No. 120,056
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
MARY L. JOHNSON,
Appellee,
v.
STORMONT VAIL HEALTHCARE INC.,
Appellant.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1.
To receive a workers compensation award, the law places the burden on the
worker to prove that the injury arises out of and in the course of the worker's
employment.
2.
By law, an accident or injury which arose out of a neutral risk with no particular
employment or personal character cannot arise out of and in the course of employment in
order to be compensable under the Workers Compensation Act.
3.
The question of whether an accident arises out of and in the course of employment
is a question of fact.
4.
Upon appellate review, determining whether the Board's findings of fact are
supported by substantial competent evidence is a question of law.
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5.
Words and phrases shall be construed according to the context and approved usage
of the language, but technical words and phrases and other words and phrases that have
acquired a peculiar and appropriate meaning in law, shall be construed according to their
peculiar and appropriate meanings.
6.
In deciding whether an injury arises out of employment, the focus of inquiry
should be on whether the activity that results in injury is connected to, or is in, the
performance of the job.
7.
Once the claimant has met the burden of proving a right to compensation, the
employer may seek relief from liability based on any statutory defense or exception. The
employer then has the burden of proof on any claimed defenses or exceptions.
Appeal from Workers Compensation Board. Opinion filed July 12, 2019. Affirmed.
Kendra M. Oakes, of McAnany, Van Cleave & Phillips, P.A., of Kansas City, for appellant.
Roger D. Fincher, of Topeka, for appellee.
Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., MALONE and HILL, JJ.
HILL, J.: Mary L. Johnson, a cleaning lady at Stormont Vail Hospital in Topeka,
fell twice at work and was injured. She received workers compensation benefits after
both the administrative law judge and the Workers Compensation Appeals Board ruled
that she had proved her injuries arose out of and in the course of her employment even
though she could not explain why she fell. Stormont Vail argues that since these were
unexplained falls, they are neutral risks and any injuries arising from neutral risks are
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noncompensable under the Workers Compensation Act. Because the Board made a
factual finding that these falls had an employment character, that is, Johnson fell while
walking, and walking was a major portion of her job, we hold the Board properly
awarded Johnson workers compensation benefits. The Act only exempts from
compensation injuries from neutral risks such as unexplained falls that have no
employment character.
Within a span of a few months, Johnson suffers two falls.
Johnson worked at Stormont Vail Hospital in the Environmental Services
Department as a housekeeper. Her duties included cleaning patients' rooms, bathrooms,
waiting rooms, lobbies, and most other areas of the hospital. These duties also included
changing sheets, making beds, carrying dirty linens to bins, removing trash, dusting,
sweeping, and vacuuming.
In 2015, while she was walking down a basement hallway in the hospital on her
way to clean the pavilion, her foot caught somehow and she fell. She later explained, "I
was just walking down, down the hallway and I, I just trip—I fell." Johnson later stated,
"I was just—just walking and next thing I knew I had—my foot caught like that, or
something, and I just fell flat." She elaborated, "I know my foot stopped (indicating). It
stopped, that's what made me trip." Johnson could not say definitively what made her
fall—whether she slipped or if her foot caught on something sticky. Johnson noticed
nothing on the floor that she could have tripped over or that was wet.
When she fell, she hit her left knee, skinned her arm, and got a floor burn on her
right hand that became bruised. She also shattered her left kneecap. This injury forced her
to go to a rehabilitative center for about four days, and then after her discharge she
underwent physical therapy. Johnson was off work for three months.
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About six months after returning to work, Johnson was again walking down the
basement hallway when she fell just outside the housekeeping office. This time, she was
carrying cleaning supplies. "All I saw was me and my supplies scattered all over the
floor." She again denied slipping on anything, said the floors looked fine, but also noted
that sometimes her shoes stuck to the floor.
From this fall, Johnson fractured her left wrist. Once again, she could not work for
three months. When her doctor released her to return to work, she was told to wear a
brace. But since Stormont Vail did not want her to work while wearing a brace, it placed
her on extended leave for another month.
