Nationwide Mutl Ins v. Timothy Shaw , 491 F. App'x 353 ( 2012 )


Menu:
  •                                                                 NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 11-3573
    _____________
    NATIONWIDE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Appellant
    v.
    TIMOTHY SHAW, individually;
    TIMOTHY SHAW, d/b/a Shaw Brothers Donkey Ball Co.;
    ROBERT EISENBERRY
    _____________
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    (Civ. Action No. 3:10-cv-00374)
    District Judge: Honorable James M. Munley
    ______________
    Argued June 5, 2012
    ______________
    Before: SCIRICA, GREENAWAY, JR., and COWEN, Circuit Judges.
    (Opinion Filed: August 6, 2012)
    Krista M. Kochosky, Esq. (argued)
    O’Malley & Magley
    5280 Steubenville Pike
    Pittsburgh, PA 15205
    Charles E. Haddick, Jr., Esq.
    Dickie, McCarney & Chilcote
    425 North 21st Street
    Plaza 21, Suite 302
    Camp Hill, PA 17011
    Counsel for Appellant Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company
    Michael R. Goffer, Esq. (argued)
    Law Offices of Goffer & Cimini
    1603 Monsey Avenue
    Scranton, PA 18508
    Counsel for Appellees Timothy Shaw, Timothy Shaw d/b/a Shaw Brothers Donkey
    Ball Co., and Robert Eisenberry
    ______________
    OPINION
    ______________
    GREENAWAY, JR., Circuit Judge.
    Appellant Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company (“Nationwide”) appeals the
    District Court’s Order denying its motion for summary judgment and granting summary
    judgment in favor of Appellees Timothy Shaw (“Shaw”), individually and d/b/a Shaw
    Brothers Donkey Ball Co., and Robert Eisenberry (“Eisenberry”). For the reasons that
    follow, we will vacate the District Court’s Order and remand for further proceedings.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    Because we write primarily for the benefit of the parties, we recount only the
    essential facts.
    2
    Shaw was the sole proprietor of a business that provided donkeys for charity
    basketball events. 1 The donkeys were housed and cared for in a New York barn that
    Shaw leased in the name of his business. For several decades, the business operated
    under the name “Shaw Brothers Donkey Ball Company.” Around 2003, on the advice of
    his attorney, Shaw changed the name of the business to “Shaw Brothers Donkey Ball,
    LLC.”
    Shaw had a commercial general liability policy for the business with Nationwide
    (the “Insurance Policy”), providing coverage for claims of bodily injury or property
    damage, among other areas of coverage. The Insurance Policy contained a number of
    exclusions to coverage. The relevant exclusion provision at issue here stated:
    2.     Exclusions
    This insurance does not apply to:
    e.     Employer’s Liability
    “Bodily injury” to:
    (1) An “employee” of the insured arising out of
    and in the course of:
    (a) Employment by the insured; or
    (b) Performing duties related to the conduct of
    the insured’s business
    (App. 160.) In other words, Nationwide expressly removed from coverage a bodily
    injury to one of Shaw’s “employees.”
    1
    Shaw’s family started the business, which Shaw assumed sole control of in
    approximately 2001. Shaw earned money from admission fees charged to those
    attending the fundraising events. He closed the business around August 2009.
    3
    The Insurance Policy, however, did not define who constitutes an employee of the
    business. Instead, the Insurance Policy merely stated that an “employee” includes a
    “leased worker” but does not include a “temporary worker.” (App. 170.) Those two
    terms are defined in the Insurance Policy:
    10.    “Leased worker” means a person leased to you by a
    labor leasing firm under an agreement between you and the
    labor leasing firm, to perform duties related to the conduct of
    your business.      “Leased worker” does not include a
    “temporary worker.”
    19.   “Temporary worker” means a person who is furnished
    to you to substitute for a permanent “employee” on leave or
    to meet seasonal or short-term workload conditions.
    (App. 170, 172.) Separately, the Insurance Policy defined a “volunteer worker” as a
    “person who is not your ‘employee,’ and who donates his or her work and acts at the
    discretion of and within the scope of duties determined by you, and is not paid a fee,
    salary or other compensation by you or anyone else for their work performed for you.”
