Eddy v. Virgin Islands Water & Power Authority

Opinions of the United 2004 Decisions States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 5-21-2004 Eddy v. VI Water Power Auth Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential Docket No. 02-4057 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2004 Recommended Citation "Eddy v. VI Water Power Auth" (2004). 2004 Decisions. Paper 654. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2004/654 This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at Villanova University School of Law Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 2004 Decisions by an authorized administrator of Villanova University School of Law Digital Repository. For more information, please contact Benjamin.Carlson@law.villanova.edu. PRECEDENTIAL Samuel H. Hall, Jr. (Argued) Marie E. Thomas Birch de Jongh Hindels & Hall IN THE UNITED STATES COURT Poinsettia House at Bluebeard’s Castle OF APPEALS 1330 Estate Taarnebjerg FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT Charlotte Amalie St. Thomas, USVI 00802 NO. 02-4057 Cathy M. Smith Virgin Islands Water & Power Authority P.O. Box 1450 GABRIELLE EDDY Charlotte Amalie St. Thomas, USVI 00804 v. Attorneys for Appellant VIRGIN ISLANDS WATER AND POWER AUTHORITY; James M. Derr (Argued) JAM ES BROWN; P.O. Box 664 JOHN DOE I; JOHN DOE II; Charlotte Amalie JOHN DOE III; JOHN DOE IV St. Thomas, USVI 00804 Virgin Islands Water Attorney for Appellee and Power Authority, Appellant OPINION OF THE COURT On Appeal From the District Court of the Virgin Islands (D.C. Civil Action No. 96-cv-00048) District Judge: Hon. Thomas K. Moore STAPLETON, Circuit Judge: Argued December 9, 2003 The Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority (“WAPA”) appeals from a BEFORE: NYGAARD, BECKER and judgment entered on a verdict finding it STAPLETON, Circuit Judges liable to Gabrielle Eddy (“Eddy”) for intentional infliction of emotional distress. (Opinion Filed: May 21, 2004) WAPA further appeals the denial of their renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law. Because the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to Eddy will not support recovery on an intentional the yard. Eddy informed his foreman, infliction of emotional distress claim that James Brown, that he had not been trained is not barred by the exclusive remedy for work in the High Yard. Brown provision of the Virgin Islands Workers’ responded, “Well, Mr. Eddy, we want you Compensation Act, we will reverse the to do it, or [face] disciplinary action.” JA judgment of the District Court of the at 1376. Brown then informed Eddy that Virgin Islands and will direct that work on the switch had to be performed judgment be entered in favor of WAPA. hot for economic reasons. 2 I. Factual and Procedural Background The crew did not have enough insulating material to cover up all exposed A. Factual Background 1 areas of the switch, and, accordingly, while Eddy covered most of the switch Gabrielle Eddy was employed by with insulating materials, the back area WAPA as a first class lineman trained to remained uninsulated. In addition, Eddy do “hot line” work, where power lines was not provided with an insulated remain energized while work is being wrench, which was necessary to safely done. On June 2, 1994, Eddy’s crew was perform maintenance on the switch. directed by its foreman to report to the High Yard, an area of WAPA’s St. Nonetheless, Brown directed Eddy to Thomas power plant with large electrical repair the partially uninsulated switch with switches that are bigger and closer the uninsulated wrench. Eddy protested, together than switches found out in the responding to Brown: “You’ve got to be field where Eddy usually worked. The crazy. You’ve got to be kidding me. In crew was to perform what an internal there so close, I mean, you got to be WAPA memo would later describe as kidding me,” JA at 1380, and further “planned corrective and preventative objected to using the uninsulated wrench. maintenance” on a high voltage switch in Eddy had been previously sent home twice for refusing to perform unsafe work. 1 As our standard of review in evaluating a motion for judgment as a 2 matter of law, discussed infra, requires us Eddy attended a meeting sometime to “view[] the evidence in the light most before the day of the accident at which favorable to the non-movant and giv[e] it WAPA announced that all work in the the advantage of every fair and reasonable High Yard would be performed hot. Eddy inference,” W.V. Realty, Inc. v. N. Ins. Co., protested, along with another employee, 334 F.3d 306, 311 (3d