    shoplifter ran over him when he went outside to investigate the situation. Mr. Griffin
    argues that he acted within the course and scopes of his employment when he came to the
    aid of co-employees whom he believed were in distress.
    He further argues that the incident arose out of the employment because the man
    who ran him over was attempting to flee after he had shoplifted items from McDoogals.
    Mr. Griffin denies that he attempted to stop the shoplifter and maintains that the car ran
    over him because he did not have time to get out of the way.
    McDoogals’ Contentions
    McDoogals argues that the incident did not arise primarily out of Mr. Griffin’s
    employment. McDoogals argues that there is no causal connection between the incident
    and the employment because the risk of Mr. Griffin being struck by a fleeing shoplifter
    was not any greater as a result of his employment with McDoogals. McDoogals also
    characterized the incident as a neutral “assault” and argued that the employment did not
    increase Mr. Griffin’s risk of this type of assault from the general public. Finally,
    McDoogals contends that the shoplifter did not assault Mr. Griffin because he worked for
    McDougals.
    McDoogals further argues that the incident did not occur in the scope of
    employment because Mr. Griffin deviated from his job duties as a cashier when he left
    the store to assist a person in distress. McDoogals argues that the “Good Samaritan
    Rule” bars recovery because Mr. Griffin’s actions did not benefit the employer.3
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
    Standard Applied
    “The Workers’ Compensation Law shall not be remedially or liberally construed
    in favor of either party but shall be construed fairly, impartially and in accordance with
    basic principles of statutory construction favoring neither the employee nor
    employer.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-116 (2014). At an expedited hearing, an employee
    3
    McDoogals also raised the defense that Mr. Griffin had willfully violated a known safety rule that
    prohibited McDoogals’ employees from chasing shoplifters. At the hearing, counsel for McDoogals
    conceded that McDoogals had not carried its burden of proving this affirmative defense. The Court
    agrees.
    6
    need not prove every element of his or her claim by a preponderance of the evidence in
    order to be eligible for benefits. McCord v. Advantage Human Resourcing, No. 2014-06-
    0063, 2015 TN Wrk Comp App Bd LEXIS 6, *7-8, 9 (Tenn. Workers’ Comp. App. Bd.
    March 27, 2015); cf. McCall v. Nat’l Health Corp., 
    100 S.W.3d 209
    , 214 (Tenn.
    2003). Instead, an employee must come forward with sufficient evidence from which the
    trial judge could conclude that the employee is likely to prevail at a hearing on the
    merits.
    Id. Factual Findings The
    Court finds that Mr. Griffin believed that his co-employees, Ms. Smith and
    Samantha, were in danger, and that he left McDoogals with the intent of coming to their
    aid. Mr. Griffin did not know that the unidentified man had shoplifted from McDoogals.
    Mr. Griffin did not intend to stop the shoplifter from leaving the parking lot when he
    stood in front of the car. Mr. Griffin could not avoid the car driven toward him by the
    shoplifter and had no choice but to hold onto the hood of the car, after it hit him, to avoid
    being run over. McDoogals did not have a safety rule that prohibited its employees from
    confronting shoplifters. People had shoplifted from McDoogals in the past.
    Application of Law to Facts
    I.    Mr. Griffin’s objection to Mr. Bottom’s testimony.
    At the hearing, McDoogals called Jarrett Bottom, the general manager of
    McDoogals, as a witness. Mr. Griffin’s counsel objected to Mr. Bottom testifying. The
    Court reserved ruling on Mr. Griffin’s objection pending issuance of this order and
    allowed Mr. Bottom to testify with the understanding that the Court would not consider
    his testimony if it sustained the objection.
    Mr. Griffin, through counsel, argued that the Court should not consider Mr.
