RENDERED: OCTOBER 23, 2025 TO BE PUBLISHED
Supreme Court of Kentucky 2024-SC-0571-WC
KENTUCKY EMPLOYERS' MUTUAL APPELLANT INSURANCE
ON APPEAL FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. NO. 2024-CA-0552 WORKERS' COMPENSATION BOARD NO. WC-21-01628
CLAS COAL CO., INC.; HONORABLE APPELLEES TONYA CLEMONS, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE; TROY STIDHAM; AND WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE KELLER
AFFIRMING
Kentucky Employers’ Mutual Insurance (“KEMI”) appeals the decision by
the Kentucky Court of Appeals (“Court of Appeals”) upholding the Workers’
Compensation Board’s (“Board”) finding that Kentucky has jurisdiction over a
claim by Appellee Troy Stidham (“Stidham”) for work-related hearing loss.
While Stidham had been exposed to loud noise working for Clas Coal Company,
Inc. (“Clas Coal”) for over sixteen years in Kentucky, his final nine months of
loud noise exposure came while working in Alabama. For the reasons set out
below, we affirm the decision by the Court of Appeals which affirmed the
Board’s decision to uphold the ALJ’s finding that the injury occurred on January 1, 2020, that the injury occurred in Kentucky, and that Kentucky
therefore has jurisdiction over Stidham’s claim.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Between September 1, 2003, and February 3, 2020, KEMI had issued a
workers’ compensation insurance policy to Clas Coal. During this same time
frame, Stidham was employed by Clas Coal for sixteen years and one month.
In the course of employment with Clas Coal, he worked in a coal mine in Pike
County, Kentucky, up until the time that mine closed. His last day working in
Kentucky was January 1, 2020. Following the Kentucky mine closure,
Stidham continued to work for Clas Coal but had to relocate his work to
Alabama. He worked in Alabama for a total of nine months before his
retirement from the workforce on October 31, 2020. In both Kentucky and
Alabama, Stidham worked mostly as a shuttle car operator, during which time
he was constantly exposed to continuous loud noise from the conveyor belt.
Despite using hearing protection every day at work, Stidham began
noticing problems with his hearing around 2018 or 2019. He noticed hearing
difficulties the most when other people were talking. On August 31, 2021, Dr.
Robert Manning, an audiologist in Kentucky, first diagnosed Stidham with
hearing loss. Dr. Manning assessed an eight percent whole person impairment
to Stidham from hearing loss consistent with long-term exposure to loud noise.
Prior to this date, Stidham had never been treated for hearing loss.
On November 11, 2021, Stidham filed workers’ compensation claims
against Clas Coal for hearing loss and coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, listing his
2 date of last exposure as January 1, 2020, the date he last worked in Kentucky.
KEMI objected to Stidham’s claims, arguing in part that Stidham’s date of last
exposure was October 31, 2020, the date that he retired in Alabama.
Stidham was seen by Dr. Brittany Brose, Au.D., a clinical audiologist and
the University Evaluator, on February 10, 2022. Dr. Brose diagnosed Stidham
with hearing loss greater than typical for his age and opined that the loss
stemmed from work-related repetitive exposure to hazardous noise over an
extended period of time. Dr. Brose assessed a nine percent whole person
impairment rating. Dr. Brose later testified at a deposition that she would not
expect that level of impairment to result from seven months in an underground
coal mine but instead expected it to be caused from much longer exposure.
Dr. Daniel Shumaier evaluated Stidham at the request of Clas Coal on
March 28, 2022. Dr. Shumaier assessed a five percent whole person
impairment rating stemming from hearing loss due to his long-term exposure
from mining.
