Intercontinental Hotels Group v. Labor Commission , 2019 UT 55 ( 2019 )


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  •                   This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2019 UT 55
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    INTERCONTINENTAL HOTELS GROUP
    and AMERICAN ZURICH INS. CO.,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    UTAH LABOR COMMISSION
    and JESSICA WILSON,
    Respondents.
    No. 20170501
    Filed September 4, 2019
    On Certification from the Court of Appeals
    Attorneys:
    Bret A. Gardner, Kristy L. Bertelsen, Scott R. Taylor, Salt Lake City,
    for petitioners
    Christopher C. Hill, Salt Lake City, for respondent
    Utah Labor Commission
    Gary E. Atkin, Kenneth E. Atkin, Salt Lake City,
    for respondent Jessica Wilson
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, JUSTICE HIMONAS, JUSTICE PEARCE, and
    JUSTICE PETERSEN joined.
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, opinion of the Court:
    Introduction
    ¶1 Jessica Wilson was injured after she tripped and fell in a
    parking lot while walking into work. To pay for her injuries,
    Ms. Wilson requested workers’ compensation benefits from her
    employer, Intercontinental Hotels Group (IHG), which IHG denied.
    Ms. Wilson appealed this denial to the Utah Labor Commission, and
    the Labor Commission ordered IHG to award benefits. IHG now
    asks us to overturn the Labor Commission’s decision. Because the
    Labor Commission did not err in concluding that Ms. Wilson’s
    IHG v. LABOR COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    injuries arose out of, and in the course of, her employment with IHG,
    we decline to do so.
    Background
    ¶2 Ms. Wilson tripped and fell in a parking lot next to IHG’s
    office building while on her way to work. Although IHG does not
    own the parking lot in which Ms. Wilson fell, it does have a
    “nonexclusive right” to use the entire parking lot, as well as
    “exclusive parking rights” to certain spaces in the lot.1 At the time of
    the fall, the parking lot was free of any obvious tripping hazards,
    such as ice, cracks, or other defects.
    ¶3 As a result of the fall, Ms. Wilson injured her right foot—an
    injury that necessitated two surgeries and the amputation of her
    right third toe. To cover her medical costs, and to receive temporary
    disability compensation, Ms. Wilson filed a workers’ compensation
    claim. But American Zurich Insurance Co., IHG’s workers’
    compensation provider, denied Ms. Wilson’s claim because it
    believed that, under the going-and-coming rule, her accident did not
    arise out of and in the course of her employment—a prerequisite to
    workers’ compensation coverage under Utah law. Ms. Wilson
    challenged this denial by filing a claim with the Labor Commission.
    ¶4 An administrative law judge with the Labor Commission
    reviewed Ms. Wilson’s claim and, after holding an evidentiary
    hearing, concluded that Ms. Wilson was entitled to workers’
    compensation benefits. The judge found that Ms. Wilson had
    “slipped and f[allen] in the parking area her employer directed her
    to use.” As a result, the judge concluded that she was entitled to
    compensation under what courts often refer to as the premises rule.
    IHG appealed this decision to the Labor Commission’s appeals
    board.
    ¶5 The Labor Commission affirmed the administrative law
    judge’s ruling. In so doing, it found that “the communal parking
    area where the accident occurred [was] . . . part of IHG’s premises
    for purposes of determining compensability under the Utah
    Workers’ Compensation Act.” For this reason, it held that
    Ms. Wilson’s injury was “not precluded from compensability under
    the going and coming rule and the accident [wa]s considered to have
    _____________________________________________________________
    1In exchange for these parking rights, IHG pays the landlord’s
    parking-lot-maintenance costs.
    2
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    Opinion of the Court
    arisen out of and in the course of her employment.” In accordance
    with Utah Code section 63G-4-401, IHG petitioned the Utah Court of
    Appeals to review the entirety of the Labor Commission’s order. The
    court of appeals subsequently certified the case to this court. We
    have jurisdiction pursuant to Utah Code section 78A-3-102(3)(b).
    Standard of Review
    ¶6 IHG asks us to reconsider the Labor Commission’s order
    affirming the award of workers’ compensation benefits to
    Ms. Wilson. “Whether the [Labor] [C]ommission correctly or
    incorrectly denied benefits is ‘a traditional mixed question of law
    and fact.’”2 And the “standard of review we apply when reviewing a
    mixed question can be either deferential or non-deferential.”3
    “Deference on a mixed question is warranted when the mixed
    finding is not law-like because it does not lend itself to consistent
    resolution by a uniform body of appellate precedent or is fact-like
    because the [factfinder] is in a superior position to decide it.”4 In this
    case, we must review two Labor Commission determinations: one
    determination that is law-like—whether certain “going and coming”
    exception factors we identified in a previous case applied to
    accidents on an employer’s premises—and another that is fact-like—
    whether the accident in this case occurred on the employer’s
    premises. Accordingly, we review the first determination without
    deference, and the second determination with deference.
