Giles v. Industrial Commission of Utah

692 P.2d 743, 1984 Utah LEXIS 945
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1984
Docket19711
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 692 P.2d 743 (Giles v. Industrial Commission of Utah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giles v. Industrial Commission of Utah, 692 P.2d 743, 1984 Utah LEXIS 945 (Utah 1984).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice:

Billy R. Giles appeals, by a writ of review, an order of the Industrial Commission denying worker’s compensation benefits to him for a detached retina suffered while on the job.

Billy R. Giles had been employed by Safeway Stores, Inc., as a delivery truck driver since 1974. As part of his normal duties, he sometimes helped load his truck. Merchandise was on pallets that were lifted with a pallet jack. Very little manual lifting was required. Unloading of the truck was done by employees of the various stores, although Giles would usually help. Again, unloading was generally done using a power pallet jack.

On September 17, 1982, Giles was delivering bread. The bread was stacked in plastic trays, each loaded tray weighing 25 pounds. On this particular occasion, the bread had been stacked too high to clear the loader door. Giles thus had to move the top trays by hand. After the shortened stacks had been removed from the truck, Giles began to replace the previously removed trays. As he bent over and lifted two trays, small black spots (“floaters”) appeared in the lower left corner of Giles’ left eye. Giles did not inform his employer of the incident since he had been told by his doctor that floaters might occur as a result of eye surgery he had recently undergone.

The next day, September 18, 1982, Giles had backed his truck up to a dock to unload a delivery of milk. He reached down and grasped the latch handle of the truck door to lift it up, jerking hard as he did so. The load, however, had been stacked in such a way that it had tipped against the door and jammed it. Thus, the door did not respond to Giles’ effort. Because of the force Giles exerted to start the door opening, he received a significant jar. At that moment, a large black spot about the size of a dime appeared in the lower left corner of the vision of Giles’ left eye. A power jack later had to be used to raise the door sufficiently for two boys to crawl under and move the milk before the door could be opened.

Giles sought medical attention after completing his immediate responsibilities. Giles’ wife notified his supervisor from the doctor’s office. The doctor, after examining Giles, sent him directly to the hospital where surgery to repair a detached retina was performed on September 20.

Giles had had significant problems with his eyes prior to the September 1982 incidents. In March and August of 1975, Giles *745 had had surgery to remove cataracts from both eyes. In May and September of 1982, he had surgical lens implants in both eyes, being unable to wear bifocals or hard or soft external contact lenses. He returned to work with the permission of his doctor nine days after the September lens implant in his left eye.

Prior to the hearing before the administrative law judge for the Industrial Commission, Giles was examined by Dr. Gary Stanford at Safeway’s request. Stanford concluded that Giles’ retinal detachment was not caused by a work-related accident. Giles was also examined by Dr. H.H. Bartholomew at the request of the administrative law judge. Bartholomew concluded that the incident of September 17 did not cause Giles’ detachment. Bartholomew further concluded that, because Giles had a predisposition to the injury because of retina surgery, the September 18 incident was not the cause of the detachment.

The administrative law judge found that the September 17 incident was not a com-pensable accident. However, she found that, while the injury on September 18 was largely a result of preexisting conditions, it constituted a compensable industrial accident because there was an unexpected occurrence combined with an immediate and identifiable result.

The Industrial Commission granted a motion for review by Safeway and the Second Injury Fund and summarily reversed the judge’s order without hearing, additional discussion, or written findings.

U.C.A., 1953, § 35-1-85 states: “[I]t shall be the duty of the commission to make findings of fact and conclusions of law in writing _” (Emphasis added.) While the Commission is not bound by the findings of the administrative law judge when the evidence is conflicting, 1 the Commission can and often does adopt the findings of the administrative law judge as its own. 2 Where the Commission does not make its own findings, it is presumed that the Commission has adopted the findings of the administrative law judge. 3 In light of the fact that the Commission in this case did not make its own findings of fact and conclusions of law and specifically reversed only the order of the administrative law judge, 4 this Court will presume adoption of the administrative law judge’s findings and look to those for review.

In order for worker’s compensation to be awarded in any given case, an accident must have occurred and there must be a causal connection between the accident and the injury claimed. 5 The mere showing of injury does not mean that a compensable accident has occurred. 6

The meaning of the word “accident” is a question of law. 7 The standard set by the Commission can therefore be reviewed by this Court with no deference to the Commission. 8 However, whether the evidence conforms to the legal meaning is a question of fact. 9 The scope of review with regard to questions of fact has been affirmed repeatedly by this Court:

[T]he reviewing court’s inquiry is whether the Commission’s findings are “arbitrary or capricious,” or “wholly without *746 cause” or contrary to the “one [inevitable] conclusion from the evidence” or without “any substantial evidence” to support them. Only then should the Commission’s findings be displaced. 10

Accident has been defined by this Court as “an unanticipated, unintended occurrence different from what would normally be expected to occur in the usual course of events.” 11

The administrative law judge clearly applied the correct standard of law. She analyzed the incident in terms of normal activity and unexpected occurrences. The question then is whether the evidence in the case conforms to the legal meaning of accident.

The findings of fact of the administrative law judge support her conclusion that the “incident of September 18, 1982 [the jar resulting from the jammed door] constitutes an accident within the contemplation of the Worker’s Compensation Act.” Specifically, she found that:

Although opening the loading doors would certainly be considered a normal activity for a truck driver, the fact that the Applicant did not realize that the door was stuck when he jerked on it, removes the incident from the realm of the expected and normal consequences of such an activity.

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Related

Crosland v. Board of Review of the Industrial Commission
828 P.2d 528 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1992)
Allen v. Industrial Commission
729 P.2d 15 (Utah Supreme Court, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
692 P.2d 743, 1984 Utah LEXIS 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giles-v-industrial-commission-of-utah-utah-1984.