Like the first fall, why Johnson fell is unclear. Once again, Johnson acknowledged
there was not anything obvious on the floor that caused her fall. She suggested it was
possibly because of the hospital floors being sticky due to an improperly mixed cleaning
chemical. After Johnson's second fall, her supervisor asked her what caused it. At his
deposition, Johnson's supervisor could not recall Johnson's answer, but he thought she
said that she was not sure. He checked the floor for wetness and found it was not wet, but
he did not check for stickiness. At the time of both falls, Johnson was wearing closed-
toed, rubber-soled shoes required by her employer. The floor in the basement is covered
mainly with hard tile and rubber matting in some spots.
Johnson seeks workers compensation benefits.
In short, Johnson's respective injuries from her falls were a left patellar fracture
and a left distal radius fracture. She received conservative treatment for both injuries. At
her initial hearing, she reported occasional or continued symptoms such as a dull ache,
decreased range of motion, and stiffness in her left knee. She reported throbbing,
tenderness, decreased range of motion, numbness, and weakness in her left wrist.
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The parties stipulated that Johnson suffered a work-related injury by traumatic
accident on both dates. Johnson argued that both accidents arose out of and in the course
of her employment. Stormont Vail argued they did not. In its view, her falls resulted from
a neutral risk with no particular employment or personal character and were therefore, not
compensable. The administrative law judge found for Johnson on this point and awarded
compensation for both falls.
Stormont Vail sought review of the award to the Workers Compensation Appeals
Board, arguing that Johnson's injuries arose from neutral risks or idiopathic causes. In the
hospital's view, Johnson's injuries did not arise out of and in the course of her
employment and were thus not compensable.
Rejecting Stormont Vail's position, the Board adopted the ALJ's stipulations,
which included the joint stipulation that Johnson suffered work-related injuries during her
two falls. The Board found that Johnson's job required her to stand and walk the entire
day. The Board did, however, reject the ALJ's speculation that Johnson was injured
because of work fatigue or work distractions. The Board found that Johnson did not
prove her falls were caused by her shoes sticking to any cleaning chemical residue on the
floors.
To sum up, the Board held that Johnson's accidental injuries arose out of and in the
course of her employment. While the Board acknowledged Stormont Vail's argument that
because Johnson's falls were unexplained, they were caused by neutral risks, it ruled that
it was Stormont Vail's burden to prove the existence of a personal or neutral risk that
would deny a finding of a compensable injury.
The Board found that a neutral risk barred compensability for injuries when the
neutral risk had no particular employment or personal character. The Board noted the
record lacked proof of an element of personal character to the incidents or injuries, but in
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looking to the context of Johnson's falls, there was an employment character—"namely
Johnson's need to walk to get the job done." Thus, the Board found both of Johnson's
injuries were compensable:
"Neither fall involved what would be only a neutral risk, but rather they involved neutral
risk with a particular employment character. Walking was required to do the work and
Johnson was injured while walking. The Board does not view the [Kansas Workers
Compensation Act] as requiring that a worker explain why an accident or injury occurred
when the worker sustains an injury by accident while performing job tasks."
Thus, the Board's logic is manifest. It concluded that Johnson's injuries by accident arose
out of and in the course of her employment because her work required her to walk. In the
context of her job, the need to walk shows the employment character of the neutral risk
here. By applying the statutory definition, the Board ruled her injuries were compensable.
Stormont Vail appealed to this court.
Stormont Vail raises two issues on appeal. First, in its view, the Board improperly
interpreted and applied the law by finding that there was not a neutral risk that barred
compensation and erred when it concluded that Johnson's accidents arose out of and in
the course of her employment. Second, the Board erred by placing the burden of proof on
Stormont Vail to establish Johnson's accidents were caused by a neutral risk.
In response, Johnson argues that we should affirm the Board. She contends that
she met her burden to show her accidents arose out of and in the course of her
employment, and that Stormont Vail's failure to establish a neutral risk was merely
ancillary to the Board's finding that she had proved a work-related injury. Johnson
maintains that the burden of proving a neutral risk caused her accidents was Stormont
Vail's since the hospital argued that she had failed to meet her burden. And Johnson
contends that it was not her burden to prove a negative. We will address the issues in that
order after a brief review of some fundamental principles of workers compensation law.
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We review some legal principles that guide us.
It is fundamental that to receive a workers compensation award, a worker must
suffer a work-related injury and the law places the burden on the worker to prove that the
injury arises out of and in the course of the worker's employment. K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 44-
501b(c). But the circumstances here give us more to consider—the application of an
amendment to our Workers Compensation Act.
