RICHARD MARCONI VS. UNITED AIRLINES (DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION) ( 2019 )


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  •                NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0110-18T4
    RICHARD MARCONI,
    Petitioner-Appellant,               APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    July 22, 2019
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    UNITED AIRLINES,
    Respondent-Respondent.
    ____________________________
    Argued May 20, 2019 – Decided July 22, 2019
    Before Judges Messano, Fasciale and Gooden Brown.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Department of Labor
    and Workforce Development, Division of Workers'
    Compensation, Claim Petition Nos. 2016-31488 and
    2016-31489.
    Cristie Robostell Nastasi argued the cause for
    appellant (Hoffman Di Muzio, attorneys; Kenneth A.
    Di Muzio, of counsel; Cristie Robostell Nastasi, on the
    brief).
    Prudence M. Higbee argued the cause for respondent
    (Capehart & Scatchard PA, attorneys; Prudence M.
    Higbee, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    MESSANO, P.J.A.D.
    New Jersey resident Richard Marconi filed two claim petitions with the
    Camden Vicinage of the Division of Workers' Compensation (the Division).
    In the first, Marconi alleged a workplace injury to his left hip occurred on
    January 31, 2015, while working for United Airlines (United) in Philadelphia.
    United answered the petition and acknowledged that it employed Marconi on
    the date of the incident, his injury arose out of the course of his employment,
    and it had made full payment of benefits to Marconi.
    In his second petition, Marconi alleged an occupational injury to his hip
    while "[p]erforming repetitive duties [as an] aircraft technician" between 1986
    through present.      The petition again asserted the injury occurred at the
    "[e]mployer's [p]remises" in Philadelphia.       United answered this petition,
    denied the injury arose out of Marconi's employment, and reserved all defenses
    under the New Jersey Workers' Compensation Act (WCA), N.J.S.A. 34:15-1 to
    -128.1
    United subsequently moved to dismiss both petitions alleging lack of
    jurisdiction. In her certifications, United's counsel explained Marconi was
    "hired in San Francisco in 1986," began working at Philadelphia International
    Airport in 1988, "was displaced due to furlough in 2009 and transferred to . . .
    1
    Counsel advised us at oral argument that New Jersey's workers'
    compensation benefits for permanency awards are greater than Pennsylvania's.
    A-0110-18T4
    2
    Dulles [Airport in] Washington[,] . . . transferred back to Phil[adelphia] in
    2012 and . . . worked there ever since." Counsel asserted Marconi "was not
    hired in . . . New Jersey, the accident did not occur in New Jersey and United
    does not have any contact with . . . New Jersey."2
    The Workers' Compensation judge (WCJ) conducted a hearing limited to
    the jurisdictional issue. Marconi was the sole witness. 3
    Although Marconi temporarily lived in other cities throughout his career,
    he was born and raised in New Jersey and lived here continuously since 1988,
    when United transferred him to Philadelphia.           Marconi's supervisor in
    Philadelphia reported to a United employee at Newark's Liberty International
    Airport, a United "hub" for at least a decade. Although never statio ned at
    Newark, Marconi frequently depended on the technical advice of United's staff
    at that airport and would call "once every couple of months" for assistance.
    Marconi received training all over the world, including in Newark. He
    would fly from Newark whenever United assigned him to do "field service,"
    2
    In the identical certifications supporting both motions, counsel asserted that
    United denied jurisdiction in its previously filed answers. This is contrary to
    the record; United only challenged jurisdiction as to Marconi's occupational
    petition. Counsel also certified that Marconi's "attorney confirmed he cannot
    object to a dismissal of the claims." In fact, Marconi opposed the motions, and
    we found nothing in the record supporting counsel's certification.
    3
    Although United requested additional time to consider producing testimony,
    it ultimately rested without calling any witnesses.
