Ibp, Inc. Vs. Lee Burress ( 2009 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 07–1887
    Filed July 10, 2009
    IBP, INC.,
    Appellee,
    vs.
    LEE BURRESS,
    Appellant.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Robert J.
    Blink, Judge.
    Employee     challenges   district   court’s   determination   that   his
    brucellosis was an occupational disease and not an injury. DECISION
    OF COURT OF APPEALS AFFIRMED; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT
    REVERSED.
    Jason D. Neifert of Max Schott & Associates, P.C., Des Moines, for
    appellant.
    Timothy A. Clausen and Sharese Manker of Klass Law Firm, L.L.P.,
    Sioux City, for appellee.
    2
    STREIT, Justice.
    Pigs give us bacon and ham.             They can also give meat packers
    brucellosis.    Lee Burress contracted brucellosis while working at IBP,
    Inc.’s meat-packing plant. He did not discover he had the disease until
    six years after he left IBP’s employment.             Soon thereafter, he filed a
    petition for workers’ compensation benefits. The deputy commissioner
    determined brucellosis was an injury, not an occupational disease. The
    commissioner affirmed. The district court reversed, concluding Burress
    suffered from an occupational disease, not an injury.                   The court of
    appeals reversed the district court.               Because Burress contracted
    brucellosis from a traumatic event, it is an injury, and he is entitled to
    benefits under Iowa Code chapter 85 (2009). 1
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Lee Burress worked at IBP, Inc.’s meat-packing plant from 1987
    until 1997. During his first few years working there, Burress worked as
    a jowl and side shaver, a hog sticker (killing the hog by sticking a knife in
    its throat), and a head dropper (cutting the head off the hog).                  These
    positions involved significant contact with hogs and hog blood.                 On at
    least one occasion, Burress cut his finger while dropping heads. During
    his final eight years at IBP, Burress worked in the trolley room, where he
    was responsible for running automated carts to various places within the
    plant. Although he did not have much contact with hogs in this position,
    he would occasionally come into contact with hog blood. During these
    eight years, he cut his finger and elbow and sustained a superficial
    puncture wound to his face.              Burress stopped working for IBP in
    September 1997.
    1
    No substantive difference exists in the relevant current code sections and those
    in force at the time the action arose. Therefore, all references are to the 2009 Iowa
    Code unless otherwise indicated.
    3
    In July 2003, Burress began experiencing hip pain. The source of
    the hip pain was unclear. Burress underwent hip surgery in September
    2003 and developed an infection that lasted for several months.                     In
    December      2003,     Burress     was    diagnosed      with    brucellosis    with
    osteomyelitis. In December 2004, Dr. William Nauseef told Burress he
    had contracted brucellosis from hog blood, with skin abrasions being the
    most common “portal of entry.”
    On January 3, 2005, Burress filed a workers’ compensation
    petition alleging he had developed “chronic infection, hips, bone” as a
    result of his “[c]ontact with blood products and tissue from slaughtered
    hogs.” In its answer to the petition, IBP alleged the claimed injury is an
    occupational disease, not an injury, under Iowa Code chapter 85A, and,
    therefore, recovery is barred under section 85A.12. 2
    Following a hearing, the deputy commissioner determined “[s]ince
    it is most likely [Burress] contracted brucellosis as a result of trauma,
    the injury is an injury under chapter 85, not an occupational disease.”
    The deputy commissioner also found Burress did not become “aware of
    the probable compensable character of his condition until sometime in
    early December of 2004,” and his petition was filed within two years, as
    prescribed by chapter 85.         The deputy commissioner awarded Burress
    permanent partial disability benefits.
    IBP   filed    an   application    for   rehearing,    which     the   deputy
    commissioner denied.           On intra-agency appeal, the commissioner
    affirmed and adopted the deputy commissioner’s arbitration decision
    with one modification, that Burress met the definition of being
    2Under section 85A.12, an employer is relieved from liability one year after the
    worker’s last exposure.
    4
    permanently and totally disabled and was thus entitled to permanent
    total disability benefits. IBP filed a petition for judicial review.
    The district court reversed the agency’s decision, concluding
    Burress suffered from an occupational disease, not an injury. The court
    determined Burress failed to file his petition within one year after the last
    exposure, as required by Iowa Code section 85A.12. Burress appealed.