    Bottom’s testimony because McDoogals failed to provide an affidavit from Mr. Bottom
    prior to the Expedited Hearing. Mr. Griffin argued that Rule 0800-02-21-.14(1)(b)
    requires McDoogals to “present all information in its position” showing that Mr. Griffin
    is “not entitled to temporary disability or medical benefits.” Mr. Griffin argued that
    McDoogals’ failure to provide an affidavit violated this rule and also made it impossible
    for him to effectively cross-examine Mr. Bottom. Mr. Griffin cited the Appeals Board’s
    decision in Hadzic v. Averitt Express, No. 2014-02-0064, 2015 TN Wrk Comp App Bd
    LEXIS 14 (Tenn. Workers’ Comp. App. Bd. May 18, 2015) in support of his argument.
    McDoogals, through counsel, argued that the rule does not require the party
    opposing the request for temporary benefits to provide affidavits. McDoogals maintains
    that if the Division intended the opposing party to provide an affidavit, it would have
    stated so in the rule. McDoogals further argues that requiring the opposing party to
    7
    marshal its proof within five (5) days, as suggested by Counsel for Mr. Griffin, when the
    moving party has essentially sixty (60) days to prepare its proof, is simply unfair.
    For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that a party opposing a motion for
    Expedited Hearing is not required to provide an affidavit before a witness may testify.
    Accordingly, the Court overrules Mr. Griffin’s objection and will consider the testimony
    of Mr. Bottom in determining this cause.
    Rule 0800-02-21-.14(1)(a) specifically provides that “[a]ll motions for expedited
    hearing must be accompanied by an affidavit[.]” The rule governing responses by the
    opposing party, Tennessee Comprehensive Rules and Regulations 0800-02-21-.14(1)(b),
    however, contains no such language. Instead, the rule requires that the opposing party
    submit all “information in its possession” within five (5) business days of the motion’s
    filing.
    Id. As any affidavit
    submitted by the party opposing the rule would not be in its
    possession but would have to be created, an affidavit does not fall within the definition of
    “information” in the opposing party’s “possession.”
    The Court finds McDoogals’ argument about the imbalance of time allotted an
    opposing party to marshal its proof persuasive. Conversely, the Court does not find Mr.
    Griffin’s argument, that the lack of an affidavit unduly prejudiced his ability to cross-
    examine the witness, persuasive. By letter dated May 25, 2015, counsel for McDoogals
    notified Mr. Griffin’s counsel that it intended to call Mr. Bottom or Jeff Warzynski, the
    wine manager, as a witness. The letter further stated that either Mr. Bottom or Mr.
    Warzynski would testify that Mr. Griffin’s actions “constituted willful misconduct and/or
    violation of a safety rule.” The Court finds that this communication gave Mr. Griffin
    sufficient notice of the “information” McDoogals intended to present to prepare for cross-
    examination.
    Lastly, the Court is compelled to address Mr. Griffin’s citation of the Hadzic
    opinion in support of his position. In Hadzic, the workers’ compensation judge denied
    the injured employee’s claim for temporary benefits for reasons based on the judge’s
    review of the merits. At the hearing, counsel for the opposing party objected to the
    Expedited Hearing proceeding because Mr. Hadzic had not presented an affidavit in
    support of his motion for an Expedited Hearing. Hadzic, 2015 TN Wrk Comp. App. Bd.
    LEXIS 14, *4. The workers’ compensation judge overruled the objection holding that a
    “party is only required to file an affidavit if the moving party intends to rely on the
    affidavit[] at the Expedited Hearing,”
    Id. at *5.
    Based on the plain and ordinary meaning
    of Tennessee Comprehensive Rules and Regulations 0800-02-21-.14(1)(a), the Appeals
    Board vacated and remanded the decision. See
    Id., generally. The Board
    provided the
    following explanation for its decision:
    In short, Rule 0800-02-21-.14(1)(a) cannot be reasonably
    construed as applying only to those situations where the party
    8
    requesting an expedited hearing does not intend to testify at
    the hearing. Giving the terms “all” and “must” their plain and
    ordinary meaning, as we must, we are compelled to conclude
    that the trial court incorrectly determined the filing of an
    affidavit is unnecessary when the party seeking an expedited
    hearing testifies at the hearing. Because the trial court's
    decision is inconsistent with the plain meaning of the
    language of the regulation, it must be set aside as lacking
    legal support.
