Missouri Department of Transportation v. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 21, 2020
DocketWD82835
StatusPublished

This text of Missouri Department of Transportation v. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (Missouri Department of Transportation v. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission) 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.

Bluebook
Missouri Department of Transportation v. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT MISSOURI DEPARTMENT OF ) TRANSPORTATION, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) WD82835 ) THE LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL ) Opinion filed: April 21, 2020 RELATIONS COMMISSION, ) ) Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COLE COUNTY, MISSOURI THE HONORABLE JON E. BEETEM, JUDGE

Division Four: Karen King Mitchell, Chief Judge, Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Judge and Thomas N. Chapman, Judge

The Missouri Department of Transportation (“MoDOT”) appeals the quashing of a

preliminary writ of prohibition by the Circuit Court of Cole County. MoDOT had sought a writ

prohibiting the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (“Commission”) from accepting or

considering additional evidence in a workers’ compensation case or, in the alternative, directing

the Commission not to exceed the Missouri Supreme Court’s mandate in Mantia v. Mo. Dep’t of

Transp., 529 S.W.3d 804 (Mo. banc 2017). Finding no error, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

This matter arose from a workers’ compensation claim filed with the Missouri Division of

Workers’ Compensation. In 2008, Linda Mantia (“Employee”), who had worked for MoDOT for more than twenty years, filed a workers’ compensation claim seeking benefits for mental injury

resulting from work-related stress arising out of and in the course of her employment.1 Both

Employee and MoDOT presented expert medical testimony, and both experts concluded that

Employee’s psychiatric injury was caused by her employment.

In 2014, an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) denied workers’ compensation benefits to

Employee, finding that Employee had failed to prove that she had been exposed to extraordinary

and unusual work-related stress through her employment with MoDOT as required by section

287.120.8, RSMo.2 Employee appealed the ALJ’s decision to the Commission, which reversed

and awarded compensation, finding that “the stress employee experienced was extraordinary and

unusual for purposes of § 287.120.8, and that her mental injury arose out of and in the course of

the employment.” MoDOT appealed. The Missouri Supreme Court accepted transfer of the case

and issued its decision on September 12, 2017. See Mantia v. Mo. Dep’t of Transp., 529 S.W.3d

804 (Mo. banc 2017).

The Supreme Court found that the Commission had “failed to apply the proper objective

standard when reviewing Employee’s claim.” Id. at 811. The Court explained that “the objective

standard for determining whether Employee’s stress was compensable is whether the same or

similar actual work events would cause a reasonable highway worker extraordinary and unusual

stress.” Id. at 810. The Court continued:

Such evidence might be introduced through the testimony of other highway workers as to the circumstances that are experienced as part of the job in general, but individualized, subjective reactions to those circumstances are irrelevant.

1 The source of Employee’s alleged mental injury was stress associated with her work at numerous traffic accident scenes during her tenure with MoDOT. 2 Statutory references are to the Missouri Revised Statutes, updated through the 2008 supplement.

Section 287.120.8, RSMo states: “Mental injury resulting from work-related stress does not arise out of and in the course of the employment, unless it is demonstrated that the stress is work related and was extraordinary and unusual. The amount of work stress shall be measured by objective standards and actual events.”

2 Employee need not show the subjective experiences of her fellow workers were not as severe as her experiences, but rather, she must demonstrate the actual events she experienced were such that a reasonable highway worker would experience extraordinary and unusual stress. . . .

There was no evidence presented in this case that Employee’s work-related stress was objectively “extraordinary and unusual” as statutorily required. . . . Given the confusion as to the appropriate test for meeting the statutory objective standard for proof of extraordinary and unusual work-related stress, it is unclear whether Employee would have been able to present evidence sufficient to meet the statutory requirements.

Id. at 810-11. The Supreme Court vacated the award of compensation and remanded the case to

the Commission for “a proper review of Employee’s claim.” Id. at 811. The Court’s mandate stated

that the Commission’s award “be vacated and the said cause be remanded to the said Labor and

Industrial Relations Commission for further proceedings to be had therein, in conformity with the

opinion of this Court herein delivered.”

Following the remand, Employee filed a “Motion to Submit Additional Evidence” with the

Commission, pursuant to 8 CSR 20-3.030(2),3 arguing that the Supreme Court’s decision

announced a new standard applicable to work-related mental injury claims under section

287.120.8, and that Employee could not have known of the necessity of producing evidence to

meet that standard during the original proceedings. The Commission agreed, finding that

“employee could not have presented, with the exercise of reasonable diligence, evidence sufficient

to satisfy an evidentiary burden that was, at the time of the March 25, 2014, hearing before the

administrative law judge, unknown.” The Commission remanded the case to the ALJ to “hold an

3 8 CSR 20-3.030(2) states, in relevant part, that “[t]he hearing of additional evidence by the commission shall not be granted except upon the ground of newly discovered evidence which with reasonable diligence could not have been produced at the hearing before the administrative law judge.”

3 evidentiary hearing to permit employee the opportunity to advance the additional evidence

identified in her Motion.”4

MoDOT filed a petition for writ of prohibition or, in the alternative, mandamus in the

Eastern District of this Court seeking to prevent the Commission from permitting Employee to

present additional evidence, arguing that allowing additional evidence went beyond the Supreme

Court’s mandate in Mantia. The Eastern District, finding it lacked jurisdiction,5 transferred the

writ petition to this Court which denied relief. MoDOT thereafter sought the same writ from the

Missouri Supreme Court, which was also denied.

MoDOT subsequently initiated this writ proceeding in the Circuit Court of Cole County,

again asserting the arguments included in its prior writ filings that had been rejected by both this

Court and the Missouri Supreme Court. The circuit court entered a preliminary writ of prohibition

against the Commission. Later, after hearing argument from the parties, the circuit court quashed

the preliminary writ and denied permanent relief, finding that “[t]he Commission clearly had the

discretion to re-open the record for new evidence and this Court finds it did not abuse such

discretion[;]” and “[MoDOT] did not establish a clear right to an order denying the re-opening of

the record.” MoDOT appeals.

Discussion

MoDOT raises a single point on appeal alleging the circuit court abused its discretion by

quashing the preliminary writ, arguing that “the September 12, 2017 order of the Supreme Court

of Missouri limited the scope of the remand to the [Commission], in that the [Commission] was

4 The Commission’s remand further allowed MoDOT and the Second Injury Fund to offer additional rebuttal evidence.

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