    A-0110-18T4
    3
    i.e., assisting in the servicing of United planes because of a lack of local
    technicians at other airports. 4   Marconi requisitioned parts from United's
    Chicago and San Francisco operations, but these would routinely be delivered
    first to Newark and then to Marconi in Philadelphia. Marconi's supervisor
    sometimes would drive to United's facility at Newark to retrieve parts
    delivered there.
    In a thorough and thoughtful written opinion, the JWC reviewed relevant
    case law and considered a noted commentator's "six grounds for asserting
    applicability of a particular state's compensation act." Those are:
    (1) Place where the injury occurred;
    (2) Place of making the contract;
    (3) Place where the employment relation exists or is
    carried out;
    (4) Place where the industry is localized;
    (5) Place where the employee resides; or
    (6) Place whose statute the parties expressly adopted
    by contract.
    [13 Lex K. Larson, Larson's Workers' Compensation,
    § 142.01 (Matthew Bender, Rev. Ed. 2019).]
    The JWC found that Marconi established factor five, residency.
    4
    Marconi recalled "stripping" a plane at the Atlantic City Airport on one
    occasion.
    A-0110-18T4
    4
    Citing Williams v. Raymours Furniture Co., 
    449 N.J. Super. 559
    (App.
    Div. 2017),5 and Parks v. Johnson Motor Lines, 
    156 N.J. Super. 177
    (App.
    Div. 1978), the JWC noted a seeming "dispute among . . . Appellate Division
    panels" as to whether residency alone was sufficient. After analyzing those
    decisions and others, the JWC concluded "any exercise of jurisdiction in
    extraterritorial injury cases . . . must be based upon New Jersey case law . . .
    and I can find no New Jersey case where jurisdiction based solely on residency
    was deemed sufficient."
    The JWC also considered Professor Larson's fourth factor, whether
    United was "localized" in New Jersey.      He found that "United . . . has a
    substantial presence in New Jersey" and, recounting Marconi's testimony, the
    JWC concluded United was "'localized' in New Jersey (as well as
    Pennsylvania)." However, citing our decision in Connolly v. Port Authority of
    New York & New Jersey, 
    317 N.J. Super. 315
    (App. Div. 1998), the JWC
    concluded "Workers' Compensation Courts should decline to exercise
    jurisdiction even when the injured worker is a New Jersey resident and there is
    substantial localization of the employer's operations in New Jersey." The JWC
    found this to be "somewhat vexing," because our courts "will exercise
    5
    The Court granted certification, 
    233 N.J. 119
    (2017), but the petition was
    later dismissed on petitioner's motion.
    A-0110-18T4
    5
    jurisdiction in non-workers' compensation extraterritorial injury cases where
    the injured party resides here and the responsible party has substantial
    operations here." (citing Rose v. Port of N.Y. Auth., 
    61 N.J. 129
    (1972)).
    The JWC observed that our court had approved the exercise of
    jurisdiction over extraterritorial injuries when the petitioner was a resident and
    New Jersey was the "[p]lace where the employment relation exists or is carried
    out." 13 Larson, § 142.01. 6 Unlike the fourth factor, which "focuses on the
    employer's operations and presence in the state," this factor "focuses on the
    injured employee's duties, responsibilities, activities and operations in the
    state."
    The JWC determined Marconi failed to carry his burden of establishing
    jurisdiction as to his first petition — the January 31, 2015 injury — because
    "there [was] no connection between New Jersey and the . . . accident at the
    Philadelphia Airport." Regarding the occupational claim, the JWC concluded
    Marconi "failed to establish compliance with any of the three factors
    additionally imposed in a jurisdictional analysis of occupational claims as set
    forth in Williams v. Port Authority of N[ew] Y[ork] & N[ew] J[ersey], 
    175 N.J. 82
    (2003)." He dismissed both petitions, and this appeal followed.
    6
    The JWC mischaracterized this as factor two; it is Larson's third factor.
