IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 18–0317
Filed November 16, 2018
JASON BLUML,
Appellant,
vs.
DEE JAY’S INC. d/b/a LONG JOHN SILVERS and
COMMERCE & INDUSTRY INSURANCE COMPANY,
Appellees.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Pottawattamie County,
Jeffrey L. Larson, Judge.
A workers’ compensation claimant appeals a district court ruling
affirming the commissioner’s denial of benefits. REVERSED AND
REMANDED.
Douglas R. Novotny of Novotny Law, LLC, Omaha, NE, for appellant.
Jean Z. Dickson and Paul M. Powers of Betty, Neuman & McMahon,
P.L.C., Davenport, for appellees.
2
MANSFIELD, Justice.
In this case, we return to the question of when an idiopathic
workplace fall is compensable. We last addressed this issue nearly two
decades ago.
A fast-food employee who was handling a customer order had a
seizure and fell backwards directly to a ceramic tile floor. He suffered
serious head injuries. The workers’ compensation commissioner declined
to award benefits, reasoning that idiopathic falls from a standing or
walking position to a level floor do not arise out of employment under our
workers’ compensation law. The employee petitioned for judicial review,
and the district court affirmed the commissioner for the same reasons.
On appeal, we reverse. We conclude there is no blanket rule
rendering certain categories of workplace idiopathic falls noncompensable,
so long as the employees proves that a “condition of his [or her]
employment increased the risk of injury.” Koehler Elec. v. Wills, 608
N.W.2d 1, 5 (Iowa 2000). Because the commissioner incorrectly treated a
factual issue as a legal matter, we remand for further agency proceedings.
I. Facts and Procedural History.
Jason Bluml is a high school graduate who has worked a number of
supervisor jobs in fast-food restaurants. In approximately 2007, Bluml
began to have seizures. In one instance, Bluml experienced a seizure while
driving, which resulted in a crash into a house. Bluml was prescribed
antiseizure medicine. In the months leading up to February 2012, Bluml
had not been taking his antiseizure medication regularly and also had
some issues with alcohol abuse.
On February 15, 2012, Bluml—then 38 years old—was working at a
Long John Silver’s in Council Bluffs as shift manager. Bluml had called
in late for work that evening because he was not feeling well. About two
3
hours into his shift, Bluml was working behind the customer counter.
According to witnesses, Bluml experienced a full-body seizure. He fell
straight backward onto the ceramic tile floor of the restaurant, striking the
back of his head. Witnesses heard Bluml’s head hit the tile floor. In
addition to seeing blood on the floor, they saw nearby a paper bag
containing a customer order that Bluml apparently had in his hand when
he fell. Bluml was taken to the emergency room where he was found to
have an acute subarachnoid hemorrhage and required intubation.
Bluml was transferred to the University of Nebraska Medical Center
for further care. On February 18, doctors performed a left decompressive
craniectomy. On March 12, Bluml began a course of rehabilitation for his
brain injuries. On June 6, he underwent a left-sided cranioplasty.
Following his release, Bluml went to work in the fast-food business again,
although he still has significant cognitive impairments, especially with
reading, memory, and judgment. Bluml presently works as a cook rather
than as a manager. He continues to suffer from seizures and to struggle
with alcohol abuse.
On February 7, 2014, Bluml filed a petition for arbitration before the
Iowa Workers’ Compensation Commission, seeking workers compensation
benefits from Dee Jays Inc. d/b/a Long John Silvers, the employer, and
Commerce & Industry Insurance Company, the carrier, relating to the
February 15, 2012 incident. The case went to hearing, and on January
13, 2016, the deputy commissioner issued his arbitration decision.
In that decision, the deputy ruled that Bluml had failed to carry his
burden of proof that he had sustained an injury that arose out of and in
the course of employment. The deputy noted that Bluml had suffered an
idiopathic fall, i.e., a fall due to a personal condition, and concluded, “[T]he
4
law appears clear that idiopathic falls to level surfaces are not
compensable under Iowa law.”
Bluml appealed to the commissioner. On July 20, 2017, the
commissioner affirmed the deputy. The commissioner observed, “There is
no real dispute that the injuries sustained by claimant were rendered more
serious because claimant’s fall occurred on a ceramic tile floor inside
defendant-employer’s restaurant.” He commented that a minority rule
“hold[s] that idiopathic falls on a level floor are compensable when the
hardness of the floor affects the severity of the injury,” whereas a majority
of jurisdictions
hold that idiopathic falls on a level floor are not compensable
regardless of the hardness of the floor on the theory that a
floor presents a risk or a hazard encountered everywhere and
that such risks and hazards presented by a level floor are the
same risks which confront all members of the public.