    Id. at 12-13.
    The Court interprets Hadzic as applying only to circumstances where a
    party requesting an Expedited Hearing fails to file a supporting affidavit as required by
    Rule 0800-02-21-.14(1)(a). Extending Hadzic to require an affidavit by the responding
    party, when Rule 0800-02-21-.14(1)(b) does not expressly require it, would essentially
    undermine the Appeals Board’s reasoning.
    II.    The incident arose primarily out of and occurred within the course and scope
    of Mr. Griffin’s employment for McDoogals.
    Under the Law, an “injury” or “personal injury” by accident is compensable
    whenever “the injury is caused by a specific incident, or set of incidents, arising primarily
    out of and in the course and scope of employment.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-102(13)
    (2014). “An injury arises primarily out of and in the course and scope of employment
    only if it has been shown by a preponderance of the evidence that the employment
    contributed more than fifty percent (50%) in causing the injury, considering all causes[.]”
    Id. (internal quotations omitted).
    McDoogals argues that Mr. Griffin’s accident did not arise out of or occur in the
    course and scope of his employment. The Court disagrees.
    a. The incident occurred in the scope of employment.
    An injury occurs “in the course of” employment if it takes place while the
    employee was performing a duty he or she was employed to perform. Fink v. Caudle, 
    856 S.W.2d 952
    , 958 (Tenn. 1993). The “in the course of employment requirement” focuses
    on the time, place, and circumstances of the injury. Hill v. Eagle Bend Mfg. Inc., 
    942 S.W.2d 483
    , 487 (Tenn. 1997). “An accidental injury arises out of and is in the course
    and scope of employment if it has a rational connection to the work and occurs while the
    employee is engaged in the duties of employment.”
    Id. at 487
    (citing Orman v. Williams
    Sonoma, Inc., 
    803 S.W.2d 672
    , 676 (Tenn. 1991)).
    McDoogals maintains that Mr. Griffin went outside the scope of his job duties as a
    cashier when he left the store to assist his distressed co-employees. McDoogals points to
    9
    the “Good Samaritan Rule” in support of its position. In its “Pre-Hearing Brief,”
    McDoogals cited Hall v. Mason Dixon Lines, Inc., 
    743 S.W.2d 148
    (Tenn. 1988), in
    support of its argument that Mr. Griffin left the scope of his employment when he left the
    store to help his co-employees. The Court finds the Hall case distinguishable.
    In Hall, a truck driver stopped his truck on the side of the interstate to assist a girl
    trapped in a stalled car.
    Id. at 149.
    The driver did not know the girl and she was neither
    employed by, or a customer of, the driver’s employer. After helping the girl from the car,
    the driver used his flashlight to direct interstate traffic around the girl’s car, which had
    blocked one of the lanes.
    Id. When walking around
    the stalled car, the driver tripped
    over a guardrail and fell twenty (20) feet to the underpass below.
    Id. The driver suffered
    significant injuries and filed for workers’ compensation benefits.
    Id. The employer argued
    that the driver’s injury did not arise out of and in the course and scope of the
    employment, and moved to dismiss the claim.
    Id. The trial court
    granted the motion.
    Id. The driver appealed.
    The Supreme Court affirmed the trial court and, relying on its
    ruling in Lennon Co. v. Ridge, 
    412 S.W.2d 638
    (Tenn. 1967), stated the following:
    Defendant was not required by any statute to aid motorists
    and defendant had not caused or contributed to the accident
    involving the car. The rescued girl was neither an employee
    nor a customer of defendant. We cannot say on this record
    that the chancellor erred in his determination that defendant
    did not benefit from the actions of plaintiff, and therefore,
    plaintiff's injuries were not compensable under Lennon.
    
    Hall, 743 S.W.2d at 150
    .
    In Lennon, Charles Ridge was working for Lennon on a construction site owned
    by another company, Combustion Engineering Company (Combustion). 
    Lennon, 412 S.W.2d at 639
    . At that same jobsite, an employee of a plumbing contractor, the Sam
    Raider Company (Sam Raider), was also working.