    A-0110-18T4
    6
    Before us, Marconi argues that given the remedial nature of the WCA,
    which compels liberal construction in favor of compensation, and because of
    controlling dicta in the Court's decision in Bunk v. Port Authority of New
    York & New Jersey, 
    144 N.J. 176
    , 180-81 (1996), residency alone is sufficient
    to confer jurisdiction on New Jersey.       Alternatively, he contends that his
    residency, combined with United's "localized" business in New Jersey, confers
    jurisdiction.
    I.
    While we defer to the factual findings of a judge of compensation if
    supported by sufficient credible evidence, Lindquist v. City of Jersey City Fire
    Dep't, 
    175 N.J. 244
    , 262 (2003), "[w]e owe no particular deference to the
    judge of compensation's interpretation of the law."         Sexton v. Cty. of
    Cumberland/Cumberland Manor, 
    404 N.J. Super. 542
    , 548 (App. Div. 2009)
    (citing Manalapan Realty, LP v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378
    (1995); Verge v. Cty. of Morris, 
    272 N.J. Super. 118
    , 123 (App. Div. 1994)).
    In particular, we owe no deference to the JWC's interpretation of case law.
    Bowser v. Bd. of Trs., Police & Firemen's Ret. Sys., 
    455 N.J. Super. 165
    , 170-
    71 (App. Div. 2018).     Whether a party may invoke the limited, statutory
    jurisdiction of the Division presents a question of law, to which we apply de
    novo review. 
    Raymours, 449 N.J. Super. at 562
    .
    A-0110-18T4
    7
    Under the WCA, an injury is compensable only if it "aris[es] out of and
    in the course of employment." N.J.S.A. 34:15-7. The Division's jurisdiction
    "is limited to that granted by the Legislature and therefore 'cannot be inflated
    by consent, waiver, estoppel or judicial inclination[,]'" Bey v. Truss Systems,
    Inc., 
    360 N.J. Super. 324
    , 327 (App. Div. 2003) (quoting Riccioni v. American
    Cyanamid Co., 
    26 N.J. Super. 1
    , 5 (App. Div. 1953)), however, the WCA
    "does not address the issue of extraterritoriality." 
    Williams, 175 N.J. at 88
    .
    Determining whether the Division may exercise jurisdiction "requires
    consideration of the particular facts." 
    Connolly, 317 N.J. Super. at 318
    .
    Because "jurisdiction over an out-of-state injury . . . becomes mixed
    with a choice-of-law analysis[,]" we have recognized that "[a]ny state having a
    more-than-casual interest in a compensable injury may apply its compensation
    act to that injury without violating its constitutional duty to give full faith and
    credit to the compensation statutes of other states also having an interest in the
    injury." 
    Id. at 319
    (quoting 9 Larson, § 86.00 at 16-55 (1997)); 7 see also
    
    Williams, 175 N.J. at 90
    ("New Jersey generally will take jurisdiction and
    apply its Act when the State has a substantial interest . . . ."). Professor
    Larson's most recent assessment of the constitutional limits of jurisdiction is:
    "As matters now stand, it is clear that the state which was the locus of any one
    7
    This volume and section of Larson has been replaced by 13 Larson, § 142.
    A-0110-18T4
    8
    of the first three items — contract, injury or employment — and probably also
    of the next two — employee residence and business localization — can
    constitutionally apply its statute if it wants to." 13 Larson, § 142.01.
    With these principles in mind, we consider the issues presented in this
    case.
    II.
    A.
    In Bunk, a New Jersey resident employed by the Port Authority was
    injured in a work-related truck accident in New 
    York. 144 N.J. at 181
    .
    Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:15-43 as it then existed, a public employee like Bunk
    who was receiving a disability pension became ineligible for permanency
    benefits under the WCA.       
    Id. at 181-82.
       Setting the stage for the issues
    presented, in a single sentence, the Court said: "As a resident of New Jersey,
    Bunk can bring his action in New Jersey." 
    Id. at 181
    (citing Parks, 156 N.J.