The commissioner acknowledged that the issue appears to be one of “first
impression” in Iowa. Ultimately, the commissioner found “the authority
and the arguments presented by defendants in support of the majority rule
on this issue are more persuasive.”
On August 16, Bluml petitioned for judicial review in the Iowa
District Court for Pottawattamie County. On January 25, 2015, the
district court affirmed the commissioner’s decision, after discussing much
of the same caselaw cited by the commissioner and agreeing with the
commissioner’s “interpretation of the applicable law.” Bluml appealed,
and we retained the appeal.
II. Standard of Review.
The question here is whether an idiopathic fall is compensable
because it “aris[es] out of . . . employment.” Iowa Code § 85.3(1) (2011).
We will review the commissioner’s legal interpretation of this section for
5
errors at law. See Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(c). “In recent years, we have
repeatedly declined to give deference to the commissioner’s interpretations
of various provisions of chapter 85.” Iowa Ins. Inst. v. Core Group of Iowa
Ass’n for Justice, 867 N.W.2d 58, 65 (Iowa 2015). The language at issue
is not technical or within the special expertise of the commissioner. See
Renda v. Iowa Civil Rights Comm’n 784 N.W.2d 8, 13–14 (Iowa 2010).
Indeed, we have previously held that this phrase should be interpreted de
novo by our court on administrative review. Xenia Rural Water Dist. v.
Vegors, 786 N.W.2d 250, 253 (Iowa 2010). However, we accept the
commissioner’s factual findings when supported by substantial evidence.
See Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(f).
III. Analysis.
It is not disputed that this case involves an idiopathic fall. Bluml
fell on February 15, 2012, because he had a seizure. The seizure was
unrelated to Bluml’s work. In fact, Bluml had a history of seizures, and it
was happenstance that this seizure occurred while Bluml was working.
A. Idiopathic Falls and the Increased-Risk Standard. Although
the parties and the commissioner devote considerable attention to
nonprecedential, unpublished opinions of the court of appeals, we will
focus on the published opinions. The only published precedent in Iowa on
idiopathic falls is Koehler Electric, 608 N.W.2d 1. There the claimant fell
from a ladder to a cement floor while wiring a customer’s air conditioning
unit. Id. at 2. The claimant sustained serious head and shoulder injuries.
Id. Yet, the claimant appeared to be unconscious when he fell, and it was
determined that the cause of the fall was alcohol withdrawal. Id. The
commissioner nonetheless awarded workers’ compensation benefits,
reasoning that the claimant’s “employment or working environment placed
him in a position that increased the effects of his fall.” Id. at 2–3.
6
On appeal, we sustained the award. Id. at 5. First, we noted that
we had not previously addressed the compensability of idiopathic falls. Id.
at 4. We acknowledged that “[g]enerally injuries resulting from risks
personal to the claimant are not compensable.” Id. Yet we noted an
exception to this rule, where “an employee . . . is placed in a position that
aggravates the effects of an idiopathic fall, such as a height.” Id.
We then invoked what is known as the increased-risk rule. We held
that to recover for an idiopathic fall, the claimant needed only prove “that
a condition of his employment increased the risk of injury.” Id. at 5. In
other words, the claimant did not need to prove “the precise injuries that
were caused by the workplace condition, such as the elevation from which
the claimant fell.” Id.
Additionally, we found that no expert testimony was needed in the
particular case “because the fact finder could conclude based on common
experience that the risk of injury is greater when one falls from a height of
four to five feet onto a concrete floor than when one falls on level ground.”
Id.
The ultimate question, of course, is whether the claimant has
suffered an injury “arising out of and in the course of the employment.”
Iowa Code § 85.3(1). The increased-risk test that we relied upon in Koehler
Electric is an interpretation of that phrase. 1 Arthur Larson et al., Larson’s
Workers Compensation Law § 3.01, at 3-4 (2018) [hereafter Larson]. It is
“the prevalent test in the United States today.” Id. § 3.03, at 3-5.
We have used that test in other cases. For example, in Miedema v.