    Id. In a tragic
    turn of events, the
    walls of a ditch collapsed, killing the Sam Raider employee.
    Id. at 640.
    Mr. Ridge ran to
    the scene of the accident and suffered injury while trying to rescue the Sam Raider
    employee.
    Id. Mr. Ridge sought
    workers’ compensation benefits from Lennon and the
    trial court awarded benefits.
    Id. Lennon appealed. The
    Supreme Court reversed, holding
    that “…the injuries sustained by the claimant while undertaking to rescue a third person
    under circumstances with which the employer had no connection, financial or otherwise,
    did not arise out of his employment.”
    Id. at 646.
    In its opinion, the Lennon Court
    included the following: “We recognize that a different result might be justified if the
    injured claimant were undertaking to rescue a fellow employee, in whose welfare the
    employer had a pecuniary rather than a humanitarian interest, and to whom the employer
    owed some duty to rescue[.]”
    Id. at 645. 10
            The facts in this case are distinguishable from those in Lennon, and its progeny,
    Hall, which counsel for McDoogals argues bars Mr. Griffin’s recovery. The key
    difference, of course, is that Mr. Griffin sought to render aid to co-employees rather than
    strangers. The Court finds that McDoogals had a “pecuniary” interest in the welfare of
    Samantha and Ms. Smith, who provided their labors to ensure the successful operation of
    the business. Because Mr. Griffin went to aid co-employees, his actions benefited
    McDoogals. Accordingly, the Court finds that Mr. Griffin acted in the course and scope
    of this employment when he responded to Ms. Smith’s and Samantha’s cries for help and
    was subsequently injured by a fleeing shoplifter.
    b. The incident arose out of the employment.
    “An accidental injury arises out of employment when there is a causal connection
    between the working conditions and the resulting injury.” Fritts v. Safety Nat’l Cas.
    Corp., 
    163 S.W.3d 673
    , 678 (Tenn. 2005) (citing Phillips v. A&H Constr. Co., 
    134 S.W.3d 145
    , 150 (Tenn. 2004)). The Tennessee Supreme Court recognized the following
    three categories for workplace assaults:
    (1) Assaults with an “inherent connection” to employment, such as disputes over
    performance, pay, or termination;
    (2) Assaults stemming from “inherently private” disputes imported into the
    employment setting from the claimant's domestic or private life and not
    exacerbated by the employment; and,
    (3) Assaults resulting from a “neutral force” such as random assaults on
    employees by individuals outside the employment relationship.
    Woods v. Harry B. Woods Plumbing Co., 
    967 S.W.2d 768
    , 771 (Tenn. 1998). Assaults
    falling into the first category are compensable. Wait v. Travelers Indem. Co. of Ill., 
    240 S.W.3d 220
    , 227 (Tenn. 2007). Assaults falling into the second category are not.
    
    Woods, 967 S.W.2d at 771
    . The compensability of assaults falling into the third category
    “depend[s] on the facts and circumstances of the employment.”
    Id. McDoogals argues that
    Mr. Griffin suffered an injury due to a “neutral assault.”
    The Court agrees. McDoogals further argues that the injury Mr. Griffin suffered through
    the neutral assault is not compensable. The Court disagrees.
    In Jesse v. Savings Prods., 
    772 S.W.2d 425
    (Tenn. 1989), a convenience store
    clerk suffered a mental injury through a neutral assault when a customer raped her in the
    stockroom of the store. In affirming the award of benefits to the store clerk, the Supreme
    Court established the following rule: If indiscriminate exposure to the general public is
    one of the conditions under which the work is required to be performed, then the actions
    11
    of those persons on the premises are reasonably considered hazards of the employment.
    Id. at 427.