Cir. 2003), we state that employees did not have the proper the facts herein in the light most favorable training or equipment for hot line work in to Eddy. the High Yard. 2 Several other WAPA workers testified to problems with impotence, and his having similar experiences.3 Eddy personality has changed completely since believed that if he refused to work on the the accident. He has been, at times, switch in the High Yard that day, he would severely depressed, angry, and stressed be sent home, and would be terminated or out. Eddy’s treating psychologist, Dr. suspended. Thomas Tyne, initially diagnosed him as suffering from general anxiety disorder, Eddy climbed twenty feet up a ladder along with posttraumatic stress disorder. as directed to repair the switch. During the In 1995, Dr. John Massimo, Eddy’s repair, as Eddy used the uninsulated socket treating psychiatrist, diagnosed him as wrench to loosen a nut, the nut moved suffering from major depressive disorder suddenly and the back of the wrench made and posttraumatic stress disorder. Eddy contact with the back of the switch, was prescribed antid epressants, an causing an electrical arc. Eddy was burned antipsychotic, and sedatives. by the hot flash from the arc and briefly lost consciousness. By 1997, nearly three years after the accident, Dr. Tyne diagnosed Eddy as Eddy was in severe pain after the suffering from a permanent moderate accident. He suffered partial and full psychological impairment. In 2001, Dr. thickness burns (requiring skin grafts), and Tyne determined that Eddy was still was burned on his face, chest, legs, and suffering from posttraumatic stress groin. Eddy has since suffered flashbacks disorder and anxiety disorder. His general during his sleep, seeing himself being anxiety disorder resulted in major electrocuted again. He has suffered from depression, and Eddy still suffered from flashbacks, remembrances, inability to concentrate, inability to sleep, and 3 disruption in eating and daily functioning At least three other individuals activities. testified as to having similar experiences: Joel Dowdye (“I was one of those B. Procedural Background individuals who was sent home numerous times for refusing to do work when I Eddy collected worker’s compensation thought it was unsafe.”), JA at 1098-99, as a result of the June 2, 1994 accident. Kenval Thomas (WAPA’s policy was He also filed this five-count lawsuit on “either you do the work or you get sent March 21, 1996. Counts IV and V were home.”), JA at 1180 et seq., and Cleve tried by a jury. Count IV alleged a Stridiron (“[W]ell, if you refuse, they violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by Brown basically say – they send you home. They for depriving Eddy of various rights, but suspend you. Like you either do it or you the jury found in favor of Brown. Count V don’t, and then you’ll be, you know, alleged intentional infliction of emotional punished after that.”), JA at 1223-24. 3 distress against both Brown and WAPA. WAPA argues that the record is devoid of evidence to support the elements of a After moving for judgment as a matter claim for intentional infliction of of law at the close of Eddy’s case, WAPA emotional distress, the claim on which the renewed its motion at the close of jury found WAPA liable. “We review the evidence, arguing, inter alia, that District Court’s decision denying a motion “[p]laintiff presented no evidence that he for judgment as a matter of law de novo, suffered emotional distress after hearing and apply the same standard that the Defendant Brown’s alleged words, nor District Court did, namely whether, was there any emotional distress flowing viewing the evidence in the light most from Brown’s conduct prior to Plaintiff favorable to the non-movant and giving it climbing the latter.” JA at 216. The the advantage of every fair and reasonable motion was denied. The jury found inference, there is insufficient evidence against Brown and WAPA on Count V, from which a jury reasonably could find and reached a verdict in the amount of liability.” W.V. Realty, Inc., 334 F.3d at $5,000.00 against Brown and 311 (citing Lightning Lube, Inc. v. Witco $1,000,000.00 against WAPA. The jury Corp., 4 F.3d 1153, 1166 (3d Cir. 1993)). determined that Brown either (1) acted as We set forth the familiar standard for WAPA’s alter ego or (2) was directed or determining the sufficiency of the authorized by WAPA. evidence in the margin.4 The District Court entered a judgment reflecting the verdict. Brown paid the 4 In determining whether the judgment against him and did not appeal. evidence is sufficient to