Department Of Labor & Industries v. App./cross-resp. v. Bart A. Rowley, Resp/cross-app.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 22, 2014
Docket71737-5
StatusPublished

This text of Department Of Labor & Industries v. App./cross-resp. v. Bart A. Rowley, Resp/cross-app. (Department Of Labor & Industries v. App./cross-resp. v. Bart A. Rowley, Resp/cross-app.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department Of Labor & Industries v. App./cross-resp. v. Bart A. Rowley, Resp/cross-app., (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES, NO. 71737-5

Appellant, DIVISION ONE

v.

PUBLISHED OPINION BART A. ROWLEY, SR.,

Respondent. FILED: December 22, 2014

Leach, J. — The Department of Labor and Industries (Department)

appeals a trial court decision awarding Bart A. Rowley Sr. industrial insurance

benefits and presents an issue of first impression. We must decide what burden

of proof and standard of proof apply when the Department claims the felony

payment bar of RCW 51.32.020 prevents a worker from receiving benefits for an

injury sustained in the course of employment.

Because courts liberally construe the Industrial Insurance Act, Title 51

RCW, to provide coverage and defer to the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals

(Board) in its area of expertise, we adopt the Board's conclusion that the

Department has the burden of proving the felony payment bar by clear, cogent,

and convincing evidence. But because the trial court erroneously required a NO. 71737-5-1/2

laboratory test to establish a substance as a narcotic, we remand for further

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

Bart Rowley worked as a truck driver for 33 years and spent 6 years

working for Joseph B. Anderson.1 On August 14, 2008, Rowley signed into work

at 7:30 a.m. Later that clear, dry morning, he inexplicably drove his tractor-trailer

truck off an overpass on highway 599. The truck landed on the road below with

the trailer on top of the cab. Paramedics took Rowley to the Harborview Hospital

trauma center.

Kent Police Officer Donevan Dexheimer went to the Harborview Medical

Center emergency room to investigate. Dexheimer, a certified drug recognition

expert, had training to perform a 12-step drug influence evaluation. An

emergency staff member told him about a "surprise" found in Rowley's pocket: a

small plastic "baggie" with smiley faces on it. By the time Dexheimer arrived,

hospital staff had placed Rowley's clothes in the trash. Staff also dumped the

white substance in the baggie in the sink and placed the baggie in the trash. At

Dexheimer's request, a nurse retrieved the baggie from the trash. The baggie

was "in a trash bag, a large trash bag that contained several smaller garbage

1 The employer on Department documents is listed as Craig Mungas Receiver for Jos (Sunset Machinery). Mungas was the court-appointed receiver for Joseph Anderson. -2- NO. 71737-5-1/3

bags that contained Mr. Rowley's clothing." In the baggie, Dexheimer saw

residue of a crystalline substance that from its packaging and appearance

"looked to [him] like methamphetamine."

Dexheimer placed the unconscious Rowley under arrest for DUI (driving

under the influence of an intoxicant). Dexheimer gave another nurse two vials to

hold blood samples, which the nurse took from Rowley in Dexheimer's presence.

Dexheimer labeled the samples and gave the vials and the baggie to Trooper

Nicholas King. King performed a field test on the substance in the baggie and

determined it was likely methamphetamine. Though the blood samples were

sent to the state toxicology lab, the baggie was not. Subsequent toxicology

testing of the blood samples revealed 0.88 milligrams per liter of

methamphetamine.2

Rowley sustained extensive injuries, including a severed spinal cord. He

remained in an induced coma for 40 days following the accident and has no

memory of events from several days before the accident until 40 days afterward.

He remains partially paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair.

In an October 27, 2008, order, the Department rejected Rowley's industrial

injury claim and required repayment of time-loss benefits in the amount of

2 A state toxicologist testified at the administrative hearing that this was a "pretty high level" that would likely cause impairment. -3- NO. 71737-5-1/4

$3,542.88. The order cited RCW 51.32.0203 as the basis for this rejection.

Following Rowley's protest, the Department affirmed its order on January 13,

2009. Rowley appealed to the Board.

On July 8, 2011, an industrial appeals judge (IAJ) reversed the

Department's order, concluding that Rowley's "injury did not result from the

deliberate intention of Mr. Rowley himself while he was engaged in the attempt to

commit, or in the commission of, a felony, within the meaning of RCW

51.32.020." The Department appealed the lAJ's order. On January 30, 2012, in

a split decision, the Board likewise reversed the Department's January 13, 2009,

order, concluding that "Mr. Rowley's industrial injury did not occur while he was

engaged in the attempt to commit, or in the commission of, a felony, within the

meaning of RCW 51.32.020."

The Department appealed to Pierce County Superior Court, which

affirmed the Board's decision on December 7, 2012. The superior court adopted

the Board's legal conclusion that "[t]he Department bore the burden of proving,

by clear, cogent and convincing evidence that Mr. Rowley's injury occurred when

3 RCW 51.32.020 states,

If injury or death results to a worker from the deliberate intention of the worker himself or herself to produce such injury or death, or while the worker is engaged in the attempt to commit, or the commission of, a felony, neither the worker nor the widow, widower, child, or dependent of the worker shall receive any payment under this title. -4- NO. 71737-5-1/5

he was in the commission of a felony, within the meaning of RCW 51.32.020,

which burden the Department did not meet." The court also concluded, "Absent

a confirming laboratory test the Department did not prove the white substance in

the baggie, found in Mr. Rowley's clothes, was methamphetamine." The

Department appeals.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

In workers' compensation cases, this court reviews a superior court

judgment as it does in other civil cases.4 This means that we examine the record

to see if substantial evidence supports the trial court's factual findings and then

review, de novo, whether the trial court's conclusions of law flow from those

findings.5 When the trial court has applied the wrong standard for the sufficiency

of the evidence or burden of proof, this court remands to the trial court for the trial

court to apply the correct standard.6

ANALYSIS

In this case we address three issues in the order identified: (1) what

burden of proof and standard of proof apply when the Department claims the

felony payment bar of RCW 51.32.020, (2) can the Department prove the identity

4 RCW 51.52.140. 5 Rogers v.

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Department Of Labor & Industries v. App./cross-resp. v. Bart A. Rowley, Resp/cross-app., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-labor-industries-v-appcross-resp-v-bart-a-rowley-washctapp-2014.