    In Beck v. State, 
    779 S.W.2d 367
    (Tenn. 1989), the Tennessee Claims Commission
    awarded workers’ compensation benefits to an employee of a driver’s license center who
    suffered mental injuries when an unknown assailant grabbed her and made suggestive
    comments just outside the doors of the center as she asked him to move his car. In
    affirming the award of benefits, the Supreme Court stated the following:
    In the case at bar, the assailant had access to Plaintiff because
    her workplace was open to the public. While there is no
    evidence that the assailant was there for any business reason,
    the evidence shows that the assailant attacked Plaintiff after
    she, as a duty of her employment, asked the assailant to move
    his improperly parked car. Just as no one could ever know the
    full intent of the assailant in Jesse, no one will ever know the
    full intent of Plaintiff's assailant. But, as in Jesse, Plaintiff's
    indiscriminate exposure to the general public was one of the
    conditions under which her work was required to be
    performed, and the actions of persons on those premises can
    be considered a hazard of the employment. We therefore find
    a causal relationship existed between Plaintiff's employment
    and the August 7, 1987 assault, and that Plaintiff suffered a
    compensable accidental injury within the statutory definition
    of the Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Laws.
    Id. at 371.
    The Court finds that, similar to the workers in Beck and Jesse, the work Mr.
    Griffin performed for McDoogals indiscriminately exposed him the to the dangers of the
    public. Accordingly, the “street risk doctrine” applies to this case. See Padilla v. Twin
    City Fire Ins. Co., 
    324 S.W.3d 507
    (Tenn. 2010) (“[T]he purpose of the “street risk”
    doctrine is to “provide[ ] the necessary causal connection between the employment and
    the injury” when “the employment exposes the employee to the hazards of the street.”)
    (citing Hudson v. Thurston Motor Lines, Inc., 
    583 S.W.2d 597
    , 602 (Tenn. 1979); see
    also Wait v. Travelers Indemnity Co. of Illinois, 
    240 S.W.3d 220
    , 227 (Tenn. 2007). As a
    liquor store, McDoogals opened its doors to the public to sell goods. Through interacting
    with the public, McDoogals employees were exposed to all the dangers posed by those
    entering the store. As the Supreme Court determined in Beck, the exposure to the general
    public and “their actions on the premises can be considered a hazard of employment.”
    Id. The Court finds
    that Mr. Griffin’s employment with McDougals indiscriminately
    exposed him to this risk. Here, a fleeing shoplifter hit Mr. Griffin with his car and he
    12
    suffered serious injury. The testimony at trial showed that people had shoplifted from the
    store in the past and at least one employee had been injured in an altercation with a
    shoplifter.
    At the hearing, Mr. Bottom testified that the area around McDoogals is “very safe”
    and stated that no one had been assaulted on McDoogals’ property or hit by a car in the
    parking lot in the last fifteen (15) years. The testimony both of McDoogals operating in a
    safe neighborhood and of no similar incidents occurring previously does not deem the
    first criminal act or other injurious occurrence noncompensable. It is the risk inherent in
    the exposure to the public as determined by an examination of the conditions under which
    the work is performed that defines the “arising out of component,” not the absence of
    prior incidents. Furthermore, because shoplifters had taken items from McDougals
    before, violence from shoplifters was a foreseeable hazard.
    McDoogals also cites Scott v. Shinn, 
    105 S.W.2d 103
    (Tenn. 1937); Wait v.
    Travelers Indemnity Co. of Illinois, 
    240 S.W.3d 220
    , 227 (Tenn. 2007); and Padilla v.
    Twin City Fire Ins. Co., 
    324 S.W.3d 507
    (Tenn. 2010) in its prehearing brief. These
    cases are all distinguishable from the instant matter and provide no support for a finding
    of noncompensability.
    In Scott, the employee, a delivery driver, died when a robber shot him at a delivery
    
    stop. 105 S.W.2d at 104
    . The robber did not know the employee, did not take anything
    from him or his employer and the robbery did not occur on the employer’s premises.
    Id. For those reasons,
    the Supreme Court held that the robbery had no causal connection to
    the employment.
    Id. at 105.
    Here, Mr. Griffin suffered injury when someone who had
    taken items from McDoogals ran him over while fleeing the McDoogals’ parking lot.