    We transferred the case to the court of appeals, which reversed the
    district court’s decision, finding the commissioner’s determination
    Burress had suffered an injury was supported by substantial evidence.
    IBP appealed.
    II. Scope of Review.
    We review the commissioner’s legal findings for correction of errors
    at law. Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(c), (m); Perkins v. HEA of Iowa, Inc., 
    651 N.W.2d 40
    , 43 (Iowa 2002).         “Our task is to determine whether the
    district court, acting in its appellate capacity in these judicial review
    proceedings, applied the law correctly.”       Noble v. Lamoni Prods., 
    512 N.W.2d 290
    , 292 (Iowa 1994).         We are bound by the commissioner’s
    findings of fact so long as those findings are supported by substantial
    evidence.   Excel Corp. v. Smithart, 
    654 N.W.2d 891
    , 896 (Iowa 2002);
    Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(f).       Under Iowa Code section 17A.19(10), “a
    reviewing court may reverse the decision of the workers’ compensation
    commissioner if it is unsupported by substantial evidence in the record
    or characterized by an abuse of discretion.”         Univ. of Iowa Hosps. &
    Clinics v. Waters, 
    674 N.W.2d 92
    , 95 (Iowa 2004). “ ‘Substantial evidence’
    means the quantity and quality of evidence that would be deemed
    sufficient by a neutral, detached, and reasonable person, to establish the
    fact at issue when the consequences resulting from the establishment of
    that fact are understood to be serious and of great importance.” Iowa
    5
    Code § 17A.19(10)(f)(1).           An abuse of discretion occurs when the
    commissioner’s exercise of discretion is “clearly erroneous or rests on
    untenable grounds.” Waters, 
    674 N.W.2d at 96
    .
    III. Merits.
    Today we must determine whether the brucellosis Burress
    contracted is an injury or an occupational disease. The legislature has
    set forth two workers’ compensation schemes:               one for injuries under
    Iowa Code chapter 85 and one for occupational diseases under chapter
    85A.       In order to qualify for workers’ compensation benefits under
    chapter 85, the employee must demonstrate “(1) the claimant suffered a
    ‘personal injury,’ (2) the claimant and the respondent had an employer-
    employee relationship, (3) the injury arose out of the employment, and
    (4) the injury arose in the course of the employment.” Meyer v. IBP, Inc.,
    
    710 N.W.2d 213
    , 220 (Iowa 2006).              Comparatively, to recover under
    chapter 85A, “the disease must be causally related to the exposure to
    harmful conditions of the field of employment,” and “those harmful
    conditions must be more prevalent in the employment concerned than in
    everyday life or in other occupations.” McSpadden v. Big Ben Coal Co.,
    
    288 N.W.2d 181
    , 190 (Iowa 1980).
    If Burress suffers from an occupational disease, his claim is barred
    by the statute of repose. See Iowa Code § 85A.12 (“An employer shall not
    be liable for any compensation for an occupational disease . . . unless
    disablement or death results . . . within one year . . . after the last
    injurious exposure to such disease in such employment . . . .”) However,
    if   his   brucellosis   is   an   injury,   his   claim   is   not   time   barred.
    Swartzendruber v. Schimmel, 
    613 N.W.2d 646
    , 650 (Iowa 2000) (holding
    the two-year statute of limitations under Iowa Code section 85.26 does
    not begin to run “until the employee discovers, or should discover in the
    6
    exercise of diligence, the nature, seriousness, and probable compensable
    character of the injury or disease”).
    Thus, whether Burress’ brucellosis is an injury or an occupational
    disease is the key issue. Section 85A.8 defines occupational disease:
    Occupational diseases shall be only those diseases
    which arise out of and in the course of the employee’s
    employment. Such diseases shall have a direct causal
    connection with the employment and must have followed as
    a natural incident thereto from injurious exposure
    occasioned by the nature of the employment. Such disease
    must be incidental to the character of the business,
    occupation or process in which the employee was employed
    and not independent of the employment. Such disease need
    not have been foreseen or expected but after its contraction
    it must appear to have had its origin in a risk connected with
    the employment and to have resulted from that source as an
    incident and rational consequence. A disease which follows
    from a hazard to which an employee has or would have been
    equally exposed outside of said occupation is not
    compensable as an occupational disease.