WAPA filed a timely motion for judgment sustain liability, the court notwithstanding the verdict. WAPA’s may not weigh the evidence, motion for judgment notwithstanding the determine the credibility of verdict was thereafter denied, and WAPA witnesses, or substitute its filed this timely appeal. version of the facts for the jury’s version. Although II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review judgment as a matter of law should be granted sparingly, The District Court had supplemental a scintilla of evidence is not jurisdiction over the intentional infliction enough to sustain a verdict of emotional distress claim pursuant to 28 of liability. The question is U.S.C. § 1367(a) and 48 U.S.C. § 1612(a). not whether there is literally We have jurisdiction to review the final no evidence supporting the judgment of the District Court under 28 party against whom the U.S.C. § 1291. motion is directed but whether there is evidence 4 III. Discussion After discussing the elements of an IIED claim and the claim preclusion While WAPA raises numerous provision of the WCA, we will address the arguments as to why it is entitled to sufficiency of the evidence with respect to judgment as a matter of law, WAPA’s the two IIED theories discussed by the central argument attacks the sufficiency of parties. The first theory is that Eddy the evidence in support of a claim for suffered severe em otional distress intentional infliction of emotional distress compensable under IIED because Brown (“IIED”), given the liability limitations forced him to choose between performing imposed by the Virgin Islands Workers’ an unsafe task or potentially losing his Compensation Act (the “WCA”). Because job–a job he could not afford to lose (the it is dispositive of this appeal, we will only “pre-accident emotional distress claim”). address that argument. 5 According to WAPA, this is the only theory that could escape the bar of the WCA, but there is no evidence to support upon which the jury it. The second theory, stressed by Eddy on could properly find a appeal, is that Brown coerced Eddy into verdict for that party. performing unsafe maintenance work, Thus, although the thereby causing the accident, physical c o u rt d r a w s a ll injury and severe emotional distress (the reasonable and “post-accident emotional distress claim”). logical inferences in t h e n o n m o v a n t ’s A. The Tort of Intentional Infliction favor, w e m u s t of Emotional Distress [reverse] an order [denying] judgment “[T]he Virgin Islands has designated as a matter of law if, the Restatement as its law, until a contrary upon review of the statute is approved.” Monk v. Virgin record, it is apparent Islands Water & Power Authority, 53 F.3d that the verdict is not supported by legally sufficient evidence. Brennan v. Norton, 350 F.3d 399, 425 n.20 WAPA or (2) WAPA authorized or (3d Cir. 2003) (quoting Lightning Lube, directed Brown’s conduct. Because our Inc. v. Witco Corp., 4 F.3d 1153, 1166 (3d other holdings are dispositive of this Cir. 1993) (citations and internal appeal, we will assume arguendo that quotations omitted)). sufficient evidence supports the jury’s finding that WAPA is liable for Brown’s 5 WAPA argues, inter alia, that there is conduct, and we treat the actions of Brown insufficient evidence to support the jury’s and WAPA as one for purposes of this finding that (1) Brown was the alter ego of appeal. 5 1381, 1387-88 (3d Cir. 1995) (citing 1 unjustified. The same comment V.I.C. § 4). 6 Section 46 of the further notes that severe distress Restatement (Second) of Torts provides: may encompass mental anguish, fright, horror, grief, worry, and One who by extreme and other emotional disturbances. The outrageous conduct intentionally or extent of the severity is to be recklessly causes severe emotional measured by whether any distress to another is subject to ‘reasonable man could be expected liability for such emotional distress, to endure it.’ and if bodily harm to the other results from it, for such bodily Chuy v. Phila. Eagles Football Club, 595 harm. F.2d 1265, 1275-76 (3d Cir. 1979) (en banc) (quoting § 46 cmt. j). Id. With respect to the “intentional” or For there to be “severe emotional “reckless” element of § 46, according to distress,” Comment i to § 46, Comment j to § 46 requires that The rule stated in this Section a plaintiff prove that he suffered applies where the actor desires to severe distress that is not inflict severe emotional distress, unreasonable, exaggerated, or and also where he knows that such distress is certain, or substantially certain, to result from his conduct. 