A hearing was held before an ALJ on August 22, 2023. The ALJ issued
its Opinion, Award, and Order on October 19, 2023, dismissing Stidham’s coal
workers’ pneumoconiosis claim but granting Stidham’s hearing loss claim
based on a nine percent whole person impairment rating. The ALJ found that
Kentucky had jurisdiction over Stidham’s hearing loss claim, accepting
Stidham’s contention that January 1, 2020, the last day that Stidham worked
for Clas Coal in Kentucky, was the date of injury. The ALJ noted that
Kentucky Revised Statute (“KRS”) 342.7305(4) “creates a rebuttable
3 presumption that the employer with whom the employee was last injuriously
exposed to the hazardous noise for a minimum duration of one year shall be
exclusively liable for benefits” and found that “[w]hile Stidham may have
worked for Defendant Clas [Coal] for nine months in Alabama, there is no
evidence to contradict the fact Defendant Clas [Coal] in Kentucky was the last
employer for whom Stidham was last injuriously exposed to the hazard for a
minimum duration of one year.” Because the ALJ found that Stidham worked
for a Kentucky employer when his hearing loss statutorily manifested,
Kentucky’s extraterritorial jurisdiction under KRS 342.670 was inapplicable to
the facts at hand.
Both parties moved for reconsideration. In denying these motions, the
ALJ explained that she found testimony from Dr. Brose that Stidham’s noise
induced hearing loss “came from a much longer period than approximately
seven months of exposure,” and that the “seven-to-nine month period Stidham
was allegedly exposed to noise in the workplace after January 1, 2020, was
inconsequential,” persuasive.
KEMI appealed the ALJ’s orders finding KEMI liable for Stidham’s
hearing loss to the Board, arguing that Kentucky lacked jurisdiction over
Stidham’s hearing loss claim because Stidham’s last injurious or hazardous
exposure to noise was in Alabama. The Board affirmed the ALJ’s October 19,
2023, Opinion, Award and Order and November 20, 2023, Order on Petition for
Reconsideration, explaining that KRS 342.670, the statute guiding
extraterritorial coverage, does not apply to Stidham’s claims of hearing loss
4 incurred while working in Kentucky. The Board further noted that “[w]ork-
related noise-induced hearing loss is a form of cumulative trauma injury as
defined by [KRS 342.0011(1)],” and “the start date for liability” may be “[t]he
date symptoms or disability arise.” Relying on the medical experts’ opinions
that the hearing loss occurred from repeated exposure to loud noise over a long
period of time and Stidham’s testimony that his symptoms began four or five
years prior to his hearing in August 2023, the Board found that “the ALJ was
entitled to reach the reasonable inference that as of January 1, 2020, the
hearing loss is compensable.” The Board highlighted that “[n]o physician has
stated the short duration of work in Alabama caused a worsening of his
condition.” The Board further stated, “The 2018 law amendment to KRS
342.7305(4) imposed a one-year working requirement with an employer before
that employer could be exclusively liable to pay benefits,” and noted that any
case law issued before the 2018 amendment was irrelevant because the statute
specifically addressed the scenario at hand. The Board concluded, “KEMI was
the insurer for Clas on the date of loss as found by the ALJ, hence, it is the
carrier at risk. The ALJ found that Stidham had a compensable hearing loss
claim when he last worked in Kentucky and substantial evidence supports that
finding.”
KEMI appealed to the Court of Appeals, arguing that Kentucky
jurisdiction over Stidham’s occupational hearing loss claim is improper and
that his injury date was on October 31, 2020, Stidham’s last date of
employment in Alabama. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Board’s decision,
5 explicitly finding that extraterritorial coverage pursuant to KRS 342.670 was
inapplicable here because Stidham worked for a Kentucky company when his
cumulative hearing loss injury manifested. The Court of Appeals held that the
Board did not commit reversible error by accepting the ALJ’s finding that the
injury manifested on January 1, 2020, in light of the language in KRS
342.7305(4) and expert testimony that Stidham’s exposure to hazardous noise
in Alabama was “inconsequential” to Stidham’s pattern and level of hearing
loss. The Court of Appeals further held that the date of diagnosis does not
necessarily equal the date the injury became manifest, and the fact that
Stidham had not been diagnosed until after working in Alabama does not mean
that his injury was not manifest prior to working in Alabama. This appeal
followed.
Further facts will be developed below as necessary.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Court of Appeals conducts a review of the Board’s findings with the
purpose of “correct[ing] the Board only where the Court perceives the Board
has overlooked or misconstrued controlling statutes or precedent, or committed
an error in assessing the evidence so flagrant as to cause gross injustice.” W.