Dial Corp., we held that a back injury suffered by an employee while using
the restroom at work did not arise out of employment because the
employee “fail[ed] to establish that use of [the] restroom exposed him to
any increased risk of injury.” 551 N.W.2d 309, 311 (Iowa 1996). In Meyer
7
v. IBP, Inc., we held that an employee who developed carpal tunnel
syndrome while working in a slaughterhouse had a compensable injury.
710 N.W.2d 213, 225 (Iowa 2006). Citing Koehler Electric, we observed,
[I]f the injury manifested during [the claimant’s] first minute
of popping tongues as an IBP employee, it still would have
arisen out of his employment because his job duties with IBP,
as shown by the record, increased the risk that carpal tunnel
syndrome would manifest.
Id.
However, in Lakeside Casino v. Blue, we confronted a case where the
claimant, a cocktail server, had injured her ankle while stumbling on
stairs. 743 N.W.2d 169, 171 (Iowa 2007). We discussed Miedema and
Meyer but not Koehler Electric. Id. at 174, 175 n.3. We said that subject
to “limited exceptions,” we had previously “abandoned” or “discarded” the
increased-risk test in favor of the actual-risk test. Id. at 174–75, 177 n.7.
Although we disavowed the positional-risk doctrine, which is a third test,
we held in Lakeside Casino that the employee’s claim was compensable
under the actual-risk doctrine. Id. at 176–77. We explained,
Blue injured her ankle when she stumbled as she was walking
down stairs. It was not disputed that these stairs were a
condition existing in her workplace. Moreover, it is a matter
of common knowledge that stairs pose an actual risk of
stumbling or falling when traversing them, similar to the risk
posed by going up and down ladders. Although Blue did not
stumble due to any particular defect in or condition of the
stairs, it is not necessary under Iowa case law that the stairs
in Blue’s workplace be more dangerous than a typical set of
steps. In addition, it matters not that she stumbled through
her own inattention. Blue’s misstep was causally related to
the fact that she was walking on stairs, and therefore, the
Commissioner rationally concluded her injury arose out of her
employment.
Id. at 177 (footnote omitted).
Lakeside Casino did not involve an idiopathic fall, i.e., a fall due to
the employee’s personal condition. Rather, the claimant “tripped when she
8
lost her footing on the stairs.” Id. We do not believe Blue intended to
overrule the legal standards set forth in Koehler Electric for idiopathic falls.
Notably, Larson generally prefers the actual-risk rule over the increased-
risk rule, but not for idiopathic falls. Larson § 3.04, at 3-6; id. § 9.01[1],
at 9-2 to 9-3. He finds that idiopathic falls present a “basically different”
question from unexplained falls and there is “general agreement” that they
are subject to the “increased danger,” i.e., increased-risk, rule. Id.
§ 9.01[1], at 9-2 to 9-3. Larson explains,
The idiopathic-fall cases begin as personal-risk cases. There
is therefore ample reason to assign the resulting loss to the
employee personally. . . . To shift the loss in the idiopathic-
fall cases to the employment, then, it is reasonable to require
a showing of at least some substantial employment
contribution to the harm.
Id. § 9.01[4][b], at 9-8. In Larson’s view, the law “rightly requires that the
employment contribute something to the risk, before pronouncing the
injury one arising out of the employment.” Id. at 9-9.
B. A Legal or a Factual Determination? Having said that, in this
case the deputy, the commissioner, and the district court all concluded as
a matter of law that idiopathic falls onto level floors are not compensable.
The deputy stated, “[I]diopathic falls (falls due to personal conditions) onto
level surfaces are generally not held compensable.” He concluded that “the
law appears clear that idiopathic falls to level surfaces are not
compensable under Iowa law.” Likewise, the commissioner agreed that
“an idiopathic fall on a level floor generally is not compensable,” and found
“the authority and the arguments presented by defendants in support of
the majority rule . . . more persuasive than the authority and arguments
presented by claimant in support of the minority rule.” The district court
canvassed the same legal authorities and found “the commissioner did not
9
erroneously interpret the law when he determined Mr. Bluml’s injury did
not arise out of his employment.”
We are not persuaded this approach is correct. Logically, whether
the condition of a floor, just like any other workplace condition, posed an
increased risk of injury should be determined factually, rather than
predetermined by some legal “rule.” Our Koehler Electric decision required
only that “the employment must contribute to the hazard of the fall.” 608
N.W.2d at 5. It did not foreclose the possibility that an especially hard
floor could amount to such a hazard. See id.