    (App. 172.)
    Eisenberry was a retired farmer who had known Shaw for approximately ten to
    twelve years at the time of the accident that precipitated this litigation, though the two
    were not “close family friend[s].” (App. 17.) Eisenberry was introduced to Shaw
    through Mr. Parks, who baled hay for Shaw. Mr. Parks informed Shaw that Eisenberry
    could help him (Shaw) whenever needed. At some point thereafter, Eisenberry began
    working at the New York barn that housed Shaw’s donkeys. Eisenberry’s responsibilities
    included unloading and moving hay, cleaning the donkey stalls, and feeding and watering
    the donkeys.
    4
    On September 4, 2007, Eisenberry was in possession of Shaw’s truck. At some
    point, Eisenberry arrived at the farm and began helping Shaw and another man unload
    bales of hay from a wagon. Eisenberry was stacking bales of hay on the second floor of
    the barn when he fell through the floor due to missing planks that were covered by pieces
    of hay. Eisenberry was rendered a paraplegic as a result of the fall.
    Eisenberry sued Shaw in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of
    Pennsylvania, asserting premises liability. On February 9, 2010, a jury returned a verdict
    in Eisenberry’s favor. 2 On February 19, 2010, Nationwide filed a declaratory judgment
    action in the District Court against Shaw, the Donkey Ball business, and Eisenberry.
    Nationwide asserted that it was not liable under the Insurance Policy to provide coverage
    to Shaw for the accident. Both sides moved for summary judgment. On August 22,
    2011, the District Court denied Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment and granted
    summary judgment in favor of Shaw, the Donkey Ball business, and Eisenberry.
    Nationwide filed a timely appeal.
    II.     JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The District Court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    . We have jurisdiction
    under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    Because the District Court’s jurisdiction was premised on diversity, we, like the
    District Court, “must apply state substantive law and federal procedural law.” Liggon-
    Redding v. Estate of Sugarman, 
    659 F.3d 258
    , 262 (3d Cir. 2011) (citation omitted). We
    2
    At oral argument, counsel for Nationwide informed this Court that Eisenberry
    and Nationwide stipulated to an award of $1 million in damages.
    5
    exercise plenary review over the District Court’s grant of summary judgment. Doe v.
    Luzerne Cnty., 
    660 F.3d 169
    , 174 (3d Cir. 2011) (citation omitted).
    III.   ANALYSIS 3
    The central issue in the declaratory judgment action is whether Eisenberry was
    Shaw’s “employee” at the time of the accident, as that term is contemplated in the
    Insurance Policy. If Eisenberry assumed employee status, the employee exclusion
    provision in the Insurance Policy would apply, and Shaw would be unable to seek
    coverage for the accident. On the other hand, if Eisenberry was not Shaw’s employee,
    then Nationwide concedes it must provide Shaw with coverage for the accident.
    A.     Insurance Policy’s Definition of “Employee”
    We begin with the terms of the Insurance Policy itself. The parties acknowledge,
    and the District Court agreed, that the Insurance Policy fails to provide a complete and
    sufficient definition of “employee.” We agree.
    The Insurance Policy states that an employee includes a leased worker but does
    not include a temporary worker. Eisenberry was neither. To be a leased worker,
    Eisenberry would have had to be furnished to Shaw under a labor leasing agreement. To
    be a temporary worker, Eisenberry would have had to be replacing a permanent employee
    or meeting Shaw’s short-term needs. Neither situation is factually true here.
    Separately, the Insurance Policy provides that an individual who donates his time
    and is not paid a fee or other compensation—what the Insurance Policy classifies as a
    3
    Nationwide raised several points of error in its briefing. At oral argument,
    counsel for Nationwide conceded each issue, except the District Court’s application of
    the employee liability exclusion provision. Accordingly, we will address only this issue.
