Griffin v. SAIF Corp.

151 P.3d 165, 210 Or. App. 469, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 24, 2007
Docket0403854; A128985
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 151 P.3d 165 (Griffin v. SAIF Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffin v. SAIF Corp., 151 P.3d 165, 210 Or. App. 469, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 118 (Or. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*471 BREWER, Co Jo

Claimant seeks review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Board that affirmed an administrative law judge’s (ALJ) determination that claimant did not suffer a compensable injury. The issue is whether claimant’s injury arose out of and in the course of his employment. We affirm.

We take the facts as found by the ALJ and adopted, with supplementation, by the board. Employer is a grinding company that grinds steel plates and fixtures and occasionally grinds eight- to nine-foot-long industrial knives. Employer’s work facility consists of two buildings — an office located in a house and a shop located across the driveway from the house. The owner, Rasmussen, and the longtime office manager, Armstrong, have offices in the house. The grinding is performed in the shop.

Claimant, a part-time employee, ultimately wanted to become a sword and knife maker. Claimant described “knife-grinding” as an “experiment for me for my own educational purposes” and “a personal project” done in his “spare time.” Employer permitted claimant to use its shop and grinding equipment to work on knives and swords when he was not otherwise working. Claimant had access to all the shop equipment and worked on personal items during lunch breaks and his days off. Claimant kept some of those personal items at the shop.

Claimant’s job duties included receiving deliveries of steel. Employer received deliveries of various weights and sizes. The larger deliveries were off-loaded by a crane operated by Rasmussen, a grinder, or a helper. Although there was a sign posted outside indicating that no deliveries were accepted during the lunch hour, deliveries were occasionally made during that time.

On May 19, 2004, claimant was not scheduled to work, and he received no wages that day. Claimant called employer that morning and received permission to grind a butcher knife that he had purchased the previous weekend. Employer did not grind that kind of knife as part of its business. Claimant came into the shop and began working on his *472 knife. Later in the morning, Rasmussen told claimant that he was leaving for lunch and that a steel delivery might arrive while he was gone. Rasmussen asked claimant if he would mind unloading the shipment if it arrived while Rasmussen was at lunch. Rasmussen told claimant to call him on his cell phone if claimant decided to leave while Rasmussen was still at lunch. Claimant agreed. Rasmussen commented, “I’m sorry to have you work on your day off.”

When Rasmussen left for lunch, claimant was sanding the butcher knife. When claimant completed work on the butcher knife, he began working on a second knife of his own that he had stored at the shop. Claimant set up a hand grinder and began grinding that knife. After claimant had been grinding for about 15 minutes, the knife broke, launching a piece of the blade through claimant’s safety glasses and into claimant’s eye, rupturing the globe.

Claimant ran into the office and Armstrong called for emergency assistance. While paramedics were tending to claimant, Armstrong overheard one of the paramedics ask claimant, “Do you work here?” Claimant answered, “Yes, but I’m on my own time.”

SAIF denied claimant’s injury claim. After an evi-dentiary hearing, an ALJ found that claimant had met his burden to show that the injury arose out of his employment, although she opined that the work connection was “weak.” However, the ALJ upheld SAIF’s denial on the ground that claimant’s injury did not occur in the course of employment. The board affirmed the ALJ’s decision but held that claimant’s injuries neither arose out of nor in the course of his employment.

On review, claimant argues that his injuries arose out of and in the course of his employment. He asserts that the circumstances of his injury satisfied, at least to some degree, each prong of the governing test and, therefore, the relationship between his injury and his employment was sufficient to justify compensation. Employer replies that “personal factors” produced claimant’s injury and that the additional circumstances that the injury occurred in the work place while claimant was permissively using employer’s *473 equipment did not make the injury sufficiently related to claimant’s employment to warrant compensation. 1

Because the pertinent facts are undisputed, we review the question whether claimant’s injury was sufficiently connected to work to be compensable as one of law. American Medical Response v. Gavlik, 189 Or App 294, 298-99, 76 P3d 117 (2003), rev den, 336 Or 376 (2004). In order for an injury to be compensable under the workers’ compensation law, it must “aris[e] out of’ and “in the course of employment.” ORS 656.005(7)(a). We view the two prongs of that compensability test as two parts of a unitary “work connection” inquiry that asks whether the relationship between the injury and the employment has a sufficient nexus so that the injury should be deemed compensable. Fred Meyer, Inc. v. Hayes, 325 Or 592, 596, 943 P2d 197 (1997). The requirement that the injury occur “in the course of’ the employment relates to the time, place, and circumstances of the injury. Krushwitz v. McDonald’s Restaurants, 323 Or 520, 526, 919 P2d 465 (1996). The “arising out of’ prong tests the causal link between the worker’s injury and his or her employment. Id. at 525-26. Both prongs must be satisfied to some degree, but neither is dispositive. Fred Meyer, Inc., 325 Or at 596. The work-connection test may be satisfied if the factors supporting one prong of the statutory test are weak while factors supporting the other prong are strong. Id. at 596-97.

We first address the issue of whether claimant’s injury “arose out of’ his employment. “[A] worker’s injury is deemed to ‘arise out of employment if the risk of the injury results from the nature of his or her work or when it originates from some risk to which the work environment exposes the worker.” Id. at 601.

As to the “arising out of’ prong, the board said:

“[C]laimant’s injury did not arise out of his employment. An injury is deemed to arise out of employment if the risk of the injury results from the nature of his or her work, or when it originates from some risk to which the work environment *474 exposes the worker. We acknowledge claimant’s argument that being struck in the face with metal is an inherent workplace risk when grinding metal. The employer did not grind butcher knives; claimant did not grind butcher knives as part of his employment. As such, the record does not establish that being struck with a broken butcher knife blade was a workplace risk in a shop that did not, as part of its business, grind butcher knives.”

(Internal citation and quotation marks omitted.)

Claimant asserts that, because he was on the employer’s premises and permissively using its equipment when he was injured, the injury arose out of his employment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 P.3d 165, 210 Or. App. 469, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-saif-corp-orctapp-2007.