Galien v. Wis. Emp't Relations Comm'n

2018 WI App 66, 921 N.W.2d 519, 384 Wis. 2d 413
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 5, 2018
DocketAppeal No. 2017AP790
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 WI App 66 (Galien v. Wis. Emp't Relations Comm'n) 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
Galien v. Wis. Emp't Relations Comm'n, 2018 WI App 66, 921 N.W.2d 519, 384 Wis. 2d 413 (Wis. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

BRENNAN, J.

¶1 Shari Vander Galien, who was employed as a correctional sergeant by the Department of Corrections (DOC) until April 17, 2015, appeals an order that affirmed a decision by the Wisconsin Employment Relations Commission (WERC) denying Vander Galien's claim for additional hazardous duty pay for periods of time after she returned to work from a December 2011 work injury. Following the injury, which resulted when a prisoner collided with her while coming around a corner, DOC paid Vander Galien hazardous duty pay for about three months, ending April 4, 2012.1 After a doctor cleared her to return to work without restrictions, Vander Galien requested hazardous duty pay for: (1) 271.25 hours used for medical appointments and absences from work between April 4, 2012, and November 15, 2014; and (2) daily absences for a five-month period beginning November 17, 2014, when she notified DOC that she could no longer work at all and stopped reporting to work.2 DOC denied the hazardous duty pay she sought for those absences.

¶2 Vander Galien appealed and WERC rejected her appeal and dismissed her claim. WERC concluded that she was ineligible for hazardous duty pay for any of the requested time.

¶3 Vander Galien had argued that she was entitled to the benefit for the 271.25 hours because the injury was a cause of the appointments and absences from work, but WERC made a factual finding that "[t]he medical appointments and absences were not directly related to the work injury" she suffered. She had argued that she was entitled to the benefit for the five months beginning November 17, 2014, because the injury made her unable to perform her duties, but WERC made a factual finding that she was "physically able to perform the duties of correctional sergeant from November of 2014 through her termination of employment in April of 2015." Pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 227.52(7), she sought judicial review of the decision, and the trial court affirmed.

¶4 Vander Galien has the burden of showing that the factual findings on which the agency's conclusions are based are not supported by substantial evidence in the record or that the agency erroneously interpreted a provision of law. See WIS. STAT. § 227.57(5) and (6). She has not satisfied that burden. We therefore affirm because we find no ground for setting aside the agency's action under any of the provisions of WIS. STAT. ch. 227. See § 227.57(2).

BACKGROUND

The 2011 application for WIS. STAT. § 230.36 benefits.

¶5 On the morning of December 16, 2011, Vander Galien was in the prison kitchen area, speaking to a colleague, when an inmate who worked in the serving area rounded a corner and collided with her. The parties stipulated that the injury occurred "as the result of an act of an inmate colliding with Vander Galien while they both were walking." WERC's decision notes that "she remained at work on the day in question and completed her shift." The parties stipulated, however, that Vander Galien was "unable to physically perform the duties of her position and was placed on a leave of absence" for the eleven days following the incident.

¶6 A colleague who witnessed the incident from ten feet away told an investigating officer in a January interview that Vander Galien was not knocked down, that the collision caused Vander Galien's radio's microphone to fall off of her uniform, and that she had then asked the inmate "if he was okay." When asked if the inmate was moving at a normal rate of speed when he collided with her, the witness replied that the inmate "was moving fast but [Vander Galien] had her stuff and was moving along too." He also stated that the inmate was permitted to be in the area at the time.

¶7 A second colleague who was four feet away when the incident happened told the investigator that he had been talking to Vander Galien just before the collision, that she had been looking at him, had just said "see ya," and then "just as she turned, they collided." He also recalled that she had asked if the inmate was okay and that at the time of the collision, both Vander Galien and the inmate "were both moving at a brisk pace." He recalled that the inmate, who he said was authorized to be in the kitchen area, "kind of stepped back and looked at [Vander Galien] as if to say why did you run into me."

¶8 In Vander Galien's December 30, 2011 interview about the incident, she said she was not walking but had stopped to speak to another guard. She said, that she "didn't fall but there was immediate pain" and that she did not remember much "because it was so forceful like a wall stun." She described it as "like getting hit by a football player." When asked if she called for assistance, she replied that two colleagues "were right there" and that one of them "asked if I was okay." She said that the inmate had no reason to be in the area and that she believed the collision was "retaliation" for a conduct report the inmate had received five months earlier. In the incident report Vander Galien submitted on December 16, 2011, she described the collision as follows:

As I was walking towards the front of the servery I turned my head to the left to say hi to [Correctional Officer] D. Knollenberg. I suddenly felt a sharp pain to my lower neck and lower back area, this was a result of [an inmate] walking right into me. [The inmate] walked into me so hard dislodging my radio. It is my belief that [the inmate] had ample time to stop his progress and not run in to me.

¶9 On December 20, 2011, Vander Galien submitted an application for hazardous duty pay related to the December 16 incident, and DOC ultimately found Vander Galien was eligible from the date of the injury through April 4, 2012.

¶10 Thereafter, Vander Galien continued working as a correctional sergeant from April 2012 through November 2014. She sought medical treatment for a neck and back condition and for recurring anxiety. Over that period she was treated for those conditions by a chiropractor, physical therapist, physiatrist, psychologist, and psychiatrist.

The 2014 application for WIS. STAT. § 230.36 benefits.

¶11 On November 18, 2014, Vander Galien submitted her second application for hazardous duty pay, attaching duty disability reports from two mental health professionals, Dr. Brad Grunert, a psychologist, and Dr. Victoria Passov, a psychiatrist. Both reports stated that Vander Galien suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and a panic disorder resulting from the December 2011 injury and that these conditions prevented her from further work with inmates. Dr. Grunert stated that, due to the incident on December 16, 2011, Vander Galien's "work ability" had been "seriously compromised." Dr. Passov noted that Vander Galien would "not be able to work at a correctional facility because of her trauma."

¶12 DOC denied the request on the grounds that the claimed injury was a "[n]on physical injury" and the denial form contained the following notation: "Reached physical end of healing. Has PTSD due to incident in 2011."

¶13 Vander Galien then submitted an additional duty disability report, authored by a physiatrist, Dr. Douglas Hendricks, opining that the December 2011 injury probably directly caused her "significant right low back pain radiating to right hip and thigh" and resulted in permanent disability. Vander Galien later provided a second recommendation from Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 WI App 66, 921 N.W.2d 519, 384 Wis. 2d 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galien-v-wis-empt-relations-commn-wisctapp-2018.