Baptist Hosp. v. Kelly, 827 S.W.2d 685, 687–88 (Ky. 1992). Further review by
this Court of the decisions by the Court of Appeals and the Board is meant “to
address new or novel questions of statutory construction, or to reconsider
precedent when such appears necessary, or to review a question of
constitutional magnitude.” Id. at 688.
6 As to questions of fact, “the ALJ, not this Court and not the Board, has
sole discretion to determine the quality, character, and substance of the
evidence.” Abbott Lab’ys v. Smith, 205 S.W.3d 249, 253 (Ky. App. 2006).
However, “we are bound neither by an ALJ’s decisions on questions of law or
an ALJ’s interpretation and application of the law to the facts. In either case,
our standard of review is de novo.” Bowerman v. Black Equip. Co., 297 S.W.3d
858, 866 (Ky. App. 2009). The manifestation date of an injury as it relates to a
worker’s compensation claim is a question of fact to be decided by the ALJ.
Ford Motor Co. v. Duckworth, 615 S.W.3d 26, 33 (Ky. 2021).
III. ANALYSIS
On appeal to this Court, the parties do not dispute that Stidham’s
hearing loss came from long-term exposure to noise encountered in his
employment with Clas Coal. Instead, the parties dispute when the
manifestation date of Stidham’s injuries occurred for the purposes of
determining whether KEMI was the carrier on the risk at the time of injury and,
relatedly, whether Kentucky had jurisdiction over Stidham’s claims. Generally,
Kentucky has jurisdiction over injuries which happen inside its borders. See
KRS 342.670 (extending jurisdiction to injuries which occur beyond Kentucky’s
borders in certain situations). To determine jurisdiction over a workers’
compensation claim, we must first determine when the injury occurred, and
then where the injury occurred.
KEMI contends that the date of injury was either the date of last
exposure to hazardous noise (i.e., October 31, 2020) or the date Stidham was
7 first diagnosed with hearing loss (i.e., August 31, 2021), while Stidham asserts
that his date of injury was the date he was last injuriously exposed to
hazardous noise in Kentucky at a mine operated by Clas Coal (i.e., January 1,
2020).
KEMI argues that jurisdiction over hearing loss claims is determined by
the date of last exposure to hazardous noise. In support, KEMI cites to Hale v.
CDR Operations, Inc., 474 S.W.3d 129, 138 (Ky. 2015), for Hale’s proposition
that “in hearing loss and occupational disease claims—which are quite similar
in nature to cumulative trauma because they occur gradually over time—the
employer at the time of the last injurious or hazardous exposure is liable.”
However, the statutory basis for which Hale relies in making this proposition
has since been amended in a material way, limiting Hale’s applicability to the
facts at hand. In support of the above quoted statement, Hale cited KRS
342.7305(4), which at the time read:
When audiograms and other testing reveal a pattern of hearing loss compatible with that caused by hazardous noise exposure and the employee demonstrates repetitive exposure to hazardous noise in the workplace, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that the hearing impairment is an injury covered by this chapter, and the employer with whom the employee was last injuriously exposed to hazardous noise shall be exclusively liable for benefits.
KRS 342.7305(4) was amended in July 2018 to add the following bolded
language:
When audiograms and other testing reveal a pattern of hearing loss compatible with that caused by hazardous noise exposure and the employee demonstrates repetitive exposure to hazardous noise in the workplace, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that the hearing impairment is an injury covered by this chapter, and the
8 employer with whom the employee was last injuriously exposed to hazardous noise for a minimum duration of one (1) year of employment shall be exclusively liable for benefits.
(emphasis added). This language undeniably alters Hale’s holding that “the
employer at the time of the last injurious or hazardous exposure is liable,”
Hale, 474 S.W.3d at 138, and instead replaces it with a rebuttable
presumption that the last employer with whom a hearing loss claimant had
been employed for at least a year while being exposed to hazardous noise shall
be liable. This is a clear directive guiding when the hearing loss injury is
statutorily deemed to occur for liability purposes. Therefore, authority relying
on the previous version of KRS 342.7305(4) or issued before the July 2018
amendment is of limited guidance. Nevertheless, what we can still glean from
Hale is that KRS 342.7305(4)’s language instructs us on when we are to find
that an injury has occurred for liability purposes, even if the specific guidance
has changed. In 2015, when Hale was written, we took the language of KRS
342.7305(4) to mean that an injury has occurred on the date of the last
exposure. With the updated language of KRS 342.7305(4), we now add the
requirement that the employee be injuriously exposed for a year while under
the same employer before finding that employer liable.