6 It applies also where he acts 1 V.I.C. § 4 provides: recklessly . . . in deliberate disregard of a high degree of The rules of the probability that the emotional common law, as expressed distress will follow. in the restatements of the law approved by the Id.; see Chuy, 595 F.2d at 1275 (analyzing American Law Institute, and comment i); see also 2 Dan B. Dobbs, The to the extent not so Law of Torts § 303, at 826 (2001) expressed, as generally (“Dobbs”) (for the “intentional” or understood and applied in “reckless” element of § 46 to be met, the the United States, shall be “defendant must intend severe emotional the rules of decision in the harm (or reckless risk of it) and such harm courts of the Virgin Islands must in fact result”). A defendant acts in cases to which they apply, “intentionally” when he acts with the in the absence of local laws purpose or desire to inflict severe to the contrary. 6 emotional distress, or acts knowing that to, or disease or death of, an such distress is substantially certain to e m p l o y ee n o t e n t i tl e d to result from his conduct. Restatement compensation under this chapter, (Second) of Torts § 8A. “Mere risk, the liability of the employer is, and however, even a very high risk, is not shall continue to be the same as if enough to show substantial certainty.” this chapter did not exist. Dobbs § 24, at 48. Instead, a defendant acts with substantial certainty where he 24 V.I.C. § 284(a). knows with virtual certainty “that [his] actions will bring about the result.” Id. A The threshold inquiry in determining defendant acts “recklessly” where he “whether the exclusive remedies of workmen’s compensation apply is whether does an act or intentionally fails to the injuries complained of fit within the do an act which it is his duty to the definition of ‘injury’ set forth in the statute other to do, knowing or having [as compensable], namely, ‘harmful reason to know of facts which change[s] in the human organism.’” would lead a reasonable man to Robinson v. Hess Oil V. I. Corp., 19 V.I. realize, not only that his conduct 106, 109 (D.V.I. 1982) (quoting 24 V.I.C. creates an unreasonable risk of § 251(a) (1981));7 see [severe emotional distress] to another, but also that such risk is substantially greater than that 7 Despite not having been expressly which is necessary to make his repealed, in 1994 the § 251 referenced in conduct negligent. Robinson and entitled “Definition and application,” providing definitions for Restatement (Second) of Torts § 500; see various terms used in the workers’ also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 46. compensation chapter, no longer appeared in the Virgin Islands Code. At that time, B. The Exclusive Remedy Provision Session Law 6033 added to § 251 new of the WCA definitions for several terms. See 1994 V.I. Sess. Laws 6033, at 239. However, The exclusive remedy provision of the another portion of that same Act read WCA, 24 V.I.C. § 284(a), provides, in “Section 251 is amended to read as pertinent part: follows” and provided for an entirely different § 251 that was unrelated to When an employer is insured under defining terms used in the Act. Id. at 245. this chapter, the right herein 24 V.I.C. § 251 now codifies the new, established to obtain compensation unrelated § 251, and the previous list of shall be the only remedy against the definitions of terms used in the workers’ employer; but in case of accident compensation chapter, including the terms 7 Chinnery v. Gov’t of the V. I., 865 F.2d 68, 71-72 (3d Cir. 1989) (to be compensable under the WCA, “injuries must have arisen that were supposed to have been added in out of and in the course of his 1994, no longer appears in the Virgin employment” and have “resulted in a Islands Code. harmful change to him”) (internal Since Session Law 6033 was quotation marks and alterations omitted); passed, two courts have assumed that the see also 6 Arthur Larson, Larson’s pre-1994 § 251 is still in existence. See Workers’ Compensation Law § 104.05, at Eddy v. Virgin Islands Water and Power 104-18 to -21 (2000) (“Larson”) Authority, 955 F. Supp. 468, 478 (D.V.I. (analyzing in the context of IIED whether 1997) (noting that “Section 251 of Title 24 physical injury of the kind dealt with by of the Virgin Islands Code defines the the relevant workers’ compensation statute terms used in the Workers’ Compensation is present). Where the employer’s conduct chapter” and quoting a definition from the has caused physical injury and the only pre-1994 § 251); Boudreaux v. Sandstone emotional distress is that resulting from Group, 1997 W L 289867, *6 (V.I. Terr. those physical injuries, the injury fits the Ct. 1997) (referring to the definition of statutory definition and is compensable “employer” in the pre-1994 § 251). At under the WCA. The employee is entitled least one Court has held that the workers’ to workers’ compensation but cannot make compensation statute in the Virgin Islands an additional claim for emotional distress. explicitly does not define “employer.” See Chinnery, 865 F.2d at 72 (where employee Nickeo v. Atlantic Tele-Network Co., 2003 suffered a physical injury compensable WL 193435, *4 (V.I. Terr. Ct. 2003) under the WCA, it “does not matter that (“Conspicuously absent from the workers’ [he] also suffered mental or nervous compensation statute is a definition of injuries”); see also Larson § 104.05, at ‘employer’. . . .”). 104-18 to -21. The Virgin Islands legislature may wish to amend Title 24 to ensure that the There is, however, an implied Code contains definitions for the workers’ exception to this literal application of § compensation chapter. Nonetheless, we 284(a). We recognized in Chinnery that, need not resolve today this ambiguity regardless of the character of the injury, between the pre-1994 § 251 and the “amended” § 251 now codified at 24 V.I.C. § 251. Even assuming arguendo that Virgin Islands law no longer provides would constitute physical “injury” under definitions for terms used in the any definition, thereby bringing Eddy’s workmen’s compensation chapter (and post-accident injuries within the scope of therefore no longer defines “injury”), there the WCA. Indeed, Eddy applied for and can be no doubt that Eddy’s severe burns was granted benefits under the WCA resulting from the June 2, 1994 accident because of his post-accident injuries. 8 there is an exception to the exclusivity bar An overwhelming majority of for tort suits where the employee can show American jurisdictions recognize that “the conduct [of the employer can] be that an employer may be sued at regarded as so egregious as to exceed the common law for inflicting “genuine bounds of negligence and constitute the intentional injury” upon the sort of intentional wrongdoing necessary employee. To fit within this to comprise an exception to the exclusive narrow exception, the putative remedy provision of WCA § 284(a).” plaintiff must allege that the Chinnery, 865 F.2d at 72 (citing Johnson employer committed the tortious v. Mountaire Farms of Delmarva, Inc., act with an actual, specific and 503 A.2 d 7 08 , 7 14 (M d. 1986) deliberate intention to injure him. (Maryland’s Act will only allow a tort suit “where [the] employer had determined to Ferris, 23 V.I. at 188. injure an employee or employees within the same class and used some means to Based on this standard, the Ferris accomplish this goal.”)). Court rejected the claim that § 284 was inapplicable because the employer’s The scope of this implied exception to failure to provide Ferris with appropriate the bar of § 284(a) was explored in Ferris tools, safety clothing, and adequate v. Virgin Islands Industrial Gases, Inc., 23 instruction made an accident virtually V.I. 183 (V.I. Terr. Ct. 1987), in a case certain to occur: much like the one before us. There, Ferris’s supervisor gave him an electric Ferris’ proposed amended drill and ordered him to remove a complaint alleges that VIGAS defective safety plug from an acetylene c r e a te d a d a nge r ous work cylinder. The electric drill ignited the gas, environment through “negligence, seriously burning Ferris. When he sued recklessness and intentional his employer, it moved for summary misconduct” by failing to provide judgment on the ground that, under § 284, him with the appropriate tools, Ferris’s sole remedy was workmen’s safety clothing and adequate compensation. Ferris argued in response instruction. Attempts to classify that § 284 was not intended to bar suit for similar contentions as intentional injuries recklessly or intentionally caused. torts a r e a lm o s t a l w a ys While the Court recognized an implied unsuccessful because the actual exception for intentionally inflicted injury remains accidental in injuries, it stressed that that exception was character even where the corporate limited to situations in which there is an employer knowingly permitted a “actual, specific and deliberate intention to hazardous work condition to exist, injure”: willfully failed to provide a safe place to work or intentionally 9 violated a safety statute. Thus, the compensation bar has been Ferris, 23 V.I. at 189-90 (quoting 2A enforced where an employer Arthur Larson, Workmen’s Compensation operated a