Villa v. City of Las Cruces

2010 NMCA 099, 241 P.3d 1108, 148 N.M. 668
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 22, 2010
Docket29,456; 32,561
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2010 NMCA 099 (Villa v. City of Las Cruces) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Villa v. City of Las Cruces, 2010 NMCA 099, 241 P.3d 1108, 148 N.M. 668 (N.M. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

OPINION

SUTIN, Judge.

{1} City of Las Cruces (Employer) appeals from a workers’ compensation judge’s (WCJ) compensation order awarding Edward Villa (Worker) disability benefits. The issue is whether Worker’s on-the-job intoxicated state barred him from recovery under the Workers’ Compensation Act (the Act). The issue requires us to consider the meaning and application of two sections of the Act, namely, NMSA 1978, Section 52-1-11 (1989), under which the intoxication would completely bar Worker’s recovery, and NMSA 1978, Section 52-1-12.1 (2001), under which Worker would receive 90% of his entitlement even though he was intoxicated. Resolution of the issue revolves around the different causation wording in the statutes. We are met with statutory ambiguity that forces us to choose between two undesirable results. We affirm, holding that the WCJ properly applied Section 52-1-12.1, given the substantial evidence that supported a contributing cause to Worker’s injury, in addition to Worker’s intoxication. We also hold that the WCJ properly held Section 52-1-11 inapplicable to bar recovery because there was substantial evidence to support the WCJ’s factual determination that Worker’s injury was not “willfully suffered” by him.

A. BACKGROUND

1. Factual Background

{2} We take the facts from the WCJ’s findings of fact. On the accident date, Worker’s job was to operate a garbage truck. He did not clock in as he was supposed to when he arrived at work probably between 4:00 and 4:30 a.m., but instead he went directly to drive the truck. At one point during his work, when Worker was picking up a dumpster with the truck forks, the dumpster slipped from the forks and fell into the truck hopper. To pull the dumpster from the truck, Worker and his supervisor, Jim Maese, climbed up on the truck on opposite sides to attach chains to the dumpster so that a grappler, operated by Fred Tarango, could pull the dumpster out. As he started to reach across to hand his end of the chain to Maese, Worker lost his balance on the narrow ledge on which he was standing and he fell to the ground, seriously injuring himself. The accident happened at about 5:45 a.m.

{3} The day before the accident, after Worker completed his work shift, Worker and a co-worker went to Worker’s house with a twelve-pack of beer that the two shared; they later went to a river where they finished the beer. Worker was then dropped off at a bar where he had at least one or two more beers, after which he was driven home. The morning of the accident, the same co-worker who was with Worker the night before picked Worker up, and they went to work.

{4} After the accident, at about 9:30 a.m., Worker’s blood was drawn and tested at a hospital. The blood-test results showed that Worker’s blood-alcohol level was .12, which was well over the New Mexico legal driving limit. Further, the hospital records indicated that alcohol was smelled on Worker’s breath. The WCJ found that the evidence showing Worker’s voluntary intoxication was abundant. The evidence included Worker’s testimony and deposition admissions in regard to his alcohol intake, the co-worker’s testimony, Worker’s failure to clock in so that he would avoid seeing supervisory personnel, and the smell of alcohol on his breath at the hospital. The WCJ stated that she had “no doubt but that Worker was legally drunk in accordance with DWI standards both when he started work and at the time of the accident.”

{5} However, in assessing Worker’s intoxication for the purposes of recovery of benefits, the WCJ also considered the following. Worker had been driving the garbage truck the morning of the accident for at least an hour before the accident and evidently had not hit anything; he had been walking round the top of the truck before Maese arrived and had no difficulty; Tarango did not notice a problem with Worker’s demeanor; and Worker evidently was able to climb up on the truck in the presence of Maese and Tarango neither of whom noticed anything amiss.

{6} The WCJ “[could] only conclude” that Worker was still under the influence of alcohol when he started work on the day of the accident, when the accident occurred, and when he was treated after the accident at the hospital. Yet the WCJ also found that “[t]he fact that Worker was inebriated ... does not resolve the legal effect of it on his claim for ... benefits.” This finding moves us into consideration of the two statutes in question relating to an intoxicated worker’s recovery of benefits and the WCJ’s rationale for determining that Worker was not completely barred from recovery and was limited to a 90% recovery.

2. The WCJ’s Legal Analysis

{7} In her findings and conclusions, the WCJ set out her analysis of how the law applied to the fact of Worker’s intoxication and of the causal relationship of the intoxication to his accident and injury. The WCJ first set out Section 52-1-11 in relevant part: “No compensation shall become due or payable from any employer ... in event such injury was occasioned by the intoxication of such worker or willfully suffered by him or intentionally inflicted by himself.” After indicating that Worker neither willfully nor intentionally injured himself, but “slipped and fell,” the WCJ concentrated on the meaning and effect of the words “occasioned by.” The WCJ determined that “[t]o the extent ‘occasioned by means ‘caused by,’ Employer has not met it[s] burden of proving that Worker’s accident was caused by his being under the influence of alcohol or intoxicated.” Acknowledging that she had no doubt as to Worker’s intoxicated state, the WCJ determined that “intoxication must be the proximate cause of the accident” and that, based on evidence of Worker’s conduct and what others noticed about his demeanor, “one cannot say that it was [the proximate cause]: Worker was working on a very small ledge, and anyone might have slipped off it while trying to hand his portion of the chain to Maese.” Therefore, the WCJ found that, “[g]iven all of this, one cannot conclude that the intoxication was the cause of the fall, or that the intoxication occasioned the fall.”

{8} After eliminating Section 52-1-11 as a bar to Worker’s recovery of benefits, the WCJ turned to Section 52-1-12.1, which provides for a reduction in benefits by 10% when a person is voluntarily intoxicated and the intoxication is “a contributing cause to the injury.” The WCJ determined that under Section 52-1-12.1 the blood-alcohol test performed on Worker could not be used as evidence of intoxication to reduce benefits because the testing did not meet the standards required and did not comply with federal workplace testing procedures. See § 52-1-12.1 (stating that for test results considered in determining intoxication “the test and testing procedures [must] conform to the federal department of transportation procedures for transportation workplace ... alcohol testing programs and the test [must be] performed by a laboratory certified to do the testing by the ... department” (internal quotation marks omitted)). But the WCJ indicated that the other evidence of intoxication could be considered under Section 52-1-12.1, and thus:

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Bluebook (online)
2010 NMCA 099, 241 P.3d 1108, 148 N.M. 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/villa-v-city-of-las-cruces-nmctapp-2010.