True, Larson points out that “[a] distinct majority of jurisdictions . . .
have denied compensation in level-fall cases.” Larson § 9.01[4][a], at 9-7.
Still, [a] significant minority . . . make awards for idiopathic level-floor falls
. . . .” Id. at 9-7 to 9-8. Larson further notes,
One factual question that figures in a number of cases
is whether, in a level-floor fall to a concrete, tile, or steel
surface, the fact of hardness alone should suffice as the added
employment hazard. As the list of cases on level-floor falls
indicates, denials have issued in a number of instances where
concrete or steel floors were present, and the fact of hardness
has in some of these cases been specifically rejected as a
source of increased risk. There is also respectable authority
for the view that hardness in itself adds to the hazard of a
level-floor fall . . . .
....
For whatever it is worth, the observation may be made
that of the four authentic American cases supporting level-
floor awards, one involved a tile floor, two involved a concrete
floor, and the fourth, although it involved a wood floor,
employed with the greatest caution the term “hard floor” at
every point, leaving the impression that the hardness of the
floor was an integral part of the risk.
Id. § 9.01[4][e], at 9-12 to 9-13 (footnotes omitted).
The fact that a majority of appellate decisions have not allowed
recovery for idiopathic falls regardless of the hardness of the floor gives us
10
some pause. But it is helpful to delve into the decisions that espouse this
majority position. In Evans v. Hara’s, Inc., the Idaho Supreme Court found
that a worker’s idiopathic fall onto a cement fall was not compensable,
reasoning,
A fall onto a level surface precipitated by an alcohol
withdrawal seizure is just as likely to happen at home, on the
sidewalk, or in any other situs which a worker may frequent
outside of the workplace. We therefore hold that an injury
resulting from an idiopathic fall at the workplace does not
arise out of employment and is not compensable under our
worker’s compensation system without evidence of some
contribution from the workplace. In so holding, we are
consistent with the majority of jurisdictions which have
considered this question.
849 P.2d 934, 941 (Idaho 1993). It is true that an idiopathic fall would be
just as likely to happen outside the workplace; yet, the court’s opinion did
not address the possibility that the surface of the floor at the place of
employment increased the risk of harm from such a fall. See generally id.
In Prince v. Industrial Commission, the Illinois Supreme Court
affirmed the industrial commission’s denial of benefits for an idiopathic
fall to a concrete floor. 155 N.E.2d 552, 554 (Ill. 1959). The decision was
fact-based; the court affirmed the commission’s factual finding as “not
against the manifest weight of the evidence.” Id. The court declined the
claimant’s argument that she should prevail “as a matter of law.” Id.
Luvaul v. A. Ray Barker Motor Co. upheld a trial court’s denial of
benefits following an employee’s idiopathic fall to a concrete floor. 384
P.2d 885, 890–91 (N.M. 1963). The New Mexico Supreme Court explained,
“Any person who falls, if not prevented from doing so, will strike the ground
or floor. That the floor at the place of employment was concrete should
not, in our opinion, alter the rule applicable in the circumstances.” Id. at
890.
11
Zuchowski v. United States Rubber Co., seemingly like Luvaul,
adopted a strict legal rule that idiopathic falls to level floors are not
compensable. 229 A.2d 61, 66 (R.I. 1967). The Rhode Island Supreme
Court elaborated,
The fact that the floor where petitioner fell was cement
does not, in our opinion, supply the necessary element of
special risk which would make his injuries compensable.
Floors of all nature and kind are a normal and customary part
of one’s life be one at home or work. We do not believe that
the composition of the floor in and of itself should be the
determining factor as to whether there is a special risk
incident present in one’s employment. Such a criterion would
send this court into the endless wilds of speculation.
Id.
In Bagwell v. Ernest Burwell, Inc., the South Carolina Supreme
Court held that the workers’ compensation commission erred in awarding
benefits for the death of a worker who suffered an idiopathic fall and fell
backward onto a concrete floor, causing his death. 88 S.E.2d 611, 612,
617 (S.C. 1955). Acknowledging that “[n]umerous cases can be found
sustaining either view,” the court decided,
We are not prepared to accept the contention that, in the
absence of special condition or circumstances, a level floor in
a place of employment is a hazard. Cement floors or other
hard floors are as common outside industry as within it.