    Analysis
    ¶7 IHG argues that the Labor Commission erred when it
    determined that Ms. Wilson was entitled to workers’ compensation
    benefits under Utah Code section 34A-2-401 (workers’ compensation
    statute). This statute entitles an employee to workers’ compensation
    benefits if the employee “is injured . . . by accident arising out of and
    in the course of the employee’s employment.”5 The workers’
    compensation statute includes two requirements that are relevant to
    this case: the accident must (1) arise out of Ms. Wilson’s employment
    with IHG, and (2) occur in the course of her employment with IHG.
    IHG argues that the accident did not arise out of Ms. Wilson’s
    _____________________________________________________________
    2   Jex v. Utah Labor Comm’n, 
    2013 UT 40
    , ¶ 15, 
    306 P.3d 799
    .
    3   
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    4   
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    5   UTAH CODE § 34A-2-401(1) (emphases added).
    3
    IHG v. LABOR COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    employment, because her injury did not stem from an
    employment-related risk. And it argues that the accident did not
    occur in the course of employment, because Ms. Wilson was
    traveling to work at the time.6 We disagree on both counts.
    I. Ms. Wilson’s Accident Arose Out of Her Employment With IHG
    ¶8 The first piece of the workers’ compensation statute at issue
    is the meaning of the phrase “arising out of” employment.
    Ms. Wilson was injured when she tripped and fell in a parking lot
    next to IHG’s office building while on her way to work. At the time
    of the fall, the parking lot was free of any obvious tripping hazards,
    such as ice, cracks, or other defects. IHG argues that the workers’
    compensation statute does not cover the unexplained fall in this case,
    because the “arising out of” element introduces a causation element
    into the workers’ compensation statute. And IHG argues that this
    causation element limits compensation to only those injuries
    sustained as a result of exposure to risk “to which the general public
    is not exposed.” Although we agree that the phrase “arising out of”
    introduces a causation element into the analysis, we hold that, in the
    workers’ compensation context, the causation element is broad
    enough to encompass the unexplained fall in this case.
    A. The phrase “arising out of” introduces an element of causation into the
    workers’ compensation analysis
    ¶9 The “arising out of” requirement in the workers’
    compensation statute requires that an accident be caused, in some
    sense, by an employee’s employment. In Bountiful Brick Co. v. Giles,
    the United States Supreme Court stated that liability for an
    employee’s injury “was constitutionally imposed under the Utah
    Compensation Law if there was a causal connection between the
    injury and the employment.”7 And in Utah Apex Mining Co. v.
    _____________________________________________________________
    6  IHG argues that Ms. Wilson’s travel-related accident is not
    compensable under what courts often refer to as the
    going-and-coming rule. Under the going-and-coming rule, where an
    employee is injured while traveling to or from the employer’s
    premises, the employee is not entitled to workers’ compensation. See
    infra ¶ 27. But, as we explain in section II of this opinion, the
    going-and–coming rule does not apply in this case, because
    Ms. Wilson’s accident occurred on IHG’s premises.
    7   
    276 U.S. 154
    , 158 (1928) (emphasis added).
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    Opinion of the Court
    Industrial Commission of Utah,8 one of our earliest workers’
    compensation cases, we explained that the “arising out of” phrase
    “refer[s] to the origin or cause of the injury.” Subsequent cases have
    also interpreted the “arising out of” language as introducing a
    causation element into the statute.9 So, under our case law, the
    phrase “arising out of” introduces a causation requirement into the
    workers’ compensation analysis. We further clarified the nature of
    this causation requirement in Allen v. Industrial Commission.10
    ¶10 In Allen, we explained that the workers’ compensation
    statute contained a causation requirement that made it necessary to
    distinguish those injuries that “coincidentally occur at work because
    a preexisting condition results in symptoms which appear during
    work hours without any enhancement from the workplace,” from
    those injuries which occur because of some condition or exertion
    required by the employment.11 After recognizing this causation
    requirement, we adopted Professor Larson’s “two-part causation
    test.”12 The two parts of this test are (1) legal causation and
    (2) medical causation. We explained that under “the legal test, the
    law must define what kind of exertion satisfies the test of ‘arising out
    of the employment.’”13 And under the medical causation test, “the
    doctors must say whether the exertion (having been held legally
    sufficient to support compensation) in fact caused this [injury].”14
    Thus, Allen established that injuries legally and medically caused by
    a work accident satisfy the “arising out of” element of the workers’
    _____________________________________________________________
    8   
    248 P. 490
    , 493 (Utah 1926) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    9 See, e.g., M & K Corp. v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    189 P.2d 132
    , 134 (Utah
    1948) (“The distinction being that in order for an accident to arise out
    of the employment a more definite and closer causal relationship is
    required than is necessary for an accident to arise in the course of the
    employment but in the latter a closer relationship must exist as to
    time and place and as to the nature and type of work being
    performed.”).