saw mill despite Law § 68.13 (1986)). knowledge of a potentially fatal hazard, [Williams v. Int’l Paper Ferris pointed the Court to § 8A of the Co., 181 Cal. Rptr. 342 (Cal. Restatement (Second) of Torts under Ct. App. 1982)], failed to which intent to cause injury includes not instruct an unskilled employee only situations in which the actor desires how to perform a hazardous to cause injury, but also situations in which task, [K i tt el l v . V t. the actor believes that the injury is Weatherboard, Inc., 417 A.2d substantially certain to result. In response, 926 (Vt. 1980)], or removed the Court acknowledged that a minority of safety devices from machinery, jurisdictions had expanded the exception [Griffin v. George’s, Inc., 589 beyond “actual, specific, and deliberate S.W.2d 24 (Ark. 1979)]. See intent to harm,” but construed § 284 also [Rosales v. Verson, 354 c onsistent with the majority o f N.E.2d 553, 558-60 (Ill. App. jurisdictions interpreting analogous Ct. 1976)]. In each case, the workers’ compensation statutes. result was inescapable because what is being tested . . . is More recently, the District Court of the not the degree of gravity or Virgin Islands reaffirmed the limited scope depravity of the employer’s of this exception to § 284 in Gass v. Virgin conduct, but rather the Islands Telephone Corp., 149 F. Supp. 2d narrow issue of intentional 205, 211 (D.V.I. 2001) (granting summary versus accidental quality . . . judgment for employer because “nothing o f the precise event suggest[ed] that Gass’ injuries resulted producing injury. The from his ‘employer’s conscious design’”), intentional removal of a rev’d in part on other grounds, 311 F.3d safety device or toleration of 237 (3d Cir. 2002). a dangerous condition may or may not set the stage for The Ferris Court was correct in its an accidental injury later. conclusion that a majority of jurisdictions But in any normal use of the construe their analogous statutes to permit words, it cannot be said, if a common law suit only when there is an such an injury does happen, intent to cause harm. See Larson § 103.03, that this was deliberate at 103-7 to -8 (it remains an “almost infliction of harm unanimous rule” that “the common law comparable to an intentional liability of the employer cannot . . . be left jab to the chin. stretched to include accidental injuries 10 caused by . . . reckless . . . misconduct of actual, specific and deliberate intention to the employer short of a conscious and cause injury. deliberate intent directed to the purpose of inflicting an injury”). It was likewise C. The Sufficiency of the Evidence correct in concluding that it should not attribute to the Virgin Islands legislature In order to uphold Eddy’s judgment, an intention to adopt the minority rule. As we must find that the evidence viewed in we explained in a comparable situation the light most favorable to him will where the District Court of the Virgin support a claim that both satisfies the Islands adopted a majority rule of statutory elements of § 46 of the Restatement construction: (Second) of Torts and avoids the bar of WCA § 284. As we have noted, two As the district court observed, the theories of recovery have been suggested. Daniels present no evidence that We will examine each in turn to determine the Virgin Islands legislature, in whether either of them meets both of these enacting [the statute], intended to requirements. adopt the minority position on this issue. Accordingly, we cannot say 1. The Pre-Accident Emotional that the district court erred in Distress Claim following the majority rule. Cf. V.I. Code Ann. titl 1, § 4 (1967) The first theory suggests that Eddy (rules of common law, as generally suffered compensable pre-accident understood and applied in the emotional distress because Brown forced United States, shall be the rules of him to choose between performing an decision in Virgin Islands courts); unsafe task and losing his job. We agree see also Dyndul v. Dyndul, 541 with WAPA that a rational jury could not F.2d 132, 134 (3d Cir. 1976) (even find for Eddy on this claim. for matters that are not strictly part of the common law, V.I. Code Ann. The evidence viewed in the light most tit. 1, § 4 is impressive evidence favorable to Eddy does establish that that the Virgin Islands legislature Brown’s directive presented Eddy with a intends majority rule to govern). hard choice and that this conduct could be regarded by a rational juror as extreme and Benoit v. Panthaky, 780 F.2d 336, 339 (3d outrageous and done in reckless disregard Cir. 1985). of an obvious risk. There is no evidence, however, which