Sylvia Martin v. Virginia Beach Public Schools and Corvel Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 31, 2020
Docket1632194
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sylvia Martin v. Virginia Beach Public Schools and Corvel Corporation (Sylvia Martin v. Virginia Beach Public Schools and Corvel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sylvia Martin v. Virginia Beach Public Schools and Corvel Corporation, (Va. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Beales, Athey and Senior Judge Haley UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia

SYLVIA MARTIN MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1632-19-4 JUDGE JAMES W. HALEY, JR. MARCH 31, 2020 VIRGINIA BEACH PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND CORVEL CORPORATION

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

Casey E. Duchesne (ChasenBoscolo Injury Lawyers, on brief), for appellant.

Bryan S. Peeples (Robert L. Samuel; Pender & Coward, P.C., on brief), for appellees.

Sylvia Martin (“claimant”) appeals the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission

(“the Commission”) that she failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that she sustained a

compensable injury by accident on March 2, 2018. She also asserts that “the ‘act of God’ defense is

contrary to the humanitarian purpose of the Workers’ Compensation Act” and “is not applicable to

[her] case.” For the following reasons, we affirm the Commission’s decision.

Background

On appeal from a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission, the evidence and

all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from that evidence are viewed in the light most

favorable to the party prevailing below. Clinchfield Coal Co. v. Reed, 40 Va. App. 69, 72

(2003). Claimant worked at Kellam High School in Virginia Beach as a security officer,

patrolling the school grounds and monitoring “hallways, doorways, [and] bathrooms.” After a

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. fall at work on February 16, 2018, however, she was placed on work restrictions that severely

limited her duties.1 Not only did those restrictions prevent her from stooping, kneeling, or

climbing, they also dramatically curtailed work involving walking and standing. Following her

February accident, she complained that walking was painful and that she was “[l]imping

throughout the day.”

Claimant remained on these work restrictions on March 2, 2018. At approximately

11:30 a.m. that morning, she was walking to lunch on school grounds when she approached a

stockade metal fence that enclosed a “breezeway” leading to another school building entrance.

Claimant, who ate lunch on the other side of the building, pushed open the gate2 in the fence and

passed through it into the breezeway.3 When she opened the gate, or door, “the wind blew it and

then blew it back into [her].” Her arm was caught between the gate and the fence, and she fell

onto the cement. Claimant used the gate two to four times each day and noted that the gate did

not require a key to open it in the direction that she was walking; however, a key was necessary

to open the gate from the opposite direction.

Claimant filed a claim for benefits on July 12, 2018. She asserted that she had landed on

her left side, injuring her left leg, left hip, ribs, back, neck, left hand, and right hand. The parties

agreed that the deputy commissioner would first determine whether claimant had suffered a

compensable accident and would defer “[the] remaining issues related to ongoing treatment and

which body parts [we]re compensable.”

1 Claimant’s medical records reveal that she had suffered from lower left back pain for several years and that she had been going to physical therapy, but had stopped in June 2017. 2 The gate was also constructed of stockade metal fencing. 3 Claimant described the breezeway as “an area where . . . trucks and deliveries and all of that go through.” She stated that it was the area “where you take trash cans and empty trash cans.” -2- Citing the “actual risk” test applied in O’Donoghue v. United Continental Holdings, Inc.,

70 Va. App. 95 (2019), the deputy commissioner ruled that claimant had failed to prove by a

preponderance of the evidence that her accident arose out of her employment because she did not

establish that “th[e] gate, its location, the surrounding environment or Claimant passing through

it was a specific work-related risk that ‘collaborated’ with the wind (an act of God) to cause her

injury.”4 Relying on O’Donoghue and Virginia Employment Commission v. Hale, 43 Va. App.

379, 385 (2004), the deputy commissioner concluded, “[w]ithout evidence of an additional

work-related risk beyond that to which the general public is exposed, we are left to conclude that

Claimant’s fall was caused by a natural wind force, which ‘standing alone, is considered “an act

of God” and does not establish that [she] is entitled to coverage under the Act.’”

Claimant sought review by the Commission. She asserted that “the design of the metal

gate, built in an outdoor breezeway, inherently expose[d] it to more wind on particularly windy

days.” Because the gate required a key to open in one direction, claimant also argued that “it

was not the type of door used by the general public.” Finally, she maintained that the “act of

God” defense did not apply because her accident resulted from “simply windy” conditions rather

than “an unusual or extraordinary manifestation of the forces of nature that it could not under

normal conditions have been anticipated or expected.”

The Commission affirmed by a split vote. After concluding that the “act of God”

doctrine applied to accidents involving “high winds,” it addressed whether claimant had

“established by preponderating evidence that her use of this particular door in this particular

location created a ‘heightened’ or ‘augmented’ risk of injury beyond the general risk to anyone

using a door on a windy day.” It found that claimant had failed to prove that the area where she

4 Although the deputy commissioner noted that claimant was carrying an item in her left hand at the time of the accident, he emphasized that “there is no evidence that this item was related to Claimant’s work or contributed to the accident.” -3- was injured was “more susceptible to[] the hazard of storms” or “continually [blowing]” winds

than other areas, or that the location of the door in the breezeway “exposed it to more wind on

windy days than other locations.” The Commission ruled that claimant had failed to prove that

“the condition of the breezeway . . . expos[ed] employees to a greater risk of injury than that

posed to the general public at large.” Thus, it decided that claimant had failed to prove that “‘the

nature and position of’ the door was a risk of employment and that[,] combined with the wind

gust, [it] caused the accident.”

In reaching its decision, the Commission stressed that claimant testified that the gate was

“heavy,” but offered no additional proof “tending to show how the door’s weight, structure, or

location contributed to the accident.” After viewing the video footage of the accident, it

determined that the door was “partially covered in chain link which would provide less air

resistance than a solid door.” The Commission also found that the footage did not corroborate

claimant’s assertion that the area was “particularly windy.” Therefore, it held that claimant had

failed to prove that she was “exposed to an unusually high wind situation, that her employment

caused her to be exposed to, or more susceptible to, injury on a windy day, or that the location of

the incident exposed her to any greater risk than anyone else in that area.” Accordingly, it

affirmed the deputy commissioner’s decision.

This appeal followed.

Analysis

To establish that an injury is compensable, a claimant “must prove by a preponderance of

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