There are four classes of injuries that are not compensable under the Act. By
enacting K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 44-508(f)(3)(A), the Legislature specified that the familiar
phrase, "arising out of and in the course of employment," as used in the Act, shall not be
construed to include an:
"(i) Injury which occurred as a result of the natural aging process or by the
normal activities of day-to-day living;
"(ii) accident or injury which arose out of a neutral risk with no particular
employment or personal character;
"(iii) accident or injury which arose out of a risk personal to the worker; or
"(iv) accident or injury which arose either directly or indirectly from idiopathic
causes." (Emphasis added.)
In other words, injuries that are caused by natural aging or day-to-day activities, injuries
from neutral risks with no particular employment or personal character, injuries from
risks personal to the worker, and injuries from idiopathic causes are not compensable
under our system of workers compensation. Here, we must focus on the law on neutral
risks.
Our tasks here are well established. The interpretation or construction of the Act is
a question of law. But once that interpretation or construction occurs, the ultimate
question of whether an accident arises out of and in the course of employment is a
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question of fact. Determining whether the Board's findings of fact are supported by
substantial competent evidence is a question of law. Estate of Graber v. Dillon
Companies, 309 Kan. 509, Syl. ¶ 3, 439 P.3d 291 (2019). Applying that rule here means
that we will not disturb the Board's findings on appeal that Johnson's two injuries arose
out of and in the course of her work if those findings are supported by substantial
competent evidence.
The Board did not misinterpret the law.
While the hospital does not argue with the Board's findings of fact, it does claim a
legal error. Stormont Vail's argument can be summarized in the following syllogism:
All injuries from neutral risks, such as unexplained falls, are
noncompensable under the Workers Compensation Act;
Johnson suffered injuries from two unexplained falls;
thus, Johnson's injuries are noncompensable.
The flaw in Stormont Vail's logic is in the first premise. That statement ignores the
complete statute. It omits important qualifying language used by the Legislature in
writing the exemption statute. Instead, Stormont Vail argues in general terms about
unexplained falls being neutral risks, and neutral risks are no longer compensable under
workers compensation law. We cannot ignore this language as Stormont Vail does.
The exemptions statute is explicit: "The words 'arising out of and in the course of
employment' as used in the workers compensation act shall not be construed to include:
. . . accident or injury which arose out of a neutral risk with no particular employment or
personal character." K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 44-508(f)(3)(A)(ii). The last part of the sentence,
"with no particular employment or personal character," is significant. These words have
meaning, and the Legislature included them for a reason.
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An understanding of the importance of this qualifying language comes from our
caselaw on neutral risks. The wellspring for categories of risk in workers compensation
cases can be traced to the worker killed by sniper fire—Hensley v. Carl Graham Glass,
226 Kan. 256, 258, 597 P.2d 641 (1979). Citing 1 Larson, Workmen's Compensation
Law § 7 (1978), the Hensley court held that there are three general categories of risks in
workers compensation cases:
(1) those distinctly associated with the job;
(2) risks which are personal to the worker; and
(3) the so-called neutral risks which have no particular employment or personal
character.
Note the qualifying phrase, "which have no particular employment . . . character"
has been in our caselaw from the beginning. The phrase is, in our view, either a technical
term or a term that has through caselaw acquired a peculiar meaning. This means that the
2011 amendments to our Act have not modified the law of neutral risks, but have
explicitly incorporated these technical terms into the law. The question arises, then, how
are we to construe this statute here?
First, we look at our law dealing with statutory construction—K.S.A. 2018 Supp.
77-201. It teaches us that "[w]ords and phrases shall be construed according to the
context and approved usage of the language, but technical words and phrases, and other
words and phrases that have acquired a peculiar and appropriate meaning in law, shall be
construed according to their peculiar and appropriate meanings." The next logical step,
then, is to see what peculiar meaning these words have acquired with the passage of time
and the rendering of interpretations made by the Legislature and the courts.
After Hensley, this court in McCready v. Payless Shoesource, 41 Kan. App. 2d 79,
200 P.3d 479 (2009), relied on the categories of risk set out in that case. The McCready
panel held that injuries sustained in an unexplained fall were compensable under the
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Workers Compensation Act in effect at that time. The court held that, "McCready fell in
the course of her employment with no explanation. As the Board has ruled, this is a
neutral risk that is compensable." 41 Kan. App. 2d at 488. It is important that the panel
affirmed the Board's finding of fact that her injuries arose out of and in the course of her
employment.