Id. at 615. Essentially, the court determined as a matter of law based on
its own experience that a level, concrete floor does not pose an additional
degree of risk. See id.
Kraynick v. Industrial Commission, upheld the dismissal of a claim
for workers’ compensation benefits following the decedent’s idiopathic fall
to a hard tile floor. 148 N.W.2d 668, 670–71 (Wis. 1967). Applying its own
standard for idiopathic falls, under which the employee had to show that
his work “require[d] him to be in a hazardous situation,” the Wisconsin
12
Supreme Court noted that “a level surface is not an area of special danger.”
Id. at 671. The court quoted from the Bagwell decision approvingly. Id.
Like Bagwell, this decision appears to be legally based; furthermore, the
court appeared to use a legal standard—“special danger”—different from
the increased-risk standard we announced in Koehler Electric. See id.
In Gates Rubber Co. v. Industrial Commission, the Colorado Court of
Appeals reversed the compensation commission’s award of benefits and
found that a concrete floor did not constitute an “extra” or “special” hazard
of employment. 705 P.2d 6, 7 (Colo. App. 1985). The court said, “Level
concrete surfaces, such as that upon which Bigley struck his head, are
encountered on sidewalks, parking lots, streets, and in one’s home. Such
a ubiquitous condition does not constitute a special risk of employment.”
Id. Thus, as in Kraynick, the court found that a concrete floor was not a
“special” risk, utilizing a standard that may not have been the same as
Iowa’s increased-risk standard. See id.
Kovatch v. A.M. General upheld the denial of a widow’s claim for
benefits following a fatal idiopathic fall to a concrete floor. 679 N.E.2d 940,
941 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997). In a footnote, the Indiana Court of Appeals cited
an earlier Indiana Supreme Court case and, without further elaboration,
“reject[ed] [the employee’s] contention that the hardness of the concrete
floor in itself created an increased risk, thereby making his death
compensable.” Id. at 944 n.6 (citing Pollock v. Studebaker Corp., 105
N.E.2d 513, 513 (Ind. 1952)). The prior Indiana Supreme Court case,
however, promulgated no legal rule; instead, it affirmed a denial of benefits
exclusively on factual grounds. Pollock, 105 N.E.2d at 514. The court
there said, “We cannot say . . . that the quantum of evidence was so
meagre as to show that the finding does not rest upon a rational basis
. . . .” Id. Meanwhile, a dissenter on the Indiana Supreme Court urged
13
the rest of the court to find for the claimant as a matter of law. See id.
(Draper, J., dissenting).
Later, in Burdette v. Perlman-Rocque, Co., the Indiana Court of
Appeals again approved the denial of benefits to the estate of a worker who
died of head injuries following an idiopathic fall to a concrete floor. 954
N.E.2d 925, 927–28 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). The court there relied on
Kovatch. Id. at 931, 932. Yet it also emphasized “the deferential standard
of review” and the fact that the workers’ compensation board had “weighed
the evidence.” Id. at 932.
In Ledbetter v. Michigan Carton Co., the Michigan Court of Appeals
concluded,
The plaintiff’s remaining argument for compensation is
that the concrete or cement floor onto which the decedent fell
aggravated his injury. Although we recognize that a fall onto
a softer surface may have lessened the impact, we are not
convinced that the composition of the floor necessarily
aggravated the harm. It cannot be said with certainty that
had the fall occurred at a different location, away from the
employer’s premises, the injuries would have been less
serious.
253 N.W.2d 753, 756 (Mich. Ct. App. 1977). This appears to be the
appellate court’s factual finding. We might be prepared to accept such a
finding if the commissioner had made it here, applying the appropriate
burden of proof.
In Harris v. Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation, the Ohio Court
of Appeals upheld a denial of benefits to a worker who suffered an
idiopathic fall onto a concrete floor, resulting in a subdural hematoma.
690 N.E.2d 19, 19–20 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996). The court stated it was
“compelled” to follow a prior decision of the Ohio Supreme Court. Id. at
20 (citing Stanfield v. Indus. Comm’n, 67 N.E.2d 446 (Ohio 1946) (per
curiam)). The Ohio Supreme Court precedent, however, involved a worker
14
who died of the heart condition that precipitated his fall, not from injuries
sustained in the fall. See Stanfield, 67 N.E.2d at 447.