    10   
    729 P.2d 15
     (Utah 1986).
    11   Id. at 25.
    12 Id. (citing LARSON, THE LAW         OF   WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION
    § 38.83 (1986)).
    13   Id.
    14   Id. (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    5
    IHG v. LABOR COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    compensation statute.15 Accordingly, we agree with IHG that the
    phrase “arising out of” introduces a causation requirement into the
    workers’ compensation statute.
    B. Ms. Wilson’s accident satisfies the causation requirement
    ¶11 Although IHG correctly states that the phrase “arising out
    of” requires a causal connection between an employee’s injury and
    employment, we reject IHG’s argument that this element limits
    workers’ compensation to only those injuries sustained as a result of
    exposure to risk “to which the general public is not exposed.” IHG
    argues that the workers’ compensation statute provides benefits only
    for those injuries that occur because the employee’s employment
    creates “an increased risk of injury” due to the nature of the
    employee’s work responsibilities. According to IHG, this more
    restrictive view of causation would seemingly include only such
    risks as “falling objects, explosives, fingers getting caught in a
    machine, or a very heavy lift of an object”—in short, only those risks
    inherent in employment in heavy industry. But we reject this
    argument because it is inconsistent with our case law.
    ¶12 Our previous cases have made clear that in applying the
    legal causation component of Allen’s two-part causation test, we
    need not determine whether the nature of an employee’s work
    responsibilities created an increased risk to which the general public
    was not exposed. Instead, we need only determine whether the
    employee’s employment can be considered “a condition out of which
    the event arises.”16
    ¶13 Significantly, this does not require an injured employee to
    prove that a condition of the employment produced “the event in
    affirmative fashion.”17 Rather, an accident is legally caused by
    employment if it occurs “as a natural consequence” of the
    employee’s employment.18 So when the requirements of the workers’
    _____________________________________________________________
    15We note that IHG does not dispute that the medical causation
    requirement of the Allen test has been met, so only the legal
    causation requirement is at issue in this case.
    16Buczynski v. Indus. Comm’n of Utah, 
    934 P.2d 1169
    , 1172 (Utah
    Ct. App. 1997) (emphasis omitted) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    17   
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    18   82 AM. JUR. 2D Workers’ Compensation § 225 (2019).
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    Opinion of the Court
    compensation statute are triggered, the employer is obligated to
    provide benefits “regardless of who was at fault in causing [the
    accident].”19 The unexplained fall in this case meets that
    requirement.
    ¶14 Where “an employee falls while walking down the sidewalk
    or across a level factory floor for no discoverable reason,” the
    causation requirement is satisfied because the “particular injury
    would not have happened if the employee had not been engaged
    upon an employment errand at the time.”20 In other words, in
    unexplained falls at work, employment constitutes a condition out of
    which the accident arises because that particular accident would not
    have happened where and when it did if employment obligations
    had not required the employee to be walking where he or she was
    walking at the time of the accident. Although this concept of
    causation would be insufficient to sustain a finding of tort liability,
    “most courts confronted with the unexplained-fall problem have
    seen fit to award compensation” in the workers’ compensation
    context.21 Our case law is consistent with this rule.
    ¶15 In Bountiful Brick, the Supreme Court explicitly held that
    there “was a causal connection” between an employee’s employment
    and an injury the employee suffered while walking.22 The Court
    explained that “employment includes not only the actual doing of
    the work, but a reasonable margin of time and space necessary to be
    used in passing to and from the place where the work is to be
    done.”23 And if “the employee [is] injured while passing” to or from
    the place where work is to be done “the injury is one arising out of
    and in the course of the employment.”24 So Bountiful Brick suggests
    that where an employee suffers an injury during travel to a work
    site, the employee’s obligation to travel to the work site sufficiently
    _____________________________________________________________
    19   Spencer v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    290 P.2d 692
    , 693 (Utah 1955).
    20 LARSON, THE LAW       OF   WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION § 7.04(1)(a)
    (2018).
    21   Id.
    22   
    276 U.S. at 158
    .
    23   
    Id.
    24   
    Id.