KEMI asserts that the amendments to KRS 342.7305(4) are merely for
determining liability between multiple employers, but that the statute does not
affect jurisdiction because it does not determine when injury occurs.
Ironically, authority KEMI cites to support this assertion — Hale, 474 S.W.3d
at 138 — relies on the predecessor version of KRS 342.7305(4) for finding that
9 injury occurred at last exposure. Amendments to KRS 342.7305(4) make the
basis for this proposition obsolete.
As the Board pointed out in its Opinion Affirming the ALJ,
The 2018 law amendment to KRS 342.7305(4) imposed a one-year working requirement with an employer before that employer could be exclusively liable to pay benefits. To disregard the wording and intent of this law because Stidham was transferred out-of-state and worked for a short period of time is illogical. We note Clas [Coal] would be liable if Stidham switched employers within the state but ceased working within one year. This would be true even if he continued to be repetitively exposed to injurious workplace noise at the new employer. Hence, the thrust of [Clas Coal’s] argument regarding the manifestation date would not shield them in that scenario. .... The parties stipulated Stidham worked in Alabama for just nine months. Clas [Coal] was the employer when Stidham worked the previous 16 years in Kentucky and then in Alabama for nine months. Therefore, any other employer that Stidham would have begun employment with in 2020 could not be held liable for hearing loss since he retired within one year. The fact that Stidham remained employed by Clas [Coal], a Virginia company no longer principally localized in Kentucky, does not shield them from liability, as Stidham had a compensable claim when he last worked in Kentucky.
We agree. “The ALJ, as the finder of fact, and not the reviewing court, has the
sole authority to determine the quality, character, and substance of the
evidence.” Square D Co. v. Tipton, 862 S.W.2d 308, 309 (Ky. 1993) (citing
Paramount Foods, Inc. v. Burkhardt, 695 S.W.2d 418 (Ky. 1985)). To overturn
the factual findings of the ALJ, a reviewing court must find that the ALJ’s
findings are not supported by substantial evidence. Wolf Creek Collieries v.
Crum, 673 S.W.2d 735, 736 (Ky. App. 1984). Here, the ALJ weighed the
evidence and determined that Stidham was injured as of January 1, 2020. The
ALJ reached this conclusion by considering testimony from Stidham regarding 10 his onset of symptoms, testimony from physicians that his pattern of hearing
loss was a result of long-term exposure to noise, testimony from Dr. Brose that
the short time that Stidham worked in Alabama was inconsequential to his
hearing loss, and the lack of testimony from a physician stating that Stidham’s
time in Alabama caused his hearing loss to worsen. Here, the ALJ’s findings
are supported by substantial evidence in the record, and we must therefore
uphold the Court of Appeal’s decision affirming the Board’s decision which
upheld the ALJ’s finding that Stidham was injured on January 1, 2020.
KEMI’s contention that the Court of Appeals applied the injury date of January
1, 2020, solely because it was the date Stidham selected on his application for
benefits, overlooks the great weight of the evidence supporting such a finding.
Nevertheless, KEMI argues that KRS 342.670 and Hicks v. Kentucky
Employers’ Mutual Insurance Co., 686 S.W.3d 215 (Ky. 2024), are controlling,
and that extraterritorial coverage must be satisfied before Kentucky can
exercise jurisdiction over Stidham’s claims. KRS 342.670, the statute guiding
extraterritorial coverage, guides instances in which Kentucky can retain
jurisdiction although the injury occurred in a different state. Simply put, as
discussed above, KRS 342.7305(4) guides us to affirm the ALJ’s finding that
the injury occurred in Kentucky, so extraterritorial coverage under KRS
342.670 is inapplicable. See Amax Coal Co. v. Smith, 748 S.W.2d 158, 160 (Ky.