One member of the Harris panel dissented, observing, “I am simply
not willing to hold that one who hits his head on a picnic table in a
lunchroom can recover, but if he falls all the way to the floor he is out of
luck.” Harris, 690 N.E.2d at 22 (Painter, J., dissenting).
Dugan v. Sabre International also involved an idiopathic fall to a level
floor. 39 P.3d 167, 168 (Okla. Civ. App. 2001). Without mentioning the
nature of the flooring, the Oklahoma Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the
workers’ compensation court’s denial of benefits. Id. at 168–70. A
dissenter took issue, stating,
The issue is not whether Claimant suffered seizures but rather
whether the injury arose from a risk associated with work.
The incident occurred at work when he suffered a seizure, fell,
and struck his head on a concrete floor. The injury occurred
because his head hit his employer’s concrete floor—not
because he had a seizure and fell.
The concrete floor is an incident and risk of
employment!
Id. at 170 (Rapp, J., dissenting).
In Hamilton v. SAIF Corp., the Oregon Court of Appeals sustained
the workers’ compensation board’s determination that the injuries an
employee suffered after she fainted and fell from a standing position onto
a brick floor were not compensable. 302 P.3d 1184, 1185 (Or. Ct. App.
2013). The court noted,
Claimant’s work environment, which required standing on a
hard kitchen floor, is unlike situations where the employer
has placed the worker in settings that may greatly increase
the danger of injury, such as by requiring her to stand on a
ladder or an elevated platform or to stand next to a dangerous
object that would have caused severe injury had she fallen on
it. Instead, she fell on level ground onto the floor. There was
nothing special about the floor or the height from which she
fell that greatly increased the danger of injury.
15
Id. at 1188. Significantly, the court there applied a “greatly increased the
danger” standard which does not conform with Iowa law. Id.
Several points about these out-of-state authorities can be noted. In
some instances, the courts applied a “special” or “greatly increased” risk
standard that doesn’t appear to match Iowa law. See Gates Rubber, 705
P.2d at 7; Hamilton, 302 P.3d at 1188; Kraynick, 148 N.W.2d at 671. Three
of the decisions, one of them fairly recent, drew dissents. See Pollock, 105
N.E.2d at 514; Harris, 690 N.E.2d at 22; Dugan, 39 P.3d at 170. Overall,
many of the foregoing decisions rest on legal determinations that the
hardness of the floor can never constitute an increased risk attributable
to the employment. See Gates Rubber, 705 P.2d at 7; Kovatch, 679 N.E.2d
at 944 n.6; Luvaul, 384 P.2d at 890; Harris, 690 N.E.2d at 20 (majority
opinion); Hamilton, 302 P.3d at 1188; Zuchowski, 229 A.2d at 66; Bagwell,
88 S.E.2d at 615; Kraynick, 148 N.W.2d at 671. In our view, that approach
is off the mark because it transforms a factual issue into a legal one.
In Chapman v. Hanson Scale Co., the Mississippi Supreme Court
went arguably too far in the opposite direction in reversing a denial of
benefits for an idiopathic fall to a concrete floor. 495 So. 2d 1357, 1358
(Miss. 1986). The court reasoned, “We consider exposure to falls upon a
concrete floor a sufficient risk attendant upon employment so that an
injury caused in part thereby is compensable.” Id. at 1361. This too
strikes us as converting a factual matter into a legal one, by holding in
effect that idiopathic falls to concrete floors are always compensable. See
also George v. Great E. Food Prods., Inc., 207 A.2d 161, 161–63 (N.J. 1965)
(finding as a matter of law that an idiopathic fall to a concrete floor
resulting in a skull fracture was compensable).