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    IHG v. LABOR COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    connects the injury to the employment, thus satisfying the causation
    requirement.25
    ¶16 And this reasoning accords with a number of other Utah
    cases in which we, or the court of appeals, awarded workers’
    compensation benefits despite the accidents at issue having stemmed
    from risks to which the general public is equally exposed. For
    example, Utah courts have awarded compensation for injuries
    sustained in car accidents,26 while shoveling snow,27 while walking
    in a parking lot,28 and while walking on ice on a public street.29 In
    each of these cases, employment did not increase the risk of injury
    beyond that to which a member of the public would have been
    exposed. Nevertheless, in each case, we, or the court of appeals,
    found the injury compensable because it occurred while the
    employee engaged in an activity connected to the employee’s work
    responsibilities.30 Accordingly, we reject IHG’s risk-based argument,
    and apply the legal causation test identified in our case law.31
    _____________________________________________________________
    25 See, e.g., Park Utah Consol. Mines Co. v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    133 P.2d 314
    , 317 (Utah 1943) (awarding benefits stemming from a
    slip-and-fall on ice in front of an employer’s entrance even though it
    did not find that the employer had a duty to keep the area free from
    snow and ice); Ae Clevite, Inc. v. Labor Comm’n, 
    2000 UT App 35
    ,
    ¶¶ 12–13, 
    996 P.2d 1072
     (determining that a slip-and-fall accident on
    an employee’s driveway was “connected” to that employee’s
    employment because the employee worked from home and fell
    while shoveling snow from his driveway so that a work-related
    package could be delivered to his doorstep).
    26   Salt Lake City Corp. v. Labor Comm’n, 
    2007 UT 4
    , ¶ 4, 
    153 P.3d 179
    .
    27   Ae Clevite, Inc., 
    2000 UT App 35
    , ¶¶ 11–14.
    28   Hope v. Berrett, 
    756 P.2d 102
    , 102–04 (Utah Ct. App. 1988).
    29   Park Utah Consol. Mines Co., 133 P.2d at 317.
    30 We emphasize that in this section we are discussing only the
    “arising out of” requirement in the statute. To be compensable under
    the workers’ compensation statute, the accident must also satisfy the
    “in the course of” requirement—a requirement we discuss in
    Section II of this opinion.
    We also note that IHG’s risk-based argument seems to be based
    31
    on a formulation of workers’ compensation liability that we
    (Continued)
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶17 In this case, Ms. Wilson’s unexplained fall satisfies the
    causation requirement described in our case law. Ms. Wilson’s
    accident occurred while she walked into work. And even though
    Ms. Wilson could just as easily have slipped while walking to the
    mall or through the park, Ms. Wilson’s “particular injury would not
    have happened” where and when it did but for her obligation to
    appear at IHG’s offices on the morning of the accident.32
    Accordingly, Ms. Wilson’s employment was “a condition” out of
    which her accident arose.33
    ¶18 In sum, we hold that an injury arises out of employment if
    the employment was a condition out of which the accident occurred.
    More specifically, we hold that a slip-and-fall accident arises out of
    employment where the employee slips and falls in a place, and at a
    time, in which the employee would not otherwise have been but for
    the employee’s employment obligations. Because Ms. Wilson slipped
    and fell in a parking lot on her way to work—a place she would not
    have been were she not obligated to report to work on the day of the
    accident—we hold that her accident arose out of her employment.
    disavowed in Salt Lake City Corp., 
    2007 UT 4
    , ¶ 20. In that case, we
    quoted an oft-cited justification for the going-and-coming rule: that
    injuries “suffered as a consequence of the risks and hazards to which
    all members of the traveling public are subject” are not compensable.
    Id. ¶ 19. But then we explained that this “formulation of the going
    and coming rule is poorly equipped to handle the task of evaluating
    the relationship between an employer and an employee at the time
    an injury occurs.” Id. ¶ 20. Additionally, even if we had not
    disregarded this risk-based formulation of the workers’
    compensation statute, it would not apply to the question of whether
    an accident arose out of employment because it was a concept
    specifically tied to the going-and-coming rule, a rule used to
    determine whether an accident occurred “in the course of”
    employment. See infra ¶ 23 (explaining that the going-and-coming
    rule is a judicially created principle that guides courts in determining
    whether an accident occurred in the course of employment).
    32 LARSON, THE LAW     OF   WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION § 7.04(1)(a)
    (2018).
    33 Buczynski, 
    934 P.2d at 1172
     (emphasis omitted) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
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    Opinion of the Court
    II. Ms. Wilson’s Accident Also Occurred in the Course of Her
    Employment Because it Occurred on IHG’s Premises
    ¶19 In addition to the “arising out of” requirement, the workers’
    compensation statute also requires an accident to have occurred “in
    the course of” employment. The Labor Commission, citing what
    courts commonly refer to as the premises rule or premises exception,
    found that Ms. Wilson’s accident occurred in the course of her
    employment. IHG argues this was error. It does so in two ways.
    ¶20 First, IHG argues that the premises rule is an exception to
    what we refer to as the going-and-coming rule, and that, after our
    decision in Jex v. Utah Labor Commission,34 the Labor Commission
    was required to consider two factors—benefit and control—before
    applying it in this case.35 But IHG errs in assuming the
    going-and-coming rule is relevant in cases involving accidents on an
    employer’s premises. It is not. The going-and-coming rule applies
    only in cases in which an employee is injured off of an employer’s
    premises. And because the purpose of the Jex factors is to help courts
    determine whether an exception to the going-and-coming rule
    should be made, the Jex factors apply only in cases in which an
    employee is injured off of an employer’s premises. In this case, the
    Labor Commission found that the accident occurred on IHG’s
    premises. Accordingly, we conclude the Labor Commission did not
    err in determining that the going-and-coming rule does not bar
    compensation. And in so concluding, we clarify the nature of the
    going-and-coming rule and what is often referred to as the premises
    exception to it.
