Maral Annayeva, Claimant/Appellant v. SAB of the TSD of the City of St. Louis, Employer/Respondent, and Treasurer of Missouri as Custodian of the Second Injury Fund

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 30, 2019
DocketED107558
StatusPublished

This text of Maral Annayeva, Claimant/Appellant v. SAB of the TSD of the City of St. Louis, Employer/Respondent, and Treasurer of Missouri as Custodian of the Second Injury Fund (Maral Annayeva, Claimant/Appellant v. SAB of the TSD of the City of St. Louis, Employer/Respondent, and Treasurer of Missouri as Custodian of the Second Injury Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Maral Annayeva, Claimant/Appellant v. SAB of the TSD of the City of St. Louis, Employer/Respondent, and Treasurer of Missouri as Custodian of the Second Injury Fund, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION FOUR MARAL ANNAYEVA, ) No. ED107558 ) Claimant/Appellant, ) Appeal from the Labor and ) Industrial Relations Commission vs. ) ) SAB OF THE TSD OF THE CITY OF ST. ) LOUIS, ) ) Employer/Respondent , ) ) and ) ) TREASURER OF MISSOURI AS ) CUSTODIAN OF THE SECOND INJURY ) FUND, ) ) Respondent. ) Filed: July 30, 2019

OPINION

Maral Annayeva (“Claimant”) appeals the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission’s

(the “Commission”) decision affirming the decision of the Administrative Law Judge (the

“ALJ”) denying Claimant’s workers’ compensation claim. In affirming the ALJ’s decision, the

Commission determined that Claimant failed to show that she sustained an injury arising out of

and in the course of her employment because “there was nothing about [Claimant’s] work that

caused her to fall” and the accident occurred before Claimant clocked in for work. On appeal,

1 Claimant argues that the Commission erred by finding that: Claimant did not prove that her

accident “arose out of” her employment because there was competent and substantial evidence

that Claimant’s fall occurred as a result of an accumulation of salt, dirt, and moisture on her

employer’s hallway floor (Point I); Claimant did not prove that her injuries occurred “in the

course of” her employment because, although she had not clocked in, she was walking inside her

place of employment on her way to her assigned work area when she slipped and fell (Point II);

and Claimant failed to prove a medical causal connection between her accident and her injuries

because there was a unanimity of medical opinion from board-certified psychiatrists that

Claimant’s subjective complaints are an expected manifestation of her diagnosed Somatic

Symptom Disorder and are not a result of lying or malingering (Point III). We find that the

Commission’s award concluding that Claimant’s injury did not arise out of and in the course of

her employment was unsupported by competent and substantial evidence. Accordingly, we

reverse and remand.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Claimant began working for the Special Administrative Board of the Transitional School

District of the City of St. Louis (“Employer”) on October 29, 2007. Her last position with

Employer was that of a high school teacher at Roosevelt High School teaching English as a

second language. On January 8, 2013, Claimant sustained injuries after she slipped and fell in

Employer’s hallway at the beginning of her work day. Claimant subsequently filed a claim for

workers’ compensation. On February 14, 2018, a hearing was held before an ALJ at the St. Louis

Division of Workers’ Compensation. At the hearing, Claimant testified that she arrived at work

at around 7:30 a.m. on January 8, 2013, and parked her car in the school’s parking lot (where

students and teachers park) next to the school building. She walked from the parking lot to the

2 school’s main entrance carrying a bag with curriculum folders, student papers and tests, and

lesson plans. Claimant always used this entrance to enter the school. When she arrived at the

front entrance, she walked through a pair of double doors; there were no mats on the outside of

the building, between the two sets of doors, or on the inside of the second set of double doors on

which she could wipe her feet. After she entered the building, Claimant was heading to the

“clock room” to clock in when she slipped on the floor and fell forwards, landing on her hands

and knees. The guards at the entrance rushed over and helped her get up and sit on a chair. When

she sat down, she noticed that her clothes were dirty. Claimant was taken to the nurse’s office

where she filled out a report of injury (“Injury Report”). In the Injury Report, Claimant wrote

that she had slipped, however, when asked to specify the conditions that caused the accident, she

wrote that she “could not determine the cause of the accident.”

That same day, Claimant went to the emergency room and received treatment and

medication; Claimant also returned to the emergency room the following day due to the pain she

was experiencing. Subsequently, Claimant returned to work briefly, but experienced too much

pain and could not continue working. Over time, Claimant continued treatment for her injuries

that she claimed she sustained from the fall. Her medical records indicated that she received

medical treatment, including: injections to her knee, spine adjustments, an MRI of her head, x-

rays of her lumbar spine, water therapy, neurological evaluations, and was prescribed psychiatric

medication. Both parties presented expert testimony of medical professionals who performed

independent medical and psychiatric examinations of Claimant and also presented testimony of

vocational rehabilitation counselors, who conducted vocational assessments to determine

Claimant’s employability in the open labor market.

3 On May 18, 2018, the ALJ entered his award denying compensation for benefits because

Claimant failed to prove the issue of medical causation. The ALJ found that Claimant had “failed

to provide credible testimony to [the] Court” and found that her testimony regarding her “injuries

and their subsequent effects verged on the point of malingering.” Further, the ALJ found

Claimant’s experts’ opinions “specious” because they were based on Claimant’s “own subjective

description of her maladies.” The ALJ concluded that there was “little or no objective medical

finding to support any of Claimant’s anomalies.” The ALJ further concluded that “Claimant has

not met her burden of showing the incident of January 8, 2013 was the prevailing factor causing

the physiological and/or psychological complaints[;]” therefore, the ALJ denied Claimant’s

claim on the basis of lack of medical causation. As to Second Injury Fund (“SIF”), the ALJ

concluded that the evidence did not show a compensable injury, and thus, SIF had no liability in

this case.

The majority of the Commission affirmed the decision of the ALJ with a supplemental

opinion in which it denied compensability of Claimant’s claim based upon a finding that

Claimant’s injuries did not arise out of and in the course of her employment. In regards to the

hazardous condition of the hallway, the Commission highlighted that Claimant had first

indicated during her testimony that the condition of the tile was “normal” and, after she was

asked several follow-up questions, she explained that there were “some particles of dirt, ice, dust,

[and] moist[ure]” on the floor due to “foot traffic.” Thus, the Commission held that, “[b]ecause

[Claimant] did not focus on the alleged hazardous condition of the floor until specifically asked

by her attorney, [Claimant’s] testimony on the alleged hazardous condition is questionable.”1

The Commission also found that Claimant’s medical records did not “indicate any mention of a

1 The Commission made this credibility finding based upon its reading of the transcript of the proceedings before the ALJ, where Claimant testified.

4 hazardous condition regarding the hallway floor,” and noted that the Injury Report that Claimant

filled out on the day she fell included Claimant’s statement that she “could not determine the

cause of the accident.” The Commission concluded that the “risk source was walking; [Claimant]

was walking on an even, flat surface when she fell.

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Maral Annayeva, Claimant/Appellant v. SAB of the TSD of the City of St. Louis, Employer/Respondent, and Treasurer of Missouri as Custodian of the Second Injury Fund, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maral-annayeva-claimantappellant-v-sab-of-the-tsd-of-the-city-of-st-moctapp-2019.