                NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
                           File Name: 08a0619n.06
                           Filed: October 15, 2008

                                            No. 07-6352

                           UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT


WILLIAM BAYNES; BOBBY ROGERS;                      )
CHARLES SYKES,                                     )
                                                   )
       Plaintiffs-Appellants,                      )   ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
                                                   )   STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
v.                                                 )   EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
                                                   )
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                          )
                                                   )
       Defendant-Appellee.                         )


       Before: COOK and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges; and MARBLEY, District Judge.*


       COOK, Circuit Judge. This appeal by three federal inmates challenges the dismissal of their

federal-tort-claim suits filed to recover for personal injuries each sustained when the prison bus they

were riding to a job site collided with a tree. We should affirm if the injuries were “work related”

because the Inmate Accident Compensation Act, 18 U.S.C. § 4126, provides compensation as the

exclusive remedy for inmates’ work-related injuries, thus barring tort actions. If, however, as the

inmates contend, their injuries cannot be labeled work related, we should reverse to allow their tort

claims to proceed.


                                                   I



       *
        The Honorable Algenon L. Marbley, United States District Judge for the Southern District
of Ohio, sitting by designation.
No. 07-6352
Baynes v. United States


        The plaintiffs are inmates at a “federal prison camp” located next to the Federal Correctional

Institution at Ashland, Kentucky. In this minimum-security satellite camp, non-violent prisoners live

in dormitory-style housing and provide labor to FCI Ashland. Bureau of Prisons buses transport the

inmates from their dormitories to various work sites.


        In early 2007, a Bureau of Prisons bus arrived to pick up the plaintiffs and other inmates at

the prison camp and headed to FCI Ashland’s garage, where the inmates were scheduled to mow the

lawn. (The Bureau of Prisons required the inmates to ride this bus to the garage and compensated

the inmates for their time on it. See JA 28, 39, 92, 139, 188.) Halfway there, the driver jerked the

steering wheel after suffering a back spasm, causing the bus to careen off the road and crash into a

tree. The impact fractured Plaintiff Baynes’s leg in three places, fractured Plaintiff Rogers’s hip, and

caused blunt-force trauma to several areas of Plaintiff Sykes’s body.


        Seeking compensation for their injuries, the plaintiffs filed administrative tort claims with

the Bureau of Prisons, alleging that prison officials negligently assigned a medically unfit driver to

operate the bus. The Bureau denied the claims, advising the plaintiffs to seek compensation under

§ 4126. The plaintiffs then filed separate personal-injury actions in district court under the Federal

Tort Claims Act. Agreeing with the Bureau of Prisons that § 4126 foreclosed the plaintiffs’ suits,

the district court dismissed all three complaints for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. The plaintiffs

now appeal, triggering our de novo review. Pieper v. Am. Arbitration Ass’n, Inc., 336 F.3d 458, 460

(6th Cir. 2003).


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No. 07-6352
Baynes v. United States


                                                  II


        In challenging the district court’s dismissal of their tort claims, the plaintiffs contend that

§ 4126 does not provide compensation for their injuries. Akin to state workers’ compensation

systems, § 4126 compensates inmates injured during the course of penal employment, but, as typical

in workers’ compensation schemes, this compensation is offered in lieu of tort damages. United

States v. Demko, 385 U.S. 149, 151–54 (1966) (holding that inmates are barred from bringing

Federal Tort Claims Act claims for work-related injuries); see also Wooten v. United States, 825 F.2d

1039 (6th Cir. 1987) (same). Preferring a chance at tort damages, the plaintiffs maintain that they

are ineligible for the penal workers’ compensation.


       Section 4126’s implementing regulations guide our analysis. See 18 U.S.C. § 4126

(authorizing the Federal Prison Industries Fund to pay, “under rules and regulations promulgated by

the Attorney General . . . compensation to inmates or their dependents for injuries suffered in any

industry or in any work activity in connection with the maintenance or operation of the institution

in which the inmates are confined”). The regulations provide that § 4126 will compensate inmates

for “work-related injuries”—i.e., “any injury, including occupational disease or illness, proximately

caused by the actual performance of the inmate’s work assignment.” 28 C.F.R. § 301.102(a).


       Conceding that they rode the bus “in connection with” their work, the plaintiffs point to

another section of the regulations, id. § 301.301, that articulates the “coming and going rule” typical

of workers’ compensation statutes in general, see Demko, 385 U.S. at 152 (stating that § 4126 is

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No. 07-6352
Baynes v. United States


patterned after “compensation laws all over the country,” with differences to accommodate the

differing circumstances of prisoners and non-prisoners). That section states: “[C]ompensation shall

not be paid for injuries suffered away from the work location (e.g., while the claimant is going to or

leaving work, or going to or coming from lunch outside of the work station or area).” 28 C.F.R.