    ¶21 Second, IHG argues that, even were the Labor Commission
    not required to consider the Jex factors, it nevertheless erred in
    determining that Ms. Wilson’s accident occurred on IHG’s premises.
    We disagree. Because the Labor Commission did not err in finding
    that IHG’s premises included the parking lot in which Ms. Wilson
    fell, we also affirm the Labor Commission’s finding on this point.
    _____________________________________________________________
    34   
    2013 UT 40
    , 
    306 P.3d 799
    .
    35 Under the going-and-coming rule, where an employee is
    injured while traveling to or from the employer’s premises, the
    employee is not entitled to workers’ compensation. See infra ¶ 27.
    Our decision in Jex clarified where exceptions to this rule, which
    would allow recovery for injuries suffered off of an employer’s
    premises, may be applied. See infra ¶ 33.
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    A. Under the going-and-coming rule, accidents that occur while traveling
    on an employer’s premises occur “in the course of employment”
    ¶22 First, IHG argues that the Labor Commission erred in
    applying the premises rule as a bright-line rule instead of
    considering the benefit and control factors that we identified in our
    Jex case. But this argument rests on the mistaken assumption that the
    going-and-coming rule applies to cases involving accidents that
    occur on an employer’s premises. This mistake is understandable in
    light of cases that have discussed the premises rule as if it were a
    distinct exception to the going-and-coming rule.36 But a closer look at
    the origins of the going-and-coming rule makes clear that the rule is
    inapplicable in cases involving accidents on an employer’s premises.
    And it also makes clear that what courts sometimes refer to as the
    premises rule, or premises exception, is nothing more than a
    shorthand description of a circumstance in which the
    going-and-coming rule does not apply.
    ¶23 The going-and-coming rule is a “judicially adopted
    principle” that guides courts in determining whether an accident an
    employee suffers while traveling between home and work occurred
    in the course of the employee’s employment.37 An accident occurs in
    the course of employment if it occurs in “the time, place, and
    circumstances” typical of the employee’s employment.38 For
    example, in Black v. McDonald’s of Layton,39 we explained that to “be
    embraced within the ambit of ‘course of employment,’ the injury
    must be received while the employee is carrying on the work which
    he is called upon to perform or doing some act incidental thereto.”
    ¶24 So, to occur “in the course of” employment, an accident
    “must occur within the period of employment, at a place or area
    where the employee may reasonably be, and while the employee is
    _____________________________________________________________
    36See, e.g., Soldier Creek Coal Co. v. Bailey, 
    709 P.2d 1165
    , 1166
    (Utah 1985) (discussing the “premises rule” as an “exception” to the
    “going-to-and-from-work rule”).
    37 Jex, 
    2013 UT 40
    , ¶ 18 (citing Bailey v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    398 P.2d 545
    , 546 (Utah 1965)).
    38    E.g., M & K Corp. v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    189 P.2d 132
    , 134 (Utah
    1948).
    39   
    733 P.2d 154
    , 156 (Utah 1987).
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    IHG v. LABOR COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    engaged in an activity at least incidental to his employment.”40 This
    language clearly includes employees who are injured while actively
    engaged in the work they are assigned to do during a time, and in
    the place, in which they are assigned to do it. But the language
    applies less clearly to accidents employees suffer while traveling to
    or from their work.
    ¶25 Professor Larson discusses the difficulty presented when an
    accident occurs while an employee travels between home and work:
    The course of employment is not confined to the actual
    manipulation of the tools of the work, nor to the exact
    hours of work. On the other hand, while admittedly
    the employment is the cause of the worker’s journey
    between home and factory, it is generally taken for
    granted that workers’ compensation was not intended
    to protect against all the perils of that journey.41
    In other words, Professor Larson has identified an inherent tension
    between the aim of awarding compensation for employment-caused
    accidents and the reluctance of courts to interpret workers’
    compensation statutes to encompass all accidents occurring along
    the entire journey between an employee’s home and an employee’s
    designated work site.
    ¶26 To resolve this tension, Professor Larson explains that
    almost every jurisdiction has adopted the following rule: “for an
    employee having fixed hours and place of work, going to and from
    work is covered only on the employer’s premises.”42 In other words,
    courts have resolved this tension by adopting a compromise in
    which injuries suffered during the employee’s travel between home
    and an employer’s premises are not compensable, but injuries
    suffered on the employer’s premises are.43
    _____________________________________________________________
    40 
    Id.
     An activity is incidental to employment if it advances,
    directly or indirectly, an employer’s interests. 
    Id.