    In Wait, an assailant attacked a telecommuting employee while she made lunch in
    her kitchen during a 
    break. 240 S.W.3d at 223
    . The trial court denied compensation and
    the Supreme Court affirmed. Though finding the employee to be in the course of
    employment, it held that the injury did not arise out of the employment because the facts
    did not establish that “the plaintiff's employment exposed her to a street hazard or that
    she was singled out for her association with her employer.”
    Id. at 229.
    Unlike the
    worker in Wait, Mr. Griffin worked at a location that exposed him to dangers posed by
    the general public.
    Finally, in Padilla, the Supreme Court upheld the finding of noncompensability in
    a claim brought by the widow of a deceased employee who had been murdered by an
    unknown assailant while at the employer’s place of 
    business. 324 S.W.3d at 509
    . The
    business did not receive walk-in customers and the assailant did not take anything from
    the business.
    Id. Additionally, even though
    the business operated in a high crime area, a
    razor-wire fence surrounded the property and the business also had a burglar alarm.
    Id. Based on these
    facts, the Supreme Court determined that the deceased’s employment did
    13
    not expose that employee to the dangers posed by the general public; thus the street risk
    doctrine did not warrant recovery by the widow.
    Id. at 513-14. III.
         McDoogals must resume paying benefits to Mr. Griffin.
    The parties stipulated at the hearing that McDoogals would be required to pay
    temporary disability and medical benefits to Mr. Griffin in the event the Court found that
    the injury arose primarily out and in the course and scope of employment. Having found
    that the injury did so arise, the Court finds that Mr. Griffin has shown that he will likely
    prevail at a hearing on the merits, and now turns to the computation of benefits owed.
    Tennessee law requires an employer to provide “. . . free of charge to the
    employee such medical and surgical treatment…made reasonably necessary by accident
    as defined in this chapter[.]” Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-204(a)(1)(A) (2014). McDoogals
    has continued to provide Mr. Griffin medical benefits despite its opposition to the claim.
    McDoogals must continue to provide reasonable and necessary treatment.
    Concerning disability benefit payments, an employee is entitled to receive
    temporary total disability (TTD) benefits pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section
    50-6-207(1) whenever the employee has suffered a compensable, work-related injury that
    has rendered the employee unable to work. See Simpson v. Satterfield, 
    564 S.W.2d 953
    (Tenn. 1978). Entitlement to temporary total disability benefits ends whenever an
    employee is able to return to work. Cleek v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    19 S.W.3d 770
    , 776
    (Tenn. 2000).
    Here, the parties stipulated that benefits would be due from the date McDoogals
    terminated them, March 11, 2015, until Mr. Griffin reaches maximum medical
    improvement or is released to return to work. The period from termination of TTD
    benefits to the date of this order is fifteen (15) weeks and six(6) days. Using the
    stipulated compensation rate of $289.02, McDoogals must pay Mr. Griffin $4,583.03 in
    accrued temporary disability benefits. McDoogals must also continue making temporary
    disability payments on a regular schedule pending his attainment of maximum medical
    improvement or release to return to work.
    IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED as follows:
    1. McDoogals shall continue provide reasonable and necessary medical care to Mr.
    Griffin for injuries related to his September 27, 2014 workplace accident.
    2. The amount of temporary disability benefit is $289.02 per week based on
    Employee’s average weekly wage of $433.53.
    14
    3. Payment of past due benefits in the amount of $4,583.03 shall be made for the
    period from March 11 to July 2, 2015.
    4. McDoogals or its workers’ compensation insurance carrier shall continue to pay
    Mr. Griffin temporary disability benefits in regular intervals until he is no longer
    eligible for those benefits by reaching maximum medical improvement, by
    returning to work, or by release without restrictions by the authorized treating
    physician. McDoogals’ representative shall immediately notify the Division, Mr.
    Griffin and his counsel of its intent to terminate temporary disability benefits, and
    cite the basis for the termination, by filing Form C-26 and forwarding a copy to
    Mr. Griffin and his counsel.
