Applied Plastics, Inc. v. Labor & Industry Review Commission

359 N.W.2d 168, 121 Wis. 2d 271, 1984 Wisc. App. LEXIS 4403
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 25, 1984
Docket84-366
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 359 N.W.2d 168 (Applied Plastics, Inc. v. Labor & Industry Review Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Applied Plastics, Inc. v. Labor & Industry Review Commission, 359 N.W.2d 168, 121 Wis. 2d 271, 1984 Wisc. App. LEXIS 4403 (Wis. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

Applied Plastics, Inc., and its insurer, U.S. Fire Insurance Company, (collectively, Applied Plastics) appeal from a judgment affirming an order of the Labor and Industry Review Commission (LIRC). LIRC had reversed the findings and order of the hearing examiner and awarded maximum death benefits to the guardian of the minor child of Henry Klein, Jr. (Klein). LIRC concluded that at the time of his death Klein was performing services growing out of and incidental to his employment, within the purview of the Worker’s Compensation Act. Because LIRC did not act without or in excess of its powers when it concluded that Klein’s fatal injury arose out of his employment, we affirm.

The facts found by LIRC are virtually undisputed as are many of the inferences drawn from those facts. It is chiefly the application of statutory law to the facts which sparks this controversy.

Klein was employed as president, and was the major shareholder, of Applied Plastics, a manufacturer. James Earle (Earle) was a maintenance worker and sometime foreman there. Apart from their association through employment, Earle and Klein enjoyed no personal relationship whatsoever. Earle had told his girlfriend that he did not like Klein and had told a co-employee that he did not like the way Klein ran his business. Earle said he felt Klein’s family members received favoritism.

*274 Klein made it his practice to give employees rides to work when, because of transportation problems, they could not get to work on their own. Klein did this to insure that the plant would operate with sufficient help. Klein gave Earle a ride to work on one occasion in mid-September of 1979. En route to the plant, Klein saw Earle walking along the street and picked him up. On the same day or in the same week, Earle requested a coworker to drive him, during their lunch break, to a commuter parking lot on College Avenue in the city of Milwaukee, about two miles from the Applied Plastics plant. Earle said he had left his motor home there because the engine had been sputtering. The co-worker noticed, however, that when Earle turned the ignition, the engine started right away.

On September 25, 1979, Earle told his supervisor he would not be at work the next day. On September 26, 1979, about a week after the occasion when Klein gave Earle a ride to the plant, Klein began his day in routine fashion by driving his minor son to school. Klein was not heard from again until 9:40 a.m. when he telephoned his secretary. He told her to cancel all of his appointments for the day. At about 10:15 a.m. Klein called again and told his secretary to arrange to have his son picked up from school that day. He called again at 10:30 a.m. and told his secretary he needed $15,000 but that he was on his way to Chicago and could not get the money himself and that, therefore, she should withdraw the sum in cash from his bank. Klein called five or six more times between 10:30 a.m. and 3:40 p.m., each time discussing, in an ever more urgent tone, the details of obtaining the $15,000. He instructed his secretary not to let anyone know what she was doing. In his last call Klein told his secretary to place the money on his office desk and lock the office, which she did. No one ever came for the money.

*275 At noon on the same day, Earle’s girlfriend went to her apartment to have lunch and found Earle there with his motor home parked in the lot. Earle told her he was having problems with his motor home and had stopped to fix it. His girlfriend noticed that the window drapes of the motor home were closed.

At approximately 5:25 p.m. that day, at a commuter parking lot located just west of Milwaukee county, Earle shot Klein to death with a revolver. He then killed himself with the same gun. When found, Klein’s face and head showed signs of having been severely beaten, and the remnants of a plastic bag were tied around his neck with a piece of rope. Klein’s automobile was later found parked at the College Avenue commuter parking lot about two miles from the Applied Plastics plant.

Charles Klein, the guardian of Henry Klein’s minor son, applied on the minor’s behalf for death benefits under the Worker’s Compensation Act. When benefits were denied, Charles Klein appealed to LIRC. LIRC reversed the hearing examiner’s findings of fact and order and made its own findings and order, resulting in an award of maximum death benefits to be held in trust for Henry Klein’s son.

LIRC inferred from the facts that on September 26, 1979, Earle carried out a premeditated plan to abduct Klein at gunpoint and extort $15,000 from him. LIRC concluded that Klein sustained a compensable fatal injury under the Worker’s Compensation Act insofar as Klein “was performing a service growing out of and incidental to his employment when he picked up James Earle on his way to work” and the “fatal assault visited upon [Klein] was the result of an employment-created danger, i.e., his employer-employe relationship with James Earle.”

Applied Plastics sought review of the award in circuit court. The circuit court affirmed, and this appeal followed.

*276 Section 102.03(1), Stats., provides in relevant part that liability under the Worker’s Compensation shall exist where the following conditions concur: “ (a) Where the employe sustains an injury”; “(c)l. Where, at the time of the injury, the employe is performing service growing out of and incidental to his employment”; and “(e) Where the accident or disease causing injury arises out of his employment.” Section 102.23(1) (d), Stats., provides that a reviewing court may set aside an order or award of the commission upon the following grounds: (1) the commission acted without or in excess of its powers; (2) the order or award was procured by fraud; (3) the findings of fact by the commission do not support the order or award.

LIRC’s findings of fact are conclusive on appeal so long as they are supported by credible and substantial evidence. Sec. 102.23(6), Stats.; Nottelson v. DILHR, 94 Wis. 2d 106, 114, 287 N.W.2d 763, 767 (1980). The drawing of one of several reasonable inferences from undisputed facts also constitutes fact finding. Vande Zande v. DILHR, 70 Wis. 2d 1086, 1094, 236 N.W.2d 255, 259 (1975). Any legal conclusion drawn by LIRC from its findings of fact, however, is a question of law subject to independent judicial review. Nottelson, 94 Wis. 2d at 114-15, 287 N.W.2d at 767.

When the question on appeal is whether a statutory concept embraces a particular set of factual circumstances, the court is presented with mixed questions of fact and law. See id. at 115, 287 N.W.2d at 767-68. The conduct of the parties presents a question of fact and the meaning of the statute a question of law. Id. The application of the statute to the facts is also a question of law. Id. at 115-16, 287 N.W.2d at 768. However, the application of a statutory concept to a set of facts frequently also calls for a value judgment; and when the *277

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Bluebook (online)
359 N.W.2d 168, 121 Wis. 2d 271, 1984 Wisc. App. LEXIS 4403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/applied-plastics-inc-v-labor-industry-review-commission-wisctapp-1984.