    41 LARSON, THE LAW         OF   WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION § 13.01(1)
    (2018).
    42   Id. (footnotes omitted).
    43See id. (explaining that the going-and-coming rule and premises
    rule are opposing sides of a single “compromise” between
    competing workers’ compensation policies).
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    ¶27 So, under this rule, when an employee suffers an injury
    while traveling to or from work, the operative question becomes
    whether the accident occurred on the employer’s premises. If the
    accident occurred on the employer’s premises, the rule does not
    apply; but if it occurred off of an employer’s premises, the rule
    applies and will bar compensation (unless a recognized exception to
    the rule applies). We have adopted this rule, and most commonly
    refer to it as the going-and-coming rule.44
    ¶28 Our decision in North Point Consolidated Irrigation Co. v.
    Industrial Commission of Utah45 represents one of the earliest instances
    in which we recognized the going-and-coming rule. In that case, we
    cited case law from a number of jurisdictions in support of the
    following rule: an “injury incurred by a workman in the course of his
    travel to his place of work, and not on the premises of the employer,
    does not give right to participation in [a workers’ compensation]
    fund.”46
    ¶29 The rule was again acknowledged in Bountiful Brick Co. v.
    Giles.47 In that case, the United States Supreme Court reviewed and
    upheld our decision to affirm an award of workers’ compensation
    for an employee killed by a train while crossing train tracks adjacent
    to his work site. In upholding our decision, the Court explained that
    “employment includes not only the actual doing of the work, but a
    reasonable margin of time and space necessary to be used in passing
    to and from the place where the work is to be done.”48 For this
    _____________________________________________________________
    44 See, e.g., Salt Lake City Corp. v. Labor Comm’n, 
    2007 UT 4
    , ¶ 1, 
    153 P.3d 179
     (“The law uses the ‘going and coming’ rule to determine
    when a person acquires and abandons her status as an employee at
    the beginning and end of the workday.”); see also Jex, 
    2013 UT 40
    ,
    ¶ 18 (explaining that under the going-and-coming rule, “accidents
    occurring to the employee while going to and from work are
    generally not compensable because they are outside the course of
    employment” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Soldier Creek Coal
    Co., 709 P.2d at 1166 (“Travel to and from work is not generally
    considered to be ‘in the course of . . . employment.’” (alteration in
    original)).
    45   
    214 P. 22
     (Utah 1923).
    46   Id. at 24 (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    47   
    276 U.S. 154
     (1928).
    48   
    Id. at 158
    .
    13
    IHG v. LABOR COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    reason, the Court stated that if “the employee [is] injured while
    passing, with the express or implied consent of the employer, to or
    from his work by a way over the employer’s premises, or over those
    of another in such proximity and relation as to be in practical effect a
    part of the employer’s premises, the injury is one arising out of and
    in the course of the employment as much as though it had happened
    while the employee was engaged in his work at the place of its
    performance.”49
    ¶30 So the decision in Bountiful Brick established that, while
    employees are on their employer’s premises, travel to or from their
    designated work site is incidental to their employment. For this
    reason, an injury that occurs while the employee travels to or from a
    work site on an employer’s premises necessarily satisfies the “in the
    course of” requirement as defined by our case law: it “occur[s]
    within the period of employment, at a place or area where the
    employee may reasonably be, and while the employee is engaged in
    an activity at least incidental to his employment.”50 Accordingly,
    injuries suffered while employees travel to a work site on an
    employer’s premises satisfy the “in the course of” employment
    requirement.
    ¶31 Although our practice of awarding compensation for
    accidents occurring on an employer’s premises is consistent with the
    language of the workers’ compensation statute, Utah courts quickly
    realized that applying the going-and-coming rule to bar
    compensation in cases involving accidents that occurred off of an
    employer’s premises did not always accord with the statutory
    _____________________________________________________________
    49  
    Id.
     This opinion also has policy language that formed the
    foundation for one of the first exceptions to the going-and-coming
    rule: the special hazard exception. 
    Id.
     The special hazard exception
    provides for workers’ compensation benefits where an “off-premises
    point at which the injury occurred lies on the only route, or at least
    on the normal route, which employees must traverse to reach the
    [work site], and that therefore the special hazards of that route
    become the hazards of the employment.” Soldier Creek Coal Co., 709
    P.2d at 1166 (quoting LARSON, THE LAW OF WORKMEN’S
    COMPENSATION § 15.13 (1985)).