Here, the Board clearly held that it was Johnson's burden to prove that her injuries
arose from her employment. The Board made this finding of fact on her walking as part
of her job tasks:
"In both instances, walking was part of Johnson's work duties and she was working when
she fell. As such, her cases are compensable. Neither fall involved what would be only a
neutral risk, but rather they involved neutral risk with a particular employment character.
Walking was required to do the work and Johnson was injured while walking. The Board
does not view the KWCA as requiring that a worker explain why an accident or injury
occurred when the worker sustains an injury by accident while performing job tasks."
The record on appeal reveals that the evidence supports those findings, and we
will not disturb them on appeal. Simply put, Johnson was walking down the hall at work
both times when she fell. Stormont Vail does not dispute this finding in its brief except to
contend it is legally erroneous based on its mistaken view that neutral risk injuries are
now noncompensable. It does not dispute the facts. It disputes the law.
We reject Stormont Vail's implicit argument that injuries arising from all neutral
risks are now noncompensable since the 2011 amendments to the Act. This is just not so
because the language of the law expresses an exclusion for neutral risks that have no
employment character. If the Legislature wanted to eliminate injuries arising from all
neutral risks, it could have said so explicitly. But it did not. It included the express
qualifying language found in Hensley.
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Walking further down this line, we come to Bryant v. Midwest Staff Solutions,
Inc., 292 Kan. 585, 595-96, 257 P.3d 255 (2011). The court acknowledged that no bright-
line test for what constitutes a work injury is possible. The court, however, found the
proper approach is to focus on whether the injury occurred as a consequence of the broad
spectrum of life's ongoing daily activities, such as chewing, breathing, or walking in
ways that were not peculiar to the job, or as a consequence of an event or continuing
events specific to the requirements of performing one's job. "'The right to compensation
benefits depends on one simple test: Was there a work-connected injury? . . . [T]he test is
not the relation of an individual's personal quality (fault) to an event, but the relationship
of an event to an employment.'" 292 Kan. at 595-96 (citing 1 Larson's Workers'
Compensation Law § 1.03(1) [2011]).
The Bryant court found that the focus of inquiry should be on whether the activity
that results in injury is connected to, or is in, the performance of the job. The statutory
scheme does not reduce the analysis to an isolated movement—bending, twisting, lifting,
walking, or other body motions—but looks to the overall context of what the worker was
doing—welding, reaching for tools, getting in or out of a vehicle, or engaging in other
work-related activities. 292 Kan. at 595-96.
After Bryant came Graber, a case that focused on the idiopathic exception. We
will deal with Graber more extensively in our treatment of Stormont Vail's argument
about its burden of proof. But we want to point out that Graber reversed the Board
because no evidence supported its finding that Graber's fall resulted from an idiopathic
cause. The court thus reversed the Board's ruling that Graber's injuries were not
compensable. Here, in contrast, there is evidence of the fall having an employment
character, a fact that is not disputed.
The Board properly looked at the overall context of Johnson's job duties when it
made its ruling. With the guidance of Bryant, and its one simple test, when we ask "was
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there a work related injury?" we can only say, "Yes." Although Johnson's injuries arose
from unexplained falls, she was entitled to workers compensation benefits because under
the circumstances, the neutral risks had a particular employment character. The entire
statute must be applied—not just one part.
It is reasonable to require parties to prove their claims.
Stormont Vail argues that the Board erroneously shifted the burden and required
the hospital to prove that Johnson's accidents resulted from a neutral risk. Essentially,
Stormont Vail argues that K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 44-501b(c) required Johnson to also prove
her accidents were not caused by a neutral risk. In other words, once Johnson proved her
right to compensation under 44-501b(c), she also had to prove her injuries did not arise
from a neutral risk. Essentially, Stormont Vail argues that Johnson should have to prove a
negative.
We find Stormont Vail's argument that a claimant must prove the inapplicability of
one of the four exempt classes of injury unpersuasive. Stormont Vail does not argue that
Johnson needed to also prove her accidents did not result from her natural aging process;
or prove the injuries were not from a risk personal to her; or that they were not caused by
an idiopathic cause. We must ask then, if it was Johnson's burden to prove one negative,
that on neutral risks, why then is it not also her burden to prove three other negatives, as
well?