§ 301.301(c). The plaintiffs contend that they suffered non-work-related injuries on the bus ride

because they had yet to arrive at the work area—FCI Ashland’s garage.


        The Bureau of Prisons counters that the prison bus itself counted as a “work location.” The

regulations do not define “work location” or “work area,” but we note that the Bureau of Prisons

defines these terms as “anyplace the inmate is authorized to be performing his assignment.” BOP

Program Statement 1600.08, 19 (Aug. 1999). Here, the assignment included traveling aboard the

employer-operated bus to FCI Ashland’s garage, a fact confirmed by the Bureau’s payment of wages

to the inmates for their travel time. Cf. Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law §14.06 (2008) (“[A]

demonstration that travel time was specifically paid for is one of the most reliable ways of making

a case for the compensability of a going or coming trip, and is ordinarily sufficient in itself to support

such a finding . . . .”); id. § 15.01 (“If the trip to and from work is made in a truck, bus, van, car, or

other vehicle under the control of the employer, an injury during that trip is incurred in the course

of employment” and compensable under workers’ compensation.). And although the Bureau of

Prisons provides all transportation for its prisoners, including for recreational, educational, and

administrative purposes, here the bus took the plaintiffs to the prison’s garage to mow the lawn. We

thus agree with the Bureau of Prisons and the district court that the inmates’ injuries were

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No. 07-6352
Baynes v. United States


“proximately caused by the actual performance of the inmate[s’] work assignment[s].” 28 C.F.R.

§ 301.102(a).


                                             III


       We affirm the district court’s order dismissing the plaintiffs’ complaints for lack of

subject-matter jurisdiction.




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No. 07-6352
Baynes v. United States


       MARBLEY, District Judge, DISSENTING.


       I dissent because the inmates’ injuries were not “work related,” barring recovery under

the Inmate Accident Compensation Act but permitting the inmates to sue in tort. Section 4126's

implementing regulations define a work related injury as “any injury . . . proximately caused by

the actual performance of an inmate’s work assignment.” 28 C.F.R. § 301.302 (emphasis

added). More importantly, the regulations set forth a “coming and going” rule:


       compensation shall not be paid for injuries suffered away from the work location (e.g.,
       while the claimant is going to or leaving work, or going to or coming from lunch outside
       of the work station or area).


28 C.F.R. § 301.301(c) (emphasis added). The inmates were injured on their lunch break when

their bus, operated by the Bureau of Prisons, crashed into a tree. At the time of the accident, the

BOP bus was transporting them from their dormitory to an adjacent work site where they were

assigned to mow the lawn. Notably, the regulations prohibit recovery under the Act in the very

scenario before us today—where inmates sustain an injury outside of the work area while they

were coming back from lunch. The language could not be more explicit.


       The majority disagrees on two grounds. First, they contend that the bus is a “work

location” because it was operated by the inmates’ employer and their assignment included travel

to the work site. (Maj. Op. 4 ln. 10). But as the majority concedes, the BOP is the exclusive

provider of inmate transportation for both work and non-work related events. So the fact that


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No. 07-6352
Baynes v. United States


the inmates were injured while riding their employer’s bus is of little relevance to a

determination of whether the bus constitutes a “work location.” And while the Inmate Accident

Compensation Act is modeled after other workers’ compensation laws which carve out an

exception to the coming and going rule where the assignment requires travel between different

work sites, that exception does not apply here. Plaintiffs’ work required travel—obviously,

getting to the grass is a sine qua non of mowing the lawn—but their assignments did not require

travel between work locations. It was not therefore an integral aspect of their landscaping duties

and this narrow exception does not apply. Which leads to the second argument.


        The majority hangs its hat on the fact that the inmates were being paid at the time of the

accident. But of course the inmates were being paid—they were on their lunch break. Almost all

employees are paid during their lunch break irrespective of whether they leave the work area. I

would at the very least remand the case to determine whether the inmates would have been paid

during the lunch hour regardless of whether they rode the BOP bus. Ultimately, the regulations

expressly preclude recovery for injuries sustained while an inmate is “going to or coming from

lunch outside of the work station or area.” 28 C.F.R. § 301.301(c)(4). In this case, the inmates

were injured coming back from lunch outside of the work area. The regulations could not be

more explicit. The inmates are not entitled to recover under the Inmate Accident Compensation

Act but they are entitled to sue in tort.




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