    5. This matter is set for Initial Hearing on August 18, 2015, at 9:00 a.m. (CDT).
    6. Unless interlocutory appeal of the Expedited Hearing Order is filed,
    compliance with this Order must occur no later than seven (7) business days
    from the date of entry of this Order as required by Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 50-6-239(d)(3). The Insurer or Self-Insured Employer
    must submit confirmation of compliance with this Order to the Division by
    email to WCCompliance.Program@tn.gov no later than the seventh (7th)
    business day after entry of this Order. Failure to submit the necessary
    confirmation within the period of compliance may result in a penalty
    assessment for non-compliance.
    7. For questions regarding compliance, please contact the Workers’ Compensation
    Compliance Unit via email WCCompliance.Program@tn.gov or by calling (615)
    253-1471 or (615) 532-1309.
    ENTERED ON THIS THE 2nd DAY OF JULY, 2015.
    _____________________________________
    Joshua Davis Baker
    Workers' Compensation Judge
    15
    Initial Hearing:
    An Initial Hearing has been set with Judge Joshua Davis, Court of Workers’
    Compensation Claims. You must call (615) 741-2113 or toll free at (855) 874-0474 to participate
    in the Initial Hearing. Please Note: You must call in on the scheduled date/time to
    participate. Failure to call in may result in a determination of the issues without your further
    participation. All conferences are set using Central Time (CST).
    Right to Appeal:
    Tennessee Law allows any party who disagrees with this Expedited Hearing Order to
    appeal the decision to the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board. To file a Notice of Appeal,
    you must:
    1. Complete the enclosed form entitled: “Expedited Hearing Notice of Appeal.”
    2. File the completed form with the Court Clerk within seven (7) business days of the date
    the Expedited Hearing Order was entered by the Workers’ Compensation Judge.
    3. Serve a copy of the Request for Appeal upon the opposing party.
    4. The appealing party is responsible for payment of a filing fee in the amount of
    $75.00. Within ten (10) calendar days after the filing of a notice of appeal, payment must
    be received by check, money order, or credit card payment. Payments can be made in
    person at any Bureau office or by United States mail, hand-delivery, or other delivery
    service. In the alternative, the appealing party may file an Affidavit of Indigency, on a
    form prescribed by the Bureau, seeking a waiver of the filing fee. The Affidavit of
    Indigency may be filed contemporaneously with the Notice of Appeal or must be filed
    within ten (10) calendar days thereafter. The Appeals Board will consider the Affidavit
    of Indigency and issue an Order granting or denying the request for a waiver of the filing
    fee as soon thereafter as is practicable. Failure to timely pay the filing fee or file the
    Affidavit of Indigency in accordance with this section shall result in dismissal of the
    appeal.
    5. The parties, having the responsibility of ensuring a complete record on appeal, may
    request from the Court Clerk the audio recording of the hearing for the purpose of having
    a transcript prepared by a licensed court reporter and filing it with the Court Clerk within
    ten (10) calendar days of the filing of the Expedited Hearing Notice of
    Appeal. Alternatively, the parties may file a statement of the evidence within ten (10)
    calendar days of the filing of the Expedited Hearing Notice of Appeal. The statement of
    the evidence must be approved by the Judge before the record is submitted to the Clerk of
    the Appeals Board.
    6. If the appellant elects to file a position statement in support of the interlocutory appeal,
    the appealing party shall file such position statement with the Court Clerk within three (3)
    16
    business days of the filing of the Expedited Hearing Notice of Appeal, specifying the
    issues presented for review and including any argument in support thereof. If the
    appellee elects to file a response in opposition to the interlocutory appeal, appellee shall
    do so within three (3) business days of the filing of the appellant’s position statement.
    17
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the Expedited Hearing Order was sent to
    the following recipients by the following methods of service on this the 2nd day of July, 2015.
    Name                  Certified   First       Via    Fax      Via     Email Address
    Mail        Class       Fax    Number   Email
    Mail
    Cully Ward                                                    x       cward@wtdlaw.net
    Allen Callison                                                x       acallison@eraclides.com
    _____________________________________
    Penny Patterson-Shrum, Clerk
    Tennessee Court of Workers’ Compensation Claims
    WC.CourtClerk@tn.gov
    18