Stormont Vail does not explain why Johnson has to prove the inapplicability of
one, but not all four, exempt causes. If the Legislature wanted the claimant to prove in
each claim that his or her injuries were not in the four exempt classes, it could have
written that requirement into the statute. But it did not, and we will not rewrite the law as
Stormont Vail wishes it to read.
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There is an order of proof at work here. First, Johnson provided evidence of her
falls and resulting injuries. Then, it was Stormont Vail that raised neutral risk as a
defense to Johnson's accidents at work. Once the claimant has met the burden of proving
a right to compensation, the employer may seek relief from liability based on any
statutory defense or exception. This court has often held that the employer has the burden
of proof on any claimed defenses or exceptions. Messner v. Continental Plastic
Containers, 48 Kan. App. 2d 731, 751, 298 P.3d 371 (2013). In Rash v. Heartland
Cement Co., 37 Kan. App. 2d 175, 186, 154 P.3d 15 (2006), the court ruled that once the
claimant has met their burden, the respondent employer has the burden to show any
exception.
The Board found that it was Stormont Vail's burden to establish a neutral risk
barring Johnson from compensation and that the hospital had not done so. For this
finding, the Board relied upon language in Smalley v. Skyy Drilling, No. 111,988, 2015
WL 4366531, *4 (Kan. App. 2015) (unpublished opinion), which held that it was an
employer's burden to prove the existence of a neutral risk that would deny a finding of a
compensable injury. Stormont Vail criticizes Smalley as an opinion without explanation,
and without citation to any precedent. The hospital contends that it was somehow
incongruous for the Smalley panel to acknowledge the claimant's burden to prove his
right to compensation and then hold it was the employer's burden to prove the existence
of a neutral risk.
We are not convinced by Stormont Vail's criticism of Smalley. The Smalley panel
relied on the definition of "burden of proof" in the Act to rule that the injured worker
"simply must prove that he or she has a right to compensation and the various conditions
on which that right depends 'are more probably true than not true.'" Smalley, 2015 WL
43666531, at *4. The language in the statute has not changed. Under K.S.A. 2018 Supp.
44-501b(c) and K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 44-508(h), a claimant must simply prove that they
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have a right to compensation and the various conditions on which that right depends are
"more probably true than not true." Stormont Vail's argument that the ruling was
"without . . . precedent" does not refute the statutory analysis made by the Smalley panel.
In fact, we find the panel's analysis persuasive.
Johnson thus did not have to prove that the basement floors were not clean, were
not dry, or were sticky as a result of commercial cleaner residue; she just had to show that
it was more probably true than not that she was walking in the course or in furtherance of
her duties when she fell. See Smalley, 2015 WL 4366531, at *4.
Finally, we return to Graber. The Kansas Supreme Court held that the plain
language of K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 44-508(f)(3)(A)(iv) about the idiopathic exception
renders an injury noncompensable only upon proof that the injury or accident arose
directly or indirectly from a medical condition or medical event of unknown origin
peculiar to the claimant. Graber, 309 Kan. at 524. This language is clear. If a party wants
to claim an exception, then there must be proof of that exception. The opinion does not
require that the claimant of workers compensation benefits must prove the negative. That
is, the injured worker in Graber need not prove that the injuries are not from an
idiopathic condition.
Like idiopathic causes, neutral risks are also listed as exempt causes of injury.
Thus, by analogy, we can see then that if a party claims that the injuries are the result of
neutral risks with no particular employment or personal character, there must be proof of
those circumstances. It is reasonable to place the burden upon the party making such a
claim to prove that claim. Accordingly, if the burden is on the employer to provide proof
that one subparagraph (f)(3)(A) exception applies to prevent liability for an injury, as the
Supreme Court ruled in Graber, then it is reasonable to conclude the same holding should
apply to the other exceptions in that statute, such as neutral risk.
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The Board found that Johnson met her statutory burden and, under these
circumstances, the burden was then on Stormont Vail to support its claim of a neutral risk
with no particular employment character, to deny a compensable injury. The Board was
right to do this. The burden to prove the existence of a personal or neutral risk that would
deny a finding of a compensable injury belonged to Stormont Vail. We hold that the
Board was correct in its ruling, and we reject Stormont Vail's argument to the contrary.
We affirm the Board's decision.
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