    6
    “volunteer worker”—is not an employee. The record reveals that Eisenberry was paid for
    his services in a variety of forms, even though this compensation was not calculated
    based on time worked. First, Shaw permitted Eisenberry to take hay from the barn to
    feed his (Eisenberry’s) animals. Eisenberry stated that this amounted to approximately
    ten to fifteen bales of hay per month, at roughly eighty cents per bale. Second,
    Eisenberry was permitted to use Shaw’s truck. Third, on occasion, Shaw gave Eisenberry
    about $5 or $10 for gas money. While this multifaceted form of payment was surely
    modest, it still constitutes sufficient compensation to remove Eisenberry from volunteer
    worker status.
    Because the Insurance Policy does not resolve whether Eisenberry was Shaw’s
    employee, the parties agreed in the District Court to have the term “employee,” as used in
    the Insurance Policy, be synonymous with the definition of the term provided in
    Pennsylvania’s Workers’ Compensation Act (“WCA”). We turn now to the WCA. 4
    B.     Pennsylvania’s Workers’ Compensation Act
    The WCA defines an “employe” 5 as “[a]ll natural persons who perform services
    for another for a valuable consideration, exclusive of persons whose employment is
    casual in character and not in the regular course of the business of the employer . . . .” 77
    4
    We note that our analysis under the WCA is not intended to be the archetype for
    adjudicating whether an employer-employee relationship existed. Our ruling should not
    supplant a necessary inquiry into Pennsylvania common law. We consult the WCA
    because the parties expressly agreed that the term “employee,” as used in the Insurance
    Policy, would be elucidated by the definition of that term in the WCA. Nevertheless, we
    adhere to the position that the determination of employee status is determined by
    Pennsylvania common law.
    5
    This is the spelling of the term in the statutory text.
    
    7 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 22
    . Brookhaven Baptist Church v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd.
    (Halvorson), 
    912 A.2d 770
     (Pa. 2006) is the most recent case in this area. In
    Brookhaven, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania iterated that there are three elements to
    this definition: “(1) the presence of valuable consideration; (2) whether the employment
    was casual in character; and (3) whether the employment was in the regular course of
    employer’s business.” 6 
    Id. at 776
    .
    Before we proceed to analyze these three elements, we address the interplay
    between them. As to the first element, the WCA provides that an employee is one who
    receives valuable consideration for his services. Absent the exchange of valuable
    consideration, Eisenberry could not be Shaw’s employee. The inquiry would end at this
    step.
    As the District Court noted, the statutory language regarding the second and third
    elements has engendered some debate in Pennsylvania courts. While the second and
    third elements are joined by the connector “and” in the statutory text, suggesting by its
    plain terms that the presence of both elements is necessary to find that an individual is not
    an employee under the WCA, the Brookhaven court found “a certain degree of
    ambiguity” in the statute. 
    Id. at 778
    . The Brookhaven court noted that it has, in prior
    cases, found the second and third elements to be both conjunctive and disjunctive. 
    Id.
    That is, the statute has been interpreted to exempt from coverage “a person . . . both
    casually employed and not engaged in the business of the employer” as well as a person
    6
    As in Brookhaven, the parties here do not dispute that Eisenberry was a “natural
    person” under the WCA.
    8
    who satisfies either of these two criteria. 
    Id.
     The Brookhaven court cited cases
    purportedly supporting both interpretations of the statute, though the Brookhaven court
    did not seek to resolve the ambiguity. 
    Id.
    This ambiguity is at the forefront of this case. Faced with an unresolved issue of
    state law, the District Court applied the disjunctive approach. The District Court
    reasoned, without providing any support for its preference, that it “was persuaded by the
    reasoning of those decision [sic] that conclude a worker is exempt from coverage—and in
    that sense not an employee—if that worker is either employed casually or not engaged in
    the business of the employer.” Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Shaw, No. 3:10-cv-374, 
    2011 WL 3667565
    , at *9 (M.D. Pa. Aug. 22, 2011).
    Nationwide asserts that the District Court erred in choosing to apply a disjunctive
    standard. Specifically, Nationwide argues that, contrary to the declaration of ambiguity
    by Pennsylvania’s highest court, we should part ways with the state supreme court and
    conclude that the WCA plainly imposes a conjunctive standard through the use of the
    connector “and” in the statutory text. As for the cases cited by the Brookhaven court
    purportedly advocating the disjunctive approach, Nationwide avers that those cases are
    actually consistent with the conjunctive approach. On the other hand, Shaw and
    Eisenberry contend that the District Court correctly determined that Pennsylvania law is
    ambiguous on this issue and, as a result, the District Court was justified in applying the
    disjunctive approach.