We believe the court hit the right note in Duval County School Board
v. Golly, 867 So. 2d 491 (Fla Dist. Ct. App. 2004). There the claimant
16
suffered a severe closed head injury after undergoing a seizure and falling
on a concrete walkway. Id. at 491–92. Benefits were awarded. Id. On
appeal, the Florida District Court of Appeal reversed and remanded for
further proceedings. Id. at 494. It concluded that “a fall to a level concrete
floor is [not] automatically compensable” and that there had to be “a
particularized finding of special or increased hazard.” Id. It faulted the
judge of compensation claims because he “felt constrained by [a prior case]
to find that the concrete surface was, as a matter of law, an increased
hazard.” Id.; see also Prince, 155 N.E.2d at 554 (upholding a denial of
benefits as “not against the manifest weight of the evidence”); Pollock, 105
N.E.2d at 513 (declining to say “that the quantum of evidence was so
meagre as to show that the finding does not rest upon a rational basis”);
Tex. Emp’rs Ins. v. Page, 553 S.W.2d 98, 101 (Tex. 1977) (holding that a
level-ground idiopathic fall does not necessarily preclude recovery and that
it was a factual issue “whether the surface represented such a hazard
within the scope of [the claimant’s] employment as to allow recovery for
the fall and resultant injury”).
We can think of two other reasons for us to allow the workers’
compensation commissioner to consider the hardness of the floor
factually, instead of our deeming it legally insufficient in every idiopathic
fall case. First, although most of the reported cases end up denying
recovery, the divergence of authority and the presence of dissenting
opinions suggest that reasonable people can come to different conclusions.
Given that the underlying question is really a factual one, i.e., whether the
conditions of employment increased the employee’s risk, it makes sense
for that question to be decided on a case-by-case basis by the
commissioner based on the factual record.
Second, we have long applied the workers’ compensation statute
“broadly and liberally in keeping with its humanitarian objective: the
benefit of the worker and the worker’s dependents.” Xenia Rural Water
17
Dist., 786 N.W.2d at 257. This includes cases where the issue was whether
the accident arose out of and in the course of employment. Id. at 253–55;
see also 2800 Corp. v. Fernandez, 528 N.W.2d 124, 129–30 (Iowa 1995);
Hanson v. Reichelt, 452 N.W.2d 164, 168 (Iowa 1990).
Therefore, consistent with Koehler Electric, in idiopathic-fall cases,
we believe the claimant should have both the burden and the opportunity
to meet the increased-risk test. See Koehler Elec., 608 N.W.2d at 5. That
is, there is no hard-and-fast rule in Iowa that idiopathic falls onto level
floors are never compensable. Nor is there a legal principle that idiopathic
falls to hard floors are always compensable. Rather, the claimant may
recover if he or she proves that “a condition of his [or her] employment
increased the risk of injury.” Id. at 5. 1
We pause to discuss one last case, from a neighboring jurisdiction.
Recently, in fact too recently to be incorporated in the parties’ briefing
here, the Nebraska Supreme Court decided a case somewhat similar to
ours. In Maroulakos v. Walmart Associates, Inc., a Walmart employee
suffered an idiopathic seizure and fell to the ground, receiving a facial
laceration, sinus fractures, and possibly a traumatic brain injury. 915
N.W.2d 432, 436–37 (Neb. 2018). Originally, the employee primarily
argued that he had tripped over a pallet—i.e., that the fall was not
idiopathic. Id. at 437. On appeal, he tried to claim that he had fallen into
an industrial shelving unit on his way to the floor and that the increased-
danger rule entitled him to recovery. Id. The court found a lack of factual
1The actual-risk rule that we relied upon in Lakeside Casino remains appropriate
for unexplained rather than idiopathic injuries, such as the fall that occurred in that case.
See Lakeside Casino, 743 N.W.2d at 177–78. Notably, in Lakeside Casino, we
distinguished the prior case of McIlravy v. North River Insurance Co., 653 N.W.2d 323,
326, 331 (Iowa 2002), where the claimant’s knee popped as he was simply walking across
a level cement floor. See id. at 175 & n.4, 177. Based on that information alone, the
employer had a reasonable basis for initially denying workers’ compensation benefits.
See McIlravy, 653 N.W.2d at 331. But the fact that merely walking across a level floor
might not meet the actual-risk test says nothing about whether falling on a ceramic tile
floor would meet the increased-risk test.
18
support for the employee’s new theory that his head had encountered a
shelving unit on the way down. Id. at 440. As the court put it,
Maroulakos did not present any evidence that his facial and
potential brain injuries were inconsistent with a fall to a hard
tile floor or that his potential brain injuries did not result
solely from his idiopathic condition. Therefore, any finding
that the increased-danger rule did apply would have been
purely speculative.
Id.
