Kentucky Employers' Mutual Insurance v. Clas Coal Co., Inc.

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 2025
Docket2024-SC-0571
StatusPublished

This text of Kentucky Employers' Mutual Insurance v. Clas Coal Co., Inc. (Kentucky Employers' Mutual Insurance v. Clas Coal Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Employers' Mutual Insurance v. Clas Coal Co., Inc., (Ky. 2025).

Opinion

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

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Kentucky Employers' Mutual Insurance v. Clas Coal Co., Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-employers-mutual-insurance-v-clas-coal-co-inc-ky-2025.