could support a finding We thus conclude that the intentional that being presented with that choice tort exception to the exclusive remedy occasioned emotional distress for Eddy “so provision of the WCA is limited to severe that no reasonable man could be situations in which the employer had an expected to endure it.” Restatement 11 (Second) of Torts § 46 cmt. j. Neither not barred by the exclusive remedy Eddy’s own testimony nor that of the provision of the W CA. others who were present reveals any indication of such severe distress resulting As we have explained, a literal from the directive prior to the accident. To application of § 284 bars recovery for the contrary, Eddy’s own testimony severe emotional distress occasioned by an suggests that he believed he could perform injury giving rise to a right to the work Brown requested without getting compensation under the WCA. To escape hurt. Eddy testified, “I didn’t know I this bar, Eddy was required to prove that would have get hurt. . . . If I know I was his injury was the result of conduct going to get hurt, I wouldn’t have be intended to cause injury. Thus, to escape there.” JA at 1414. Further, Eddy the bar of § 284, Eddy would have had to indicated that “[i]f Mr. Brown tell me to prove that Brown gave his directive for the go do the job, I figure everything is safe.” purpose of causing harm to Eddy. He did JA at 1417. There is no evidence Eddy not do so. suffered any symptoms immediately preceding the accident that one would Because the District Court erroneously associate with severe emotional distress. regarded all IIED claims as being beyond Instead, Eddy accepted the assignment, the scope of § 284,8 it did not ask the jury prepared the job site for the work, whether Brown acted with a purpose to removed three nuts off the top of the injure – rather, it instructed that liability switch while working within three feet of could be predicated on a finding of the energized conductors, and requested recklessness. The jury apparently found another wrench because the one he was recklessness on the part of Brown, and the using would not fit. He waited for the record clearly supports that finding. The second wrench to arrive, took it, and record provides a basis for concluding that continued his work until his hand slipped Brown’s conduct created a very grave risk and the accident occurred. of injury to Eddy and that Brown acted in deliberate disregard of that risk. Indeed, as 2. The Post-Accident Emotional Eddy stresses, his expert expressed the Distress Claim opinion that the “chance of an accident Assuming arguendo that the emotional distress Eddy suffered as a result of the 8 See Eddy, 955 F. Supp. at 478 (“claims accident and his physical injuries would such as reckless infliction of emotional otherwise be compensable under IIED, this distress . . . are not in themselves related to claim comes within the literal scope of the the type of injuries covered by the Virgin WCA because Eddy clearly suffered Isla nds w orkm en’s c om pens atio n statutory “injuries.” Accordingly, there scheme”) (quoting Robinson, 19 V.I. at can be liability on this claim only if it is 109) (internal quotation marks omitted). 12 occurring” was “a hundred percent.” JA at District Cour t a n d r em and w ith 1539. Nevertheless, the record undeniably instructions to enter judgment in favor of shows that Eddy was injured in an WAPA. “accident.” Brown’s conduct may have set the stage for that accident, but nothing suggests that he had an affirmative desire to inflict severe emotional distress on Eddy. Accordingly, Eddy’s post-accident emotional distress claim is barred by WCA § 284(a).9 IV. Conclusion We will reverse the judgment of the 9 Relying upon § 47 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, W APA raises a provocative argument suggesting that no IIED cause of action can lie with respect to this post-accident theory because Brown risked invading Eddy’s right to physical well-being as opposed to his right to be free from severe emotional distress. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 47 (“Except as stated in [the Restatement’s sections on assault], and in [the section on IIED], conduct which is tortious because intended to result in bodily harm to another or in the invasion of any other of his legally protected interests does not make the actor liable for an emotional distress which is the only legal consequence of his conduct.”). We have no occasion here to express an opinion as to whether in the absence of the WCA an IIED claim could properly be predicated on this second theory. 13