    We agree with Nationwide that the District Court erred by not applying a
    conjunctive standard, but we cannot disregard Brookhaven as Nationwide suggests.
    9
    Because jurisdiction in this case was founded on diversity, we must follow any applicable
    authoritative rulings from the state supreme court. See Mitchell Partners, L.P. v. Irex
    Corp., 
    656 F.3d 201
    , 203 (3d Cir. 2011) (stating that a “federal court must apply the law
    declared by the supreme court of the relevant state”). The Brookhaven court determined
    that the WCA was ambiguous to some degree, and we are not permitted to ignore this
    determination.
    Although the Brookhaven court found there to be an ambiguity as to whether a
    conjunctive or disjunctive standard was warranted, the court declined to resolve the
    dispute. Where an issue has not been addressed by the state’s highest court, “we must
    predict how the state’s highest court would resolve the issue.” Wayne Moving & Storage
    of N.J., Inc. v. Sch. Dist. of Phila., 
    625 F.3d 148
    , 154 (3d Cir. 2010) (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). The Brookhaven court’s decision not to resolve the
    ambiguity present in the definition of “employee” requires this Court to predict how the
    Supreme Court of Pennsylvania would resolve it.
    Upon reviewing Pennsylvania precedent and the text of the WCA, we conclude
    that the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania would find that the statutory text “exclusive of
    persons whose employment is casual in character and not in the regular course of the
    business of the employer” imposes a conjunctive standard. 
    77 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 22
    . The
    WCA links two elements—whether the employment was casual and whether the work
    performed was part and parcel of the business—with the connector “and.” Based on
    general principles of statutory interpretation, the connector “and” in a statute signifies a
    conjunctive standard. See Rivera v. Phila. Theological Seminary of St. Charles
    10
    Borromeo, Inc., 
    507 A.2d 1
    , 8 (Pa. 1986). 7 The Brookhaven court cited two state
    supreme court cases purportedly following a different canon of statutory interpretation,
    treating the connector “and” as an “or,” and requiring only one of these two elements for
    the employee exemption to apply.
    But a closer inspection of these cases reveals that they are not inconsistent with a
    conjunctive approach. In Cochrane v. William Penn Hotel, the court agreed with a lower
    court that a maintenance worker at a hotel, who died while on the job, was an employee
    under the WCA. 
    16 A.2d 43
    , 44 (Pa. 1940). The court found that because the
    maintenance worker was not employed casually, it did not need to consider the propriety
    of the lower court’s additional finding that the worker was not engaged in the business of
    the hotel. 
    Id.
     Applying a conjunctive standard, the employee would need to be both
    employed casually and not working in the regular course of his employer’s business to be
    exempt from the definition of employee. That the state supreme court ruled that the
    worker was not employed casually was sufficient by itself to support a finding that the
    decedent was an employee. 
    Id.
    The other case cited by the Brookhaven court—Marsh v. Groner, 
    102 A. 127
     (Pa.
    1917)—is admittedly less clear on this point. In Marsh, a handyman was injured while
    remodeling a woman’s home; he argued that the woman owed him workers’
    compensation for his injury. 
    Id. at 128
    . The court focused its inquiry on whether the
    handyman was engaged in the woman’s business, reasoning that the woman’s decision to
    7
    Analyzing federal law, we have similarly determined that the word “and”
    imposes a conjunctive standard. See Reese Bros., Inc. v. United States, 
    447 F.3d 229
    ,
    235-36 (3d Cir. 2006).
    11
    remodel her home did not rise to the level of a business for which the handyman could be
    engaged. Id. at 128-29. As a result, the court affirmed a lower court ruling that denied
    the handyman workers’ compensation. Id. at 129.