In Maroulakos, the employee apparently did not try to argue that an
idiopathic fall directly to the floor could have been compensable under the
increased-danger rule. See id. And we do not know exactly what the
flooring inside that Walmart was like. Here, by contrast, the employee is
arguing that his fall to the floor should have been compensable under the
increased-risk test. We see no logical reason why that test could not, in
an appropriate case, be met.
IV. Conclusion.
In sum, we conclude that whether injuries suffered in an idiopathic
fall directly to the floor at a workplace “aris[es] out of . . . employment” is
a factual matter, not a legal one. The factual question to be determined is
whether a condition of employment “increased the risk of injury.” Koehler
Elec., 608 N.W.2d at 5. For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment
of the district court and remand to the district court with instructions to
remand this matter to the commissioner for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
All justices concur except Waterman, J., who dissents, and
Christensen, J., who takes no part.
19
#18–0317, Bluml v. Dee Jay’s Inc.
WATERMAN, Justice (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent and would affirm the decisions of the district
court and commissioner that Jason Bluml’s injuries from his idiopathic
fall onto a level floor are not compensable as a matter of law under Iowa
Code chapter 85 (2011). The ceramic tile floor was not slippery. Hard-
surface floors are ubiquitous and not a hazard of employment. It is
undisputed that Bluml’s seizure was unrelated to his working conditions.
It is fortuitous that he fell due to his seizure at work rather than after
hours walking down a concrete sidewalk or on some other hard surface.
Before today, we have never held an idiopathic fall from a standing or
walking position onto a level floor of any surface was compensable.
In Koehler Electric v. Wills, the last time we addressed idiopathic falls
under chapter 85, we upheld workers’ compensation benefits for injuries
sustained in a fall from a ladder, but did so “based on common experience
that the risk of injury is greater when one falls from a height of four to five
feet onto a concrete floor than when one falls on level ground.” 608 N.W.2d
1, 5 (Iowa 2000) (emphasis added). I agree that injuries sustained in a fall
from a ladder or scaffolding are compensable. But injuries are not
compensable when the employee’s personal health problem results in a
fall while walking or standing on a level, dry floor. Bluml was working
behind a counter without the hazardous risk of being four to five feet up a
ladder.
As the court acknowledges, a majority of jurisdictions have
determined as a matter of law that idiopathic falls on a level floor (including
concrete floors and other hard surfaces) are not compensable. I would
follow the majority rule and the respected treatise, 1 Arthur Larson et al.,
Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law § 9.01[4][a], at 9-7 to 9-8 (2018) (“A
20
distinct majority or jurisdictions . . . have denied compensation in level-
fall cases.”), applying this bright-line rule. Instead, today’s decision makes
Iowa an outlier and undermines the careful balance the legislature struck
with our workers’ compensation law.
“The workers’ compensation statute is not a general health
insurance policy that extends to any and all injuries that happen to occur
while on the job.” Miedema v. Dial Corp., 551 N.W.2d 309, 312 (Iowa
1996). Rather, the purpose of Iowa Code chapter 85 “is to make statutory
compensation available to employees when the employees sustain injuries
as a result of the hazards of the business.” Staff Mgmt. v. Jimenez, 839
N.W.2d 640, 650 (Iowa 2013). “It is well settled in Iowa that for an injury
to be compensable, it must occur both in the course of and arise out of
employment.” Miedema, 551 N.W.2d at 310–11; see also Iowa Code
§ 85.3(1) (requiring compensation “for any and all personal injuries
sustained by an employee arising out of and in the course of the
employment”). Bluml was required to prove that his injury “arose out of
his employment” at Long John Silver’s. Miedema, 551 N.W.2d at 311
(requiring a “causal connection . . . between the conditions of his
employment and the injury”). “This means that [his injury] must be a
rational consequence of a hazard connected with the employment.” Id.
(quoting Cedar Rapids Cmty. Sch. v. Cady, 278 N.W.2d 298, 299 (Iowa
1979)). The commissioner correctly determined that a dry, level floor at a
fast-food restaurant is not a workplace hazard as a matter of law. There
is no hazard to prevent or guard against.
On remand, the commissioner may still find factually that Bluml’s
injury did not arise out of his employment. Nevertheless, our court leaves
the door open to a contrary finding and resulting costly payout that would
eviscerate section 85.3(1)’s “arising out of . . . the employment” proof
21
requirement and convert the employer to a general health insurer,
contrary to chapter 85.
For these reasons, I am unable to join the court’s opinion.