    Although section 85A.8 defines occupational disease, chapter 85 does
    not adequately define the term “injury.” Under section 85.61(4)(b), the
    word “injury” “shall not include a disease unless it shall result from the
    injury and they shall not include an occupational disease as defined in
    section 85A.8.”
    Our case law has filled the gap and explained the differences
    between an occupational disease and an injury.
    “[A]n ‘injury’ is distinguished from a ‘disease’ by virtue of the
    fact that an injury has its origin in a specific identifiable
    trauma or physical occurrence or, in the case of repetitive
    trauma, a series of such occurrences. A disease, on the
    other hand, originates from a source that is neither
    traumatic nor physical . . . .”
    Noble, 
    512 N.W.2d at 295
     (quoting Luttrell v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    507 N.E.2d 533
    , 541–42 (Ill. App. Ct. 1987)). Thus, the main distinction between an
    injury and an occupational disease is the method of contraction.
    7
    “The statutory definition describes an occupational disease
    in terms of a worker’s ‘exposure’ to conditions in the
    workplace. . . . The term ‘exposure’ indicates a passive
    relationship between the worker and his work environment
    rather than an event or occurrence, or series of occurrences,
    which constitute injury under the Worker’s Compensation
    Act.”
    
    Id.
     (quoting Duvall v. ICI Americas, Inc., 
    621 N.E.2d 1122
    , 1125 (Ind. Ct.
    App.    1993)).       We    have     also       determined   that,   under     certain
    circumstances, a disease can be an injury for purposes of chapter 85.
    “The contraction of disease is deemed an injury by accident
    in most states if due to some unexpected or unusual event or
    exposure. Thus, infectious disease may be held accidental if
    the germs gain entrance through a scratch or through
    unexpected or abnormal exposure to infection.”
    Perkins, 
    651 N.W.2d at
    43–44 (quoting 3 Arthur Larson & Lex K. Larson,
    Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law ch. 51, Scope, at 51–1 (2002)). 3
    What types of diseases are strictly occupational diseases and not
    injuries is debatable. Prior to 1973, chapter 85A restricted recovery for
    occupational diseases to seventeen diseases specifically listed in Iowa
    Code section 85A.9 (1971).          See McSpadden, 
    288 N.W.2d at 190
    .                In
    1973, the legislature repealed that section and broadened the definition
    of occupational disease in section 85A.8. Id.; see also 1973 Iowa Acts ch.
    144, § 24. Currently, chapter 85A makes reference to only two diseases,
    brucellosis in section 85A.11 and pneumoconiosis (the characteristic
    3Iowa’s workers’ compensation statute, Iowa Code section 85.61 (2009), does not
    limit compensable injuries to those that are “accidental,” and, therefore, it is broader
    than statutes from other states that do contain an “accidental injury” limitation. See
    Ford v. Goode, 
    240 Iowa 1219
    , 1222, 
    38 N.W.2d 158
    , 159 (1949) (interpreting 1946
    statutory provision, which is substantially similar to the 2009 provision); see also
    Perkins, 
    651 N.W.2d at 44
     (“ ‘The injury to the human body here contemplated must be
    something, whether an accident or not, that acts extraneously to the natural processes
    of nature, and thereby impairs the health, overcomes, injures, interrupts, or destroys
    some function of the body, or otherwise damages or injures a part or all of the body.’ ”
    (quoting St. Luke’s Hosp. v. Gray, 
    604 N.W.2d 646
    , 650–51 (Iowa 2000)) (Emphasis
    added.)).
    8
    fibrotic condition of the lungs caused by the inhalation of dust particles)
    in section 85A.13.    Our case law has permitted recovery for allergic
    contact dermatitis and lead intoxication under chapter 85A. See Doerfer
    Div. of CCA v. Nicol, 
    359 N.W.2d 428
    , 432 (Iowa 1984); Frit Indus. v.
    Langenwalter, 
    443 N.W.2d 88
    , 91 (Iowa Ct. App. 1989).          But see St.
    Luke’s Hosp. v. Gray, 
    604 N.W.2d 646
    , 652 (Iowa 2000) (allergic
    reactions may be considered injuries under chapter 85). In McSpadden,
    we noted other states considered the following to be occupational
    diseases:   chronic bronchitis, kidney disorder and asthma caused by
    inhalation of paint fumes, and pulmonary disease caused by inhalation
    of smoke and fumes. McSpadden, 
    288 N.W.2d at
    190–91 n.5. Although
    chapter 85A no longer limits recovery for occupational diseases to a
    specific schedule, section 85A.8 and our case law             indicate an
    occupational disease is generally acquired from repeated exposure to a
    toxin in the workplace. See Doerfer, 
    359 N.W.2d at
    432–33.