    The approach taken in Marsh is somewhat muddled. On the one hand, the court
    concluded that the handyman’s work was not within the regular course of any business
    and, therefore, affirmed a finding that the statutory exemption applied. This logic
    appears to countenance a disjunctive approach, as the court did not expressly conclude
    that it also must find the handyman’s work to be casual to apply the exemption.
    However, the court also noted in its concluding sentences that the handyman’s
    employment “was casual in character.” Id. When read in tandem with the court’s finding
    that the employment was not in the regular course of business, this would imply that a
    conjunctive approach was considered.
    We cannot discern which approach curried the favor of the Marsh court, but we
    need not resolve that issue in this case. Even assuming the Marsh court applied a
    disjunctive standard, countless decisions since Marsh have unequivocally stated that the
    WCA imposes a conjunctive standard. See, e.g., McCabe v. Timothy Shanahan & Son,
    
    24 A.2d 16
    , 18 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1942) (“In order that the employer be relieved from
    liability both elements must be established, i.e., the employment must be (1) casual and
    (2) not in the regular course of the business of the employer.”); Diviney v. J. H. France
    Fire Brick Co., 
    13 A.2d 109
    , 110 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1940) (“It is clear from the plain
    language of this provision, that in order to exclude an employe[e] under this exception, it
    12
    must appear that his employment was not only occasional and incidental, but also outside
    of the regular course of the business of the employer.”). 8
    Accordingly, we conclude the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, were it faced with
    this issue, would determine that the WCA imposes a conjunctive standard. As a result,
    under the WCA, an individual who receives valuable consideration is exempt from
    employee status only if that individual was both employed casually and not performing
    work in the regular course of the employer’s business. It was error for the District Court
    to apply a disjunctive standard to the statutory language “exclusive of persons whose
    employment is casual in character and not in the regular course of the business of the
    employer.” 
    77 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 22
    . Having discussed the interplay between the three
    elements present in the WCA’s definition of employee, we now proceed to address the
    District Court’s findings regarding each of these elements. Because we will remand for
    fact finding on each element, we direct the District Court to apply a conjunctive approach
    to subsequent WCA analysis regarding the second and third elements.
    1.     Element 1: Valuable Consideration
    An individual can be considered an employee, pursuant to the WCA, only if he
    received valuable consideration. Eisenberry was responsible for caring and maintaining
    the donkeys used in Shaw’s business, for which he received some compensation. The
    issue is whether that compensation constituted valuable consideration.
    8
    It also is noteworthy that Marsh predates each case cited by the Brookhaven
    court in support of the conjunctive interpretation, including Cochrane, which, as we have
    determined, is entirely consistent with a conjunctive reading.
    13
    Under Pennsylvania law, there is a presumption that “if services are performed for
    the payor directly, . . . the amount received is for the service and it is not a gift or
    honorarium.” Brookhaven, 912 A.2d at 776. An honorarium, by contrast, “is given to
    one who performed services for little or nothing and its tender is decided by the one for
    whom the services were performed without an obligation to give it.” Id. The District
    Court did not address the valuable consideration prong specifically, but the District Court
    did make factual findings germane to determining whether valuable consideration was
    exchanged.
    In concluding that Eisenberry was not a “volunteer worker” under the Insurance
    Policy, the District Court reasoned that “[a]ll parties agree that Eisenberry received hay
    and cash in exchange for feeding donkeys and cleaning the barn. He therefore received a
    salary or other compensation for his services . . . .” Shaw, 
    2011 WL 3667565
    , at *8.
    This determination would appear to support a finding that Eisenberry received valuable
    consideration for his services. Elsewhere in its opinion, however, the District Court
    referred to Eisenberry’s compensation as “occasional” and “supplemental and incidental
    to his larger purpose for [sic] spending his time on Shaw’s farm.” 
    Id. at *10
    . This
    finding paints a somewhat different picture of the compensation, more akin to an
    honorarium. The compensation itself amounted to the equivalent of, at most, $144 per
    year in hay (fifteen bales per month at eighty cents per bale), $5 or $10 in gas money on
    occasion, and the use of Shaw’s truck.