    50   McDonald’s of Layton, 733 P.2d at 156.
    14
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    Opinion of the Court
    language. Consequently, over time courts created a number of
    exceptions to the going-and-coming rule.51
    ¶32 These exceptions had the effect of making off-premises
    accidents compensable in certain situations. For example, we have
    applied these exceptions to award compensation to a traveling
    employee injured off of the employer’s premises because the mode
    of transportation was furnished by the employer for the employer’s
    benefit.52 And we have also granted compensation where the
    employee suffered an injury while upon a “special errand” or
    “special mission” for the employer.53 As we explained in Jex, these
    exceptions represent “limited circumstances in which an accident in
    the course of ‘going and coming’ [to or from an employer’s
    premises] is nonetheless within the course of employment.”54
    ¶33 Because determining whether a particular exception would
    apply in a given case presented a fact-intensive test that was difficult
    to apply consistently,55 in Jex, we articulated a simpler test that can
    be applied more consistently.56 In so doing, we considered a number
    of our previous going-and-coming cases before concluding that, in
    those cases, “an employee is in ‘the course of [her] employment’ if
    she is injured while subject to her employer’s control and while
    benefiting the employer.”57 Accordingly, after our decision in Jex,
    whether the going-and-coming rule will bar compensation for
    off-premises injuries depends on “two factors—employer control and
    benefits conferred.”58
    _____________________________________________________________
    51  Barney v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    506 P.2d 1271
    , 1272 (Utah 1973)
    (explaining that the various exceptions to the going-and-coming rule
    had been created over time as courts made “specific applications of
    the statute to particular fact situations”).
    52   Salt Lake City Corp., 
    2007 UT 4
    , ¶ 6.
    53State (Tax Comm’n) v. Indus. Comm’n of Utah, 
    685 P.2d 1051
    , 1053
    (Utah 1984).
    54   Jex, 
    2013 UT 40
    , ¶ 18.
    55   Kinne v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    609 P.2d 926
    , 927 (Utah 1980).
    56   Jex, 
    2013 UT 40
    , ¶¶ 16, 26–27.
    57   Id. ¶ 26 (alteration in original).
    58   Id. ¶ 27.
    15
    IHG v. LABOR COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶34 But our opinion in Jex did nothing to modify our approach
    to injuries suffered while an employee was travelling on his or her
    employer’s premises. As we have explained, the going-and-coming
    rule stems from an understanding that accidents occurring off of an
    employer’s premises should not be compensable under the workers’
    compensation statute. Thus where an employee is injured on his or
    her employer’s premises, the going-and-coming rule does not apply,
    and the employee is considered to be in “the course of” employment.
    This is so because when the employee is injured on an employer’s
    premises, the employee’s “connection with employment is both
    ‘physical and tangible.’”59 Thus the “employer’s property line
    provides a bright line” for determining whether the injured
    employee is entitled to compensation, and once an employee is
    found to have been injured on his or her employer’s premises, no
    other factors need be considered.60
    ¶35 In sum, the going-and-coming rule does not apply in cases
    in which an employee is injured on an employer’s premises. Because
    the Labor Commission concluded that Ms. Wilson’s accident
    occurred on IHG’s premises, it did not err in declining to consider
    the Jex factors before concluding that Ms. Wilson’s accident occurred
    in the course of her employment.
    B. The Labor Commission did not err in concluding that Ms. Wilson’s
    accident occurred on IHG’s premises
    ¶36 But IHG also argues that the Labor Commission erred in
    finding that IHG’s premises included the parking lot at issue. The
    Labor Commission’s finding on this point is a fact-like one, to which
    we grant deference. With this in mind, we must determine whether
    the Labor Commission erred in finding that the parking lot in which
    Ms. Wilson fell constituted a part of IHG’s premises.61 We conclude
    that it did not.
    _____________________________________________________________
    59Soldier Creek Coal Co., 709 P.2d at 1167 (quoting LARSON, THE
    LAW OF WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION § 15.12(a) (1985)).
    60   Id.
    61 See Murray v. Utah Labor Comm’n, 
    2013 UT 38
    , ¶ 33, 
    308 P.3d 461
    (explaining that where, “as an appellate court,” we are not “in the
    best position to say what the ‘right’ answer is,” we “afford deference
    to [the Labor Commission’s] decision”).
    16
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶37 In Bountiful Brick, the Supreme Court stated that if an
    employee is injured “while passing, with the express or implied
    consent of the employer, to or from his work by a way over the
    employer’s premises, or over those of another in such proximity and
    relation as to be in practical effect a part of the employer’s premises,” the
    injury is compensable.62 This provides us with an operative
    definition of an employer’s premises for the purpose of the workers’
    compensation statute.
    ¶38 Under the rule laid out in Bountiful Brick, any area within
    the employer’s premises, or any area lying in such “proximity and
    relation as to be in practical effect a part of the employer’s premises”
    may be considered a part of the employer’s premises for the
    purposes of a workers’ compensation determination.63 So we must
    determine whether the parking lot in this case constitutes part of the
    employer’s premises or lies in such proximity and relation to the
    employer’s premises to be “in practical effect” a part of the
    employer’s premises. It does.