    Super. at 181) (emphasis added). Justice O'Hern moved on to the crux of the
    appeal:
    (1) whether the Legislature intends that the provisions
    of Section 43 that bar state employees from
    simultaneously obtaining accidental disability pension
    benefits and workers' compensation benefits apply to
    employees of the Port Authority, and (2) would the
    application of that state law to the bi-state agency
    impermissibly infringe on the independence of the bi-
    state agency.
    A-0110-18T4
    9
    [Id. at 184.]
    Marconi argues the Court's dicta, emphasized above, is binding, and New
    Jersey residency alone confers jurisdiction on the Division. We disagree.
    The rule on dicta of our Supreme Court is clear and not open to debate.
    State v. Dabas, 
    215 N.J. 114
    , 136-37 (2013). Simply stated, "matters in the
    opinion of a higher court which are not decisive of the primary issue presented
    but which are germane to that issue . . . are not dicta, but binding decisions of
    the [C]ourt." State v. Rose, 
    206 N.J. 141
    , 183 (2011). However, where dictum
    is "not necessary to the decision then being made[,]" it is "entitled to due
    consideration but does not invoke the principle of stare decisis." Bandler v.
    Melillo, 
    443 N.J. Super. 203
    , 210 (App. Div. 2015) (alteration in original)
    (quoting Jamouneau v. Div. of Tax Appeals, 
    2 N.J. 325
    , 332 (1949)).
    Additionally, "[m]uch depends upon the character of the dictum. Mere obiter
    may be entitled to little weight, while a carefully considered statement . . .
    though technically dictum, must carry great weight . . . ." In re A.D., 441 N.J.
    Super. 403, 422-23 (App. Div. 2015) (quoting Barreiro v. Morais, 318 N.J.
    Super. 461, 468 (App. Div. 1999)).
    Since the Bunk Court was interpreting a provision of the WCA, it is
    tempting to conclude that establishing jurisdiction was "germane" to the issue
    A-0110-18T4
    10
    presented.   The Court's statement implying that residency alone confers
    jurisdiction on the Division therefore would be binding precedent.
    However, given the nature of the Port Authority's activities, the Court
    would have necessarily confronted the same issue — did section 43 bar Bunk's
    claim? — had Bunk been injured at Liberty International Airport or while
    driving his truck in New Jersey. In other words, Bunk's residency was only
    incidental to the legal issue confronted by the Court. See also 
    Raymours, 449 N.J. Super. at 563-64
    n.2 (noting "jurisdiction was not contested" in Bunk).
    In Parks, which the Bunk Court cited to support the proposition that a
    New Jersey resident may file a workers' compensation claim in New Jersey for
    an extraterritorial accident, we squarely confronted the jurisdictional issue.
    There, the petitioner, a New Jersey resident, worked for a North Carolina
    cargo corporation and was injured in 
    Pennsylvania. 156 N.J. Super. at 179-80
    .
    After finding that New Jersey was the "point of origin" or the "dest ination" of
    nearly one-half of the petitioner's trips, we held that New Jersey was "an
    appropriate forum in the presence of residence and significant employment
    contacts." 
    Id. at 180-81
    (emphasis added).
    Marconi cites no published or unpublished case where our courts have
    held that residency alone is sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the Division for
    an extra-territorial workplace injury. Indeed, our courts have always required
    A-0110-18T4
    11
    more.    See, e.g., 
    Raymours, 449 N.J. Super. at 563
    (residency and "some
    employment contacts here") (citing 
    Parks, 156 N.J. Super. at 180-81
    ; Beeny v.
    Teleconsult, Inc., 
    160 N.J. Super. 22
    , 27-28 (App. Div. 1978)); Int'l Schools
    Servs., Inc. v. N.J. Dep't of Labor, 
    408 N.J. Super. 198
    , 205 (App. Div. 2009)
    (same); 
    Connolly, 317 N.J. Super. at 320
    (same). We conclude that residency
    alone is an insufficient basis to confer jurisdiction on the Division for extra -
    territorial workplace injuries. 8
    B.