    Other states have determined that “under proper factual situations
    contraction of brucellosis can be characterized as accidental injury”
    rather than an occupational disease. Wilson Foods Corp. v. Porter, 
    612 P.2d 261
    , 263 (Okla. 1980).        Recognizing that “in spite of being
    recognized as a disease, brucellosis can still be categorized as a[n]
    accidental personal injury,” the Supreme Court of Oklahoma determined
    an employee who contracted brucellosis through cracks in his skin while
    working with cowhides had a compensable injury.         Id.; see also Mid-
    South Packers, Inc. v. Hanson, 
    178 So. 2d 689
    , 691 (Miss. 1965)
    (contamination through cuts and scrapes on maintenance worker’s
    hands considered to be accidental injury and not an occupational
    disease because “contraction of [brucellosis] . . . was an occurrence
    which was not expected, designed, or intentionally caused”); Baldwin v.
    9
    Jensen-Salsbery Labs., 
    708 P.2d 556
    , 558 (Kan. Ct. App. 1985)
    (brucellosis considered accidental injury where employee cut his hand
    and then touched a tool contaminated with brucella).
    Here, the deputy commissioner, whose findings were adopted by
    the commissioner, determined Burress’ brucellosis was an injury and not
    a disease.
    The evidentiary record indicates [Burress] was exposed to
    brucellosis in an event that occurred unexpectedly. The
    event, most likely a cut to [his] hand and exposure to blood,
    was sudden, traumatic, and of a brief duration. It might be
    said that workers in a hog packing plant have a greater than
    average risk of contracting brucellosis, but that risk is the
    result of risk from a traumatic injury under circumstances
    that result in infection of the disease as a consequence of
    trauma.
    IBP contends the commissioner’s decision that Burress’ brucellosis was
    an injury, and not an occupational disease, was not supported by
    substantial evidence.         Arguing that since Iowa Code section 85A.11
    discusses brucellosis, 4 and that Iowa Code section 85.61(4)(b) defines
    4Entitled   “Diagnosis for brucellosis,” section 85A.11 reads
    1. When any employee is clinically diagnosed as having brucellosis
    (undulant fever), it shall not be considered that the employee has the
    disease unless the clinical diagnosis is confirmed by:
    a. A positive blood culture for brucella organisms, or
    b. A positive agglutination test which must be verified by not less
    than two successive positive agglutination tests, each of which
    tests shall be positive in a titer of one to one hundred sixty or
    higher. Said subsequent agglutination tests must be made of
    specimens taken not less than seven nor more than ten days after
    each preceding test.
    2. The specimens for the tests required herein must be taken by a
    licensed practicing physician or osteopathic physician, and immediately
    delivered to the university hygienic laboratory of the Iowa department of
    public health at Iowa City, and each such specimen shall be in a
    container upon which is plainly printed the name and address of the
    subject, the date when the specimen was taken, the name and address of
    the subject’s employer and a certificate by the physician or osteopathic
    10
    “injury” as excluding occupational diseases, IBP asserts brucellosis can
    never be considered an injury under chapter 85.
    First, we disagree with IBP and the district court that brucellosis
    can never be an injury. Just because brucellosis is listed in Iowa Code
    section 85A.11 does not mean brucellosis is always considered an
    occupational disease. Our case law has established that a disease can
    be an injury for purposes of chapter 85 when “ ‘the germs gain entrance
    through a scratch or through unexpected or abnormal exposure to
    infection.’ ” Perkins, 
    651 N.W.2d at
    43–44 (quoting 3 Arthur Larson &
    Lex K. Larson, Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law ch. 51, Scope, at
    51–1).     In Perkins, we determined the employee’s hepatitis C was an
    injury because her “infection was linked to a sudden, specific incident of
    exposure.” 
    Id. at 43
    . Such is the case here. It would be inconsistent to
    preclude recovery for a disease that was most likely acquired through a
    similar unexpected trauma only because section 85A.11 explains how a
    diagnosis of brucellosis should be confirmed.                 There is nothing in the
    record to indicate that Burress contracted brucellosis through a passive
    exposure to conditions in the workplace.                 Noble, 
    512 N.W.2d at 295
    .