App. 1988) (“KRS 342.670(1) refers to the nature and location and the work at
the time of such injury. . . . For Kentucky’s extraterritorial coverage law to
apply to an injury, the injury must occur outside of Kentucky to a Kentucky
11 resident who principally works in Kentucky at the time of the ‘injury.’”); Coal
Dust Coal Co. v. Stiltner, 905 S.W.2d 859, 861 (Ky. 1995) (holding that
disabilities “proven to have existed” prior to leaving employment in Kentucky
do not implicate KRS 342.670). 1
Hicks, a case holding that extraterritorial coverage did not apply to
injuries sustained in West Virginia, is likewise distinguishable from the facts at
hand because, again, the injury occurred in a different state. 686 S.W.3d at
218. Hicks worked in Kentucky from 1996 until August 2017, at which time
he continued to work for the same company but in West Virginia. Id. Hicks
worked in West Virginia until he was acutely injured in West Virginia on
January 10, 2019. Id. While Hicks included a claim for cumulative hearing
loss, the parties agreed that Hicks was injured in West Virginia, and this was
never debated. Id. at 221. Instead, the principal issue was whether Hicks’
employment was “principally localized” in Kentucky so as to place him under
the purview of the extraterritorial statute. Id. That is a separate issue than the
1 KEMI takes issue with the Court of Appeal’s usage of Stiltner, claiming that
the fact that Stiltner was diagnosed prior to starting his job in another state and that Stiltner switched employers somehow differentiates Stiltner from the case at hand. While Stidham was not diagnosed until after his employment in Alabama ended, the ALJ found, based on medical testimony, that the weight of the evidence proved that Stidham’s injury manifested during his Kentucky employment. No medical testimony refutes that finding. Stiltner differentiated between injuries which occurred outside of Kentucky and “disabilit[ies] proven to have existed at the time [the claimant] left [the Kentucky company]'s employ.” 905 S.W.2d at 861. This language does not require a diagnosis be made prior to employment elsewhere. The fact that Stiltner switched employers was also inconsequential to determining where the injury occurred and is only relevant insofar as it is meaningful in determining whether a company is “principally localized” in Kentucky, a quandary not at issue here.
12 one before us, where the injuries occurred in Kentucky. Hicks is therefore of
little guidance to the case at hand.
We will now address KEMI’s other assertions. While KEMI is correct in its
statement that “[j]urisdiction is a threshold issue that must be resolved before
assessing compensability,” Kentucky has jurisdiction here because the injury
occurred here. See Letcher Cty. Bd. of Educ. v. Hall, 671 S.W.3d 374, 379 (Ky.
2023). Thus, an analysis of compensability is not premature. Cases such as
Amax Coal Co., 748 S.W.2d 158, and Eck Miller Transportation Corp. v. Wagers,
833 S.W.2d 854 (Ky. App. 1992), which do not address hearing loss claims,
provide limited instruction to us on when a hearing loss injury occurs because
the timing of hearing loss injuries for liability purposes is guided by its own
statute, KRS 342.7305(4). These cases are further distinguishable because
Amax Coal Co., 748 S.W.2d 158, concerned a factual situation in which
evidence of disability did not manifest until after the claimant started working
in another state (whereas here, Stidham experienced hearing loss symptoms
prior to working in Alabama), and Wagers, 833 S.W.2d 854, dealt with an acute
injury in another state. In both cases, there was no evidence that the injury
had manifested in Kentucky. Stidham’s arguments relating to whether
Stidham’s employment was principally localized in Kentucky are also irrelevant
because they mistakenly assume that the time of injury was when Stidham
was working in Alabama, not when he was working in Kentucky. Contrary to
KEMI’s assertions, Alcon Foil Products v. Huff, 2 S.W.3d 96, 101 (Ky. 1999),
does not address when a cumulative injury manifests in relation to when a
13 worker is diagnosed but rather, it discusses when discovery of the injury has
occurred for purposes of the statute of limitations. The date a claimant is
deemed to have notice and the clock begins to run for statute of limitation
purposes is distinct from the date of injury for liability purposes. 2 Compare
Duckworth, 615 S.W.3d at 32 (“[F]or cumulative trauma injuries, the obligation
to provide notice arises and the statute of limitations does not begin to run
until a claimant is advised by a physician that he has a work-related
condition.”), with Am. Printing House for the Blind v. Brown, 142 S.W.3d 145,
148 (Ky. 2004) (declining the invitation to find that the date of injury is the
same for notice and liability purposes and instead holding that injury occurred
for liability purposes when claimant first developed symptoms). While KEMI
cites to Brown for its correct assertion that symptoms alone, without a
diagnosis, are not enough to establish a work-related cumulative trauma
injury, the same case also makes clear that KEMI goes too far in claiming that
the date of manifestation does not occur until the date of diagnosis. 142
S.W.3d at 148–49 (holding that the injury manifested when claimant initially
reported symptoms to her employer even though this was prior to a diagnosis
by the physician).