    Given the inherent tension between the District Court’s assessments of
    Eisenberry’s compensation and the omission of any analysis on the valuable
    14
    consideration element, we cannot ascertain, on this record, whether Eisenberry received
    valuable consideration for his services. We will remand to the District Court to resolve
    this genuine dispute of material fact.
    2.      Element 2: Casual Employment
    The second element of the WCA asks whether the employment was casual.
    “[E]mployment is casual in character where it is occasional, irregular, or incidental as
    distinguished from regular and continuous.” Brookhaven, 912 A.2d at 293 (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). In other words, work is casual where it “comes
    about by chance, fortuitously, and for no fixed duration of time.” Id. (quoting Blake v.
    Wilson, 
    112 A. 126
    , 129 (Pa. 1920)). The District Court found that Eisenberry was
    employed casually based on several factual findings: (1) Eisenberry’s employment was
    occasional, without a set schedule; (2) Eisenberry’s work served the limited purpose of
    caring for the donkeys; and (3) Eisenberry’s compensation was not fixed. Of these
    factual findings, only the first is relevant in determining whether Eisenberry worked with
    regularity. That Eisenberry’s tasks were limited and his compensation imprecise has no
    bearing on the frequency with which he worked.
    As to the regularity of his employment, we conclude that a genuine dispute of
    material fact exists that precludes a finding that Eisenberry worked occasionally. In
    support of this determination, we look to the “sham affidavit” doctrine. This doctrine
    states that “a party may not create a material issue of fact to defeat summary judgment by
    filing an affidavit disputing his or her own sworn testimony without demonstrating a
    plausible explanation for the conflict.” Baer v. Chase, 
    392 F.3d 609
    , 624 (3d Cir. 2004)
    15
    (citation omitted). “[I]f it is clear that an affidavit is offered solely for the purpose of
    defeating summary judgment, it is proper for the trial judge to conclude that no
    reasonable jury could accord that affidavit evidentiary weight and that summary
    judgment is appropriate.” Jiminez v. All Am. Rathskeller, Inc., 
    503 F.3d 247
    , 253 (3d Cir.
    2007). As a remedy, a district court is permitted to disregard the affidavit, 
    id.,
     unless
    there is independent evidence to bolster the contradictory testimony, 
    id. at 254
    .
    In the underlying tort action that Eisenberry brought against Shaw for damages,
    Shaw was questioned about the regularity of Eisenberry’s work:
    Q:      Can you tell me how much time that year he would
    have fed and watered the donkeys?
    A:      10 to 12 times.
    ....
    Q:      Would he – I understand from some testimony they
    [sic] has given that he would have worked Saturdays
    and Sundays in feeding and watering the donkeys.
    Does that sound correct to you?
    A:      No.
    Q:      No? Okay.
    A:      Sundays is a normal day to clean the barn. You know,
    so it’s possible he could be there a couple of Sundays a
    year, but . . . .
    Q:      Okay. So your recollection is that he was only there
    on a few Sundays, a couple of Sundays a year?
    A:      It’s possible that he could have been there, yes.
    (App. 18.)
    16
    In that same action, Eisenberry was asked a similar line of questioning:
    Q:     And would you work for Tim three days per week?
    A:     Usually two days a week doing the barn, that’s
    Saturday and Sunday and the rest of the time he’d call
    me up if he needed me for anything.
    Q:     So what was your primary job with Tim, what was it
    that you did mostly?
    A:     Clean the barn.
    Q:     And that was usually on a Saturday and Sunday?
    A:     Yup.
    ....
    Q:     You heard him, Tim, testify that you were there,
    approximately, maybe, 10, 12 times a year?
    A:     I was there a lot more than that. I was there every
    Sunday.
    Q:     Just helping out at the barn?
    A:     Yeah, cleaning the barn.
    (App. 250, 257.) Not only did Eisenberry establish in the prior litigation that he worked
    for Shaw at least two days a week, in addition to any days that Shaw requested, but
    Eisenberry directly refuted Shaw’s recollection that he (Eisenberry) worked only a
    handful of times during the year.