    Marconi alternatively contends his residency, coupled with the JWC's
    finding that United was a "localized" employer, is sufficient to confer
    jurisdiction. The JWC concluded that in Connolly we rejected the proposition
    that residency and substantial localization of the employer's operations in New
    Jersey were sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the Division. It suffices to say
    the JWC misinterpreted our holding.
    In Connolly, a New York resident-employee of the Port Authority filed
    for benefits in New Jersey claiming an occupational hearing loss. 
    317 N.J. 8
        This appeal does not implicate the "'special mission' exception" to the
    general rule that accidents occurring outside the workplace are not
    compensable. See N.J.S.A. 34:15-36. This exception may cover extra-
    territorial work related injuries, because it "allows compensation at any time
    for employees . . . required to be away from the conventional place of
    employment[,] if actually engaged in the direct performance of employment
    duties." Zelasko v. Refrigerated Food Express, 
    128 N.J. 329
    , 336 (1992).
    A-0110-18T4
    12
    Super. at 318. Although the petitioner never lived in New Jersey and worked
    entirely in New York, the JWC concluded that Larson factor four, the "'place
    where the industry is localized[,]' was . . . determinative[,]" and because the
    Port Authority was localized in both New Jersey and New York, "jurisdiction
    could be posited in either state." 
    Id. at 318-20.
    We rejected this conclusion, stating, "no case in this jurisdiction or any
    other . . . ha[d] adopted such a broad base for jurisdiction . . . where there are
    virtually no New Jersey employer/employee contacts, or any other New Jersey
    contacts incidental to the alleged injury or occupational loss or the employee
    himself."   
    Id. at 320.
      Larson's fourth factor — localization — was "not
    sufficient ipso facto to establish jurisdiction."     
    Id. at 321.
        Citing prior
    precedent, we noted that New Jersey could exercise jurisdiction if it were the
    site of the injury, the place of the employment contract or hiring, or the
    employee's residence, when there were also some employment contacts in the
    state. 
    Ibid. "Finally, where there
    exists neither location of the injury, location
    of the employment contract or hiring, or residency of the employee in New
    Jersey, jurisdiction may still arise where the 'composite employment incidents
    present a[n] . . . identification of the employment relationship with this State.'"
    
    Id. at 320-21
    (alteration in original) (quoting Phillips v. Oneida Motor Freight,
    Inc., 
    163 N.J. Super. 297
    , 303 (App. Div. 1978)).
    A-0110-18T4
    13
    We noted that in no state workers' compensation scheme was
    localization alone sufficient to confer jurisdiction. 
    Id. at 321
    (citing 9 Larson,
    § 87.50 at 16-157 to 16-158). That apparently remains true today. See 13
    Larson, § 143.05 ("[E]xcept for an early period in Minnesota, [localization]
    has never been held sufficient in itself to confer jurisdiction over out -of-state
    injuries. In a few states, however, it is relevant in conjunction with other
    tests."). Despite the Port Authority's localized presence in New Jersey, we
    concluded "there was no . . . employment relationship between the Port
    Authority and petitioner present in New Jersey," and therefore the Division
    lacked jurisdiction. 
    Connolly, 317 N.J. Super. at 322
    .
    The issue here is whether Marconi's residence, coupled with United's
    localized presence in New Jersey, confers jurisdiction on the Division. For
    companies like United that conduct business in not only many states, but also
    internationally, what does having a "localized" presence in a state me an and
    why should that matter in the analysis?
    Professor Larson explains the rationale for the rule:
    The state in which the employer's business is
    localized has a relevant interest in a compensable
    injury . . . since the obligation side of the
    compensation relation is as much a part of that
    relation as the benefit side, and since the burden of
    payment would ordinarily fall most directly on the
    employer and community where the industry is
    centered.