It is important to note that, contrary to what the Court of Appeals implies
in their Opinion, KRS 342.7305(4) merely creates a rebuttable presumption
2 KEMI’s use of Special Fund v. Clark, 998 S.W.2d 487 (Ky. 1999), also conflated
the date the claimant was on notice for limitation purposes with the manifestation date of the injury for liability purposes.
14 that “the employer with whom the employee was last injuriously exposed to
hazardous noise for a minimum duration of one (1) year of employment shall be
exclusively liable for benefits.” This means that, should the weight of the
evidence dictate otherwise, the ALJ may determine that liability falls with an
employer other than the last employer with whom the claimant was employed
while being injuriously exposed to hazardous noise. This was not the case
here. KRS 342.7305(4)’s one-year exposure rule created a rebuttable
presumption that the injury occurred while working for Clas Coal in Kentucky,
and the factual weight of the evidence not only fails to overcome this
presumption but, in fact, provides additional support for upholding the ALJ’s
finding that the injury manifested in Kentucky.
Lastly, what constitutes as an injurious exposure is not changed by the
amendments to KRS 342.7305(4), which merely added that the injurious
exposure should be “for a minimum duration of one (1) year of employment”
before the statutory presumption is triggered. KRS 342.0011(4) defines
“injurious exposure” as “exposure to occupational hazard which would,
independently of any other cause whatsoever, produce or cause the disease for
which the claim is made.” To the extent that Greg's Construction v. Keeton, 385
S.W.3d 420, 425 (Ky. 2012), interprets “injurious exposure,” the statutory
amendments did not alter those holdings. In Keeton we said, “the final clause
of KRS 342.7305(4) does not require a worker to prove that the last
employment caused a measurable hearing loss. It refers to the type of
exposure to hazardous noise that would result in a hearing loss if continued
15 indefinitely.” However, this was before the statutory amendment added the
one-year durational language. What we are left with now after the amendment
is that, before the presumption is triggered, the worker was exposed to
hazardous noise that would result in a hearing loss if continued indefinitely for
a minimum of one year employment. KEMI makes a logical fallacy when it
asserts that “under Keeton, the relevant question is whether the worker’s last
exposure, regardless of its length, meets the statutory definition of ‘injurious
exposure.’” The only way to overcome the statutory presumption in KRS
342.7305(4) is to find that the injury, not an injurious exposure, actually
occurred at a different point in time than that which is statutorily presumed.
That was not the case here.
IV. CONCLUSION
In sum, the ALJ found that Stidham’s hearing loss injury occurred on
January 1, 2020. This finding was supported by substantial evidence, and the
Court of Appeals was correct in affirming the Board’s decision upholding the
ALJ. Because Stidham’s injury occurred while he was employed by Clas Coal
in Kentucky, Kentucky has jurisdiction over Stidham’s hearing loss claim.
Because KEMI was the insurer for Clas Coal on January 1, 2020, it is the
carrier at risk on Stidham’s hearing loss claim. Thus, for slightly different
reasoning, we affirm the Court of Appeals.
All sitting. All concur.
16 COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT, KEMI:
Barry Lewis Lewis & Lewis Law Offices
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE, CLAS COAL CO., INC.:
Edward Lee Jones
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE, TROY STIDHAM:
Ronnie Merel Slone
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE:
Hon. Tonya Clemons
WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD:
Michael Wayne Alvey, Chairman