    Now, in the present case, just five days before Shaw and Eisenberry filed a motion
    for summary judgment, Eisenberry signed an affidavit that was attached to the motion. In
    that affidavit, Eisenberry contradicted his prior testimony in the underlying case and
    sought to align his testimony with Shaw’s. As to the frequency with which he worked,
    17
    Eisenberry stated, “Tim would call me when he needed help usually ten (10) to twelve
    (12) times per year.” (App. 91.) Eisenberry made no mention of having worked at least
    every Saturday and Sunday, as he previously had testified in the underlying case. 9
    Although Shaw testified in the prior action that Eisenberry worked on an irregular
    and infrequent basis, Eisenberry flatly disagreed. Perhaps recognizing that his testimony
    would possibly put him within the purview of the employee liability exclusion,
    Eisenberry reversed course, just days before moving for summary judgment, and sought
    to harmonize his testimony with Shaw’s.
    At oral argument, counsel for Shaw and Eisenberry was presented with, and asked
    to explain, Eisenberry’s conflicting testimony. Despite his efforts, counsel was unable to
    find congruency between the two sets of statements. Counsel instructed this Court to
    breathe new meaning into Eisenberry’s prior testimony that he worked at least two days
    per week on Shaw’s farm. As counsel stated, Eisenberry’s farming background and
    limited education meant that he viewed the term “work” as synonymous with simply
    visiting the animals and performing no work at all. We reject counsel’s interpretation.
    Not only does this interpretation—that working at least two days a week cleaning a barn
    is a rural euphemism for spending quality time with animals—defy common sense,
    counsel could identify no independent evidence in the record to bolster this alternative
    interpretation.
    9
    One need not look far to perceive the objective of the affidavit. Eisenberry holds
    a judgment based on the underlying action against Shaw. Eisenberry seeks enforcement
    of the judgment. Given the employee liability exclusion provision, both Shaw and
    Eisenberry would be well served if they testified that Eisenberry was a casual worker.
    18
    The District Court determined that there was no inconsistency between
    Eisenberry’s testimony and his affidavit regarding the frequency with which he worked.
    But the District Court provided no justification for its determination, merely stating,
    without support, that “Eisenberry’s description of his frequent presence at the barn and
    frequent assistance to Shaw does not contradict Eisenberry’s sworn testimony.” Shaw,
    
    2011 WL 3667565
    , at *7 n.3. We cannot discern how the District Court reached this
    conclusion. To the contrary, as counsel for Shaw and Eisenberry eventually conceded at
    oral argument, the common sense understanding of Eisenberry’s prior testimony is in
    direct conflict with the statement in his affidavit.
    As a result, it was error for the District Court not to disregard Eisenberry’s sham
    affidavit. There remains a genuine dispute of material fact regarding the frequency with
    which Eisenberry worked. The District Court’s determination that Eisenberry was
    casually employed is unsupported on this record. 
    Id. at *9-11
    . Shaw testified that
    Eisenberry worked ten to twelve times total during the year the accident occurred.
    Eisenberry, on the other hand, testified that he worked every Saturday and Sunday and
    any other time that he was needed. Remand is necessary to ascertain whether Eisenberry
    was casually employed, pursuant to the second element of the WCA framework.
    3.      Element 3: Engaged in Shaw’s Business
    The third factor we must look to under the WCA framework is whether Eisenberry
    performed work in the regular course of Shaw’s business.
    While the District Court did not directly address whether Eisenberry was engaged
    in Shaw’s business for purposes of the WCA, elsewhere in its opinion the District Court
    19
    found that Eisenberry’s task of “caring for and feeding donkeys is action arising out of
    the business.” Shaw, 
    2011 WL 3667565
    , at *4. The parties do not challenge this
    determination. Based on this isolated statement and an application of the conjunctive
    approach, Nationwide asserts that one of the two statutory criteria for exemption is
    lacking, requiring that we simply reverse the District Court and award summary
    judgment in its favor.
    Given the numerous factual disputes in the record and the District Court’s
    omission of any analysis on this element, we find it prudent not to hypothesize whether
    the District Court would have found that Eisenberry was engaged in Shaw’s business. As
    with the other statutory elements, we will remand for factfinding on this third element.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the District Court’s Order and remand
    for further proceedings.
    20