    A-0110-18T4
    14
    [13 Larson, § 143.05 (footnote omitted).]
    See also 
    id. at §
    142.03[4] ("[T]he place where the industry is localized has a
    special interest, in that the burdens and costs of compensation fall most
    directly upon employers and consumers in the area where the industry is
    centered.").
    While none of our reported decisions have specifically addressed what
    "localization" means for purposes of the analysis, some jurisdictions have
    specifically adopted statutes that define the concept.
    Pennsylvania has an extraterritorial injury provision that extends
    jurisdiction if the petitioner's employment is "principally localized in
    [Pennsylvania]." Minus v. Workmen's Comp. Appeal Bd., 
    496 A.2d 1340
    ,
    1341 (Ct. App. 1985) (quoting 77 P.S. § 411.2(a)(1)). The statute provides, in
    relevant part, that the employment is "principally localized" in Pennsylvania if
    the employer "has a place of business in" Pennsylvania and "[the employee]
    regularly works at or from such place of business," or "he is domiciled and
    spends a substantial part of his working time in the service of his employer" in
    Pennsylvania. 
    Id. at 1341-42
    (quoting 77 P.S. § 411.2(d)(4)).
    Similarly, the District of Columbia has a specific extraterritorial injury
    provision, which provides that its workers' compensation act will cover a claim
    if at the time of the injury the petitioner's "employment was 'localized
    A-0110-18T4
    15
    principally in the District of Columbia.'" Lincoln Hockey, LLC v. D.C. Dep't
    of Emp't Servs., 
    997 A.2d 713
    , 716 (D.C. 2010) (quoting D.C. Code § 32-
    1503(a)(2)). "'[E]mployment principally localized in the District' means 'a
    claimant's employment relationship with this jurisdiction must have contacts
    more substantial here than in any other place.'"     
    Ibid. (emphasis added) (quoting
    Petrilli v. D.C. Dep't of Emp't Servs., 
    509 A.2d 629
    , 633 (D.C.
    1986)).
    However, some jurisdictions without statutory provisions, like New
    Jersey, have applied common law concepts in describing the meaning of
    "localization." In Shannon v. Communications Satellite Corp., the plaintiff's
    widow sought workers' compensation benefits when her husband, a resident of
    Maine, was killed in Thailand while working on a long-term assignment for
    the defendant, the operator of a world-wide communications system. 
    302 A.2d 582
    , 583 (Me. 1973). The state Industrial Accident Commission dismissed the
    claim for lack of jurisdiction finding the plaintiff's residence was the only
    qualifying "contact" with the state. 
    Id. at 585.
    In reversing and concluding Maine could constitutionally exercise
    jurisdiction, the court held the Commission erroneously decided the defendant
    "was 'localized' in Washington, D.C., and, therefore, precluded all legal
    possibility of multiple 'localizations,' notwithstanding that [the defendant]
    A-0110-18T4
    16
    conducts substantial business operations at its [location] in . . . Maine." 
    Id. at 586.
    The court explained:
    The decided cases in which . . . "localization" of the
    employer's business has been relied upon . . . reveal
    that "localization" has not been thought to signify, in
    multiple operations situations, that single place of
    maximum, or predominant, contact to the exclusion of
    all lesser "localizations." "Localization," rather, has
    been taken to mean that any one among a plurality of
    states may be said to have a legitimate subject-matter
    interest so long as the business of the employer is
    conducted in a manner which establishes a "substantial
    presence" of the employer in such state.
    [Ibid. (citing Hagberg v. Colonial & Pac. Frigidways,
    Inc., 
    157 N.W.2d 33
    (Minn. 1968)).]
    However, in Hagberg, the plaintiff, a Minnesota resident, was injured
    while working for the defendant when a tractor-trailer, in which he was a
    passenger, overturned on a Montana 
    highway. 157 N.W.2d at 36
    .        The
    defendant was an Iowa corporation and entered into a contract of employment
    with the plaintiff in Iowa. 