    ¶39 Utah courts have consistently considered the employer’s
    “premises,” in the workers’ compensation context, to include
    parking lots commonly used by employees. This is so even if the
    employer does not actually own the location where the accident
    occurred. At least two Utah courts have found injuries stemming
    from accidents in parking lots to be covered by the scope of the
    Workers’ Compensation Act.64 And in Bountiful Brick, the Supreme
    Court explained that the “employer’s premises” could be extended
    “to include adjacent premises used by the employee as a means of
    ingress and egress with the express or implied consent of the
    employer.”65 So, under our case law, parking lots are considered to
    be part of an employer’s premises if they are used by employees, as a
    means of ingress and egress into the place of employment, with the
    express or implied consent of the employer.
    _____________________________________________________________
    62   
    276 U.S. at 158
     (emphasis added).
    63 
    Id.
     According to Professor Larson, the “term ‘premises’
    includes the entire area devoted by the employer to the industry
    with which the employee is associated.” LARSON, THE LAW OF
    WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION § 13.04(1) (2018).
    64 See Brown v. Williams, 
    2017 UT App 29
    , 
    392 P.3d 919
    ; Hope v.
    Berrett, 
    756 P.2d 102
     (Utah Ct. App. 1988).
    65   
    276 U.S. at 158
    .
    17
    IHG v. LABOR COMM’N
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶40 This rule also accords with the majority rule in other
    jurisdictions. “[P]ractically all jurisdictions” consider parking lots to
    be “part of the ‘premises.’”66 This is true “whether [the lot is] within
    the main company premises or separated from it,” or whether the
    parking lot is “owned, controlled, or maintained by the employer.”67
    So if an employee suffers an injury in “a shopping center parking lot
    [that] is used by employees of businesses located in the center,” then
    the parking lot may be considered a part of the employer’s
    premises.68 Based on this rule, the Labor Commission did not err in
    concluding that IHG’s premises included, in practical effect, the
    parking lot at issue in this case.
    ¶41 In this case, the Labor Commission concluded that the
    parking lot constituted part of IHG’s premises. Because the evidence
    on record supports the finding that the parking lot is used by
    employees, as a means of ingress or egress into their place of
    employment, with the express or implied consent of their employer,
    we cannot say the Labor Commission’s determination—that the
    parking lot is in practical effect a part of IHG’s premises—was
    incorrect under the applicable standard of review.69 The accident
    occurred while Ms. Wilson walked through the parking lot adjacent
    to IHG’s premises. IHG has a “nonexclusive right” to use the entire
    parking lot, as well as “exclusive parking rights” to certain spaces in
    _____________________________________________________________
    66 LARSON, THE LAW     OF   WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION § 13.04(2)(a)
    (2018).
    67   Id.
    68   Id.
    69 As we have explained, whether “the [Labor] [C]ommission
    correctly or incorrectly denied benefits is ‘a traditional mixed
    question of law and fact.’” Jex, 
    2013 UT 40
    , ¶ 15. And the “standard
    of review we apply when reviewing a mixed question can be either
    deferential or non-deferential.” 
    Id.
     “Deference on a mixed question is
    warranted when the mixed finding is not law-like because it does not
    lend itself to consistent resolution by a uniform body of appellate
    precedent or is fact-like because the [factfinder] is in a superior
    position to decide it.” 
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Under this standard, the Labor Commission’s
    determinations regarding the time, place, and factual circumstances
    of the accident are fact-like. So we will not disturb them unless we
    find they are clearly erroneous.
    18
    Cite as: 
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    Opinion of the Court
    the lot. IHG, through its HR representative, had instructed
    Ms. Wilson to use the parking lot, and both parties agree that IHG
    knew Ms. Wilson regularly parked in the parking lot. Additionally, a
    co-worker testified that Ms. Wilson had parked in an appropriate
    location. These facts provide a sufficient basis for the Labor
    Commission’s finding that the parking lot is part of IHG’s premises.
    ¶42 In sum, an accident must have occurred in the course of
    employment to be compensable under the workers’ compensation
    statute. Where the accident occurs while the employee travels on an
    employer’s premises this statutory requirement is met. The Labor
    Commission found that Ms. Wilson’s accident occurred on IHG’s
    premises, and that, under our case law, this constituted an accident
    in the course of her employment. We cannot say that the Labor
    Commission’s legal conclusions were incorrect, nor can we say that
    its factual findings were clearly erroneous. Accordingly, we affirm
    the Labor Commission’s determination and hold that Ms. Wilson’s
    accident occurred in the course of her employment with IHG.
    Conclusion
    ¶43 The workers’ compensation statute provides benefits to
    employees for injuries caused “by accident[s] arising out of and in
    the course of the employee’s employment.”70 Because the accident in
    this case arose out, and in the course, of Ms. Wilson’s employment
    with IHG, the workers’ compensation statute entitles her to benefits.
    Accordingly, we affirm the Labor Commission’s award of benefits.
    _____________________________________________________________
    70   UTAH CODE § 34A-2-401(1).
    19