    Burress did not contract brucellosis through prolonged or passive
    exposure; it only took one traumatic exposure.                         As the expert’s
    description of how brucellosis is acquired indicates, “[t]he portal of entry
    [for brucellosis] is through abrasions in skin, most commonly, during
    physician that the physician took the specimen from the named subject
    on the date stated over the physician’s signature and address.
    3. The state hygienic laboratory shall immediately make the test and
    upon completion thereof it shall send a report of the result of such test to
    the physician or osteopathic physician from whom the specimen was
    received and also to the employer.
    4. In the event of a dispute as to whether the employee has brucellosis,
    the matter shall be determined as any other disputed case.
    11
    handling of infected animals or their carcasses. There is risk of aerosol
    transmission in slaughter houses as well, although this appears to be
    less common.”
    Further, just because Burress cannot pinpoint when the injury
    specifically occurred does not mean he did not suffer an injury. In St.
    Luke’s Hospital v. Gray, we determined the employee’s latex allergy to be
    an injury despite the fact the employee had not been injured on a specific
    date, but rather was exposed to the allergen on a frequent basis in the
    course of employment.      
    604 N.W.2d at 652
    .       Here, the record reveals
    Burress was exposed to a significant amount of hog blood while dropping
    heads and sticking hogs and occasionally came into contact with hog
    blood in the trolley room.     In all probability, he contracted brucellosis
    during one of these incidents. However, because Burress’ brucellosis did
    not manifest itself until 2003, six years after his last reported work-
    related injury, it is difficult to link contracting the disease to one specific
    injury. The states that have considered the contraction of brucellosis an
    injury have permitted recovery despite the fact that the claimant was not
    able to pinpoint the specific incident of exposure that resulted in
    contraction of the disease. See Wilson Foods, 612 P.2d at 263 (employee
    who contracted brucellosis through cracks in his skin while working with
    cowhides had a compensable injury); Mid-South Packers, 178 So. 2d at
    691 (contamination through cuts and scrapes on maintenance worker’s
    hands considered to be an accidental injury).
    Our case law reveals that contact with infected blood is an “injury”
    under Iowa Code chapter 85. In Perkins, the claimant was infected with
    hepatitis C when she was sprayed with blood while working on a patient.
    Perkins, 
    651 N.W.2d at 42
    .         We determined this “sudden, specific
    incident of exposure” to be an injury despite the fact that Perkins was
    not “injured” per se.     
    Id. at 43
    .    The injury was being doused with
    12
    infected blood, not being accidentally cut.      
    Id.
     at 43–44.      In our case,
    Burress testified he was frequently sprayed with and soaked in blood
    while shaving and slaughtering hogs.         Should our analysis of whether
    Burress sustained an identifiable injury under Iowa Code chapter 85 be
    any   different   because   he   sustained    multiple   injuries    (numerous
    unexpected contacts with hog blood), none of which he was able to
    specifically link to his brucellosis? We doubt our conclusion in Perkins
    would have been any different had Perkins come into contact with a
    patient’s infected blood on more than one occasion.
    Despite the fact that brucellosis is discussed in chapter 85A, the
    record supports the conclusion Burress probably acquired brucellosis
    from contact with infected hog blood.         There is substantial evidence
    supporting the commissioner’s determination that Burress’ contraction
    of brucellosis is an injury, not an occupational disease:               Burress’
    testimony indicating various cuts (portals of entry) and frequent contact
    with hog blood while working at IBP and the expert’s description of how
    brucellosis is usually acquired.      IBP did not present any evidence
    indicating Burress had contracted brucellosis in a manner consistent
    with the definition of occupational disease in section 85A.8. It simply
    relied on the reference to brucellosis in section 85A.11.              There is
    substantial evidence in the record supporting the commissioner’s
    decision Burress contracted brucellosis from a traumatic occurrence:
    the entry of infected hog blood into Burress’ body.
    IV. Conclusion.
    Because Burress contracted brucellosis from a traumatic event, it
    is an injury, and not an occupational disease. Therefore, he is entitled to
    benefits under Iowa Code chapter 85.
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AFFIRMED; DISTRICT
    COURT JUDGMENT REVERSED.