    Ibid. The trial court
    found that the defendant did "a
    substantial amount of business in Minnesota," including shipping produce into
    the state on a weekly basis. 
    Id. at 37-38.
    The Minnesota Supreme Court held:
    [t]hat defendant may have conducted a greater share
    of its business in other states is not controlling. We
    have stated in a number of cases that a business may
    be localized in more than one state. If an employer
    conducts a substantial amount of its business in
    Minnesota, it is localized in this state and subject to
    our workmen's compensation laws, at least with
    A-0110-18T4
    17
    respect to resident employees whose duties to a
    substantial extent consist of implementing the
    localized business.
    [Id. at 38 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).]
    In affirming the trial court's judgment, the court emphasized that
    seventy-five to eighty percent of the plaintiff's deliveries were made inside
    Minnesota, and "[i]t was merely fortuitous that the accident happened while
    plaintiff was hauling a load not destined for Minnesota." Ibid.9
    Although these out-of-state decisions are of limited assistance, we
    nevertheless distill a standard which finds voice in the governing principle of
    the WCA itself, i.e., that an injury is compensable only if it "aris[es] out of and
    in the course of employment."         N.J.S.A. 34:15-7.     It is the nature and
    frequency of the employee's relationship with the localized presence of the
    employer that lends weight to the fourth Larson factor. In other words, in this
    case, did Marconi's "duties to a substantial extent . . . implement[] the
    localized business" of United in New Jersey? 
    Hagberg, 157 N.W.2d at 38
    ; see
    
    Connolly, 317 N.J. Super. at 322
    (finding lack of jurisdiction when no
    9
    Minnesota subsequently amended its compensation act to add an
    extraterritorial injury provision. Follese v. Eastern Airlines, 
    271 N.W.2d 824
    ,
    832-33 (Minn. 1978). The statute as amended generally prohibits claims for
    extraterritorial injuries to its residents unless they are temporarily employed
    outside the state, as broadly defined by the statute. 
    Id. at 833
    n.12.
    A-0110-18T4
    18
    "employment relationship between the [employer] and petitioner present in
    New Jersey").
    Based upon a fair reading of the record, we must conclude that it did not.
    Marconi's contacts with United's Newark hub were, in large part, to advance
    Marconi's ability to perform his work in Philadelphia. Even when Marconi
    used United's facilities at Liberty International Airport, it was to serve United's
    interests elsewhere around the country. Essentially, nothing in the course of
    Marconi's two-decade employment with United advanced the company's
    localized interests in New Jersey. In these circumstances, although United
    maintained a localized business interest in Newark, New Jersey has no
    substantial interest in exercising its jurisdiction over the petitions. 
    Williams, 175 N.J. at 90
    . We hasten to add that our holding is limited to the facts of this
    case. See 
    Connolly, 317 N.J. Super. at 318
    (jurisdiction decision "requires
    consideration of the particular facts").
    For the sake of completeness, we note our agreement with the JWC's
    conclusion that Marconi failed to establish jurisdiction over his petition for
    occupational injuries. In Williams, the Court held that in order to invoke the
    jurisdiction of the Division in extraterritorial occupational injury claims,
    the petitioner must demonstrate either that (1) there
    was a period of work exposure in this State that was
    not insubstantial under the totality of circumstances
    and given the nature of the injury; (2) the period of
    A-0110-18T4
    19
    exposure was not substantial but the materials were
    highly toxic; or (3) the disease for which
    compensation is sought was obvious or disclosed "by
    medical examination, work incapacity, or manifest
    loss of physical function," while working in New
    Jersey.
    [175 N.J. at 90 (quoting Bond v. Rose Ribbon &
    Carbon Mfg. Co., 
    42 N.J. 308
    , 311 (1964)).]
    Marconi did not carry his burden under this exacting standard.
    Affirmed.
    A-0110-18T4
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