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118999

Anderson v. PAR Electrical Contractors, Inc.

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  • PDF 118999
1

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 118,999


IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

THOMAS J. ANDERSON,
Appellee,

v.

PAR ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS, INC., and
OLD REPUBLIC INSURANCE CO.,
Appellants.


MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Workers Compensation Board. Opinion filed November 21, 2018. Affirmed.

John D. Jurcyk, of McAnany, Van Cleave & Phillips, P.A., of Kansas City, for appellants.

Steven A. Ediger, of Steven A. Ediger, P.A., of Westwood, for appellee.

Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., GREEN, J., and ROBERT J. FREDERICK, District Judge,
assigned.

PER CURIAM: Thomas Anderson was electrocuted while working on a job for
PAR Electrical Contractors. Anderson filed for workers compensation benefits. The
administrative law judge (ALJ) awarded Anderson benefits. On appeal, the Workers
Compensation Board affirmed. PAR petitioned for judicial review, arguing that Anderson
should be precluded from recovering benefits because he violated its strict safety policy,
and PAR did not approve of his actions. For the reasons stated later, we reject PAR's
arguments. Accordingly, we affirm.

2

Anderson worked as a journeyman lineman for PAR. On August 18, 2014,
Anderson was working on a project for PAR, transferring electrical lines from old utility
poles to new utility poles. Anderson and an apprentice went up in a lift bucket to move
the overhead lines from the old utility pole to a new one. In order to transfer the lines,
Anderson and the apprentice had to move a PVC pipe housing cables from the old pole to
the new pole. They needed to shorten the PVC pipe before it could be transferred. To
shorten the PVC pipe, Anderson and the apprentice took turns cutting the PVC pipe on
their respective ends with a battery-powered rotary saw. While one man was sawing, the
other man held onto the cables. The workers believed the cables were dead, meaning they
were not carrying an electrical current. According to PAR, the cables could not possibly
have been live.

PAR enforces a safety rule referred to as the "five-foot rule." Under the 5-foot
rule, an employee who is within 5 feet of an energized source is required to wear
protective gear, including rubber gloves and sleeves.

Neither Anderson nor the apprentice wore rubber sleeves or gloves while they
were shortening the PVC pipe. Instead, Anderson wore regular leather work gloves as he
used the saw. Anderson chose not to wear rubber gloves because he believed he was
more than 5 feet from the nearest energized source and because he believed that the bulky
rubber gloves would prevent him from operating the saw safely. According to Anderson,
the saw had a trigger guard with a small hole where he had to place his finger in order to
engage the saw. Anderson claims the hole was too small for him to safely pull his finger
out and stop the saw while wearing rubber gloves. Anderson emphasized that this posed
an elevated safety risk because he and the apprentice were using the saw at approximately
eye level.

While the apprentice was using the saw and Anderson was holding the cables,
electricity burnt both of Anderson's arms. An ambulance came to the worksite and took
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Anderson to the hospital. Anderson spent 10 days in the trauma burn unit and received
skin grafts on both arms. His medical bills from the incident totaled over $100,000.

PAR investigated the incident and even attempted to recreate the scene of the
accident via photographs. The investigation concluded that several preventable unsafe
acts occurred. One of the conclusions was that Anderson violated a safety rule and
engaged in an unsafe work practice by failing to use rubber gloves. PAR fired the onsite
foreman on the day of the accident. PAR fired Anderson in a letter; the letter said he was
fired because he violated a safety rule, but it did not specify which safety rule. The
ultimate source of the electricity that shocked Anderson is unknown.

Anderson filed for a hearing before an ALJ in the Division of Workers
Compensation, seeking workers compensation from PAR. Anderson argued that he is
entitled to workers compensation benefits because he did not violate a safety rule; he also
argued he was not within 5 feet of an energized source at the time of the accident. Next,
he argued that if he did violate the 5-foot rule, he did not do so willfully or recklessly.
Anderson also argued that PAR approved of his decision not to wear rubber gloves at the
time of the accident. Finally, Anderson argued that his decision not to wear rubber gloves
was reasonable under the totality of the circumstances.

PAR opposed Anderson's request for benefits. First, PAR argued that Anderson
should be denied benefits because he willfully failed to use safety equipment the
company provided for him. Second, PAR argued that Anderson should be denied benefits
because he willfully or recklessly disregarded safety rules. Finally, PAR argued that it did
not approve of Anderson's decision not to wear rubber gloves at the time because PAR
has a "strict no tolerance policy" for safety violations. All of these arguments hinge on
PAR's claim that Anderson was violating the 5-foot rule by being within 5 feet of an
electrified source but not wearing rubber gloves at the time he was shocked.

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The ALJ ruled for Anderson, finding he was eligible for benefits. The ALJ found
that "the credible evidence proves" Anderson violated the 5-foot rule and that the
violation resulted in his injuries. The ALJ concluded that Anderson was negligent when
he violated the rule, but not reckless. Finally, the ALJ also concluded that PAR, through
the supervisor on site, approved of Anderson's decision not to wear rubber gloves.
Because the ALJ concluded that PAR approved of Anderson's decision not to wear
gloves, the ALJ did not reach the question of whether Anderson's actions were willful.

PAR sought review of the decision by the Workers Compensation Board. PAR
argued that the ALJ erred because Anderson's violation of the 5-foot rule was either
willful or reckless. PAR also argued that "the overwhelming weight of the evidence
establishes that the employer did not approve" of Anderson's failure to use rubber gloves.

Anderson did not cross-appeal to the Board, but he responded to PAR's appeal.
Anderson argued that there was no substantial evidence that he violated the 5-foot rule.
He next argued that even if he did violate the 5-foot rule, he was nonetheless entitled to
benefits because PAR approved of his actions. Finally, he argued that if he did violate the
5-foot rule, he did not do so willfully or recklessly.

The Board affirmed the ALJ's award. The Board concluded that Anderson did
violate the 5-foot rule, but he did so negligently and not recklessly. The Board also
concluded that Anderson was entitled to benefits despite violating the 5-foot rule because
PAR approved of his actions. The Board wrote that because it concluded PAR approved
of Anderson's actions, it did not need to address whether Anderson's decision to forego
rubber gloves was willful or whether it was reasonable under the totality of the
circumstances. PAR timely filed for judicial review.


5

Standard of Review

PAR raises four issues before this court. First, PAR argues that the Board's finding
that PAR approved of Anderson's actions was not supported by substantial evidence.
Second, PAR argues that the Board misinterpreted the law when it concluded that PAR
approved of Anderson's actions. Third, PAR argues that the Board misinterpreted the law
when it concluded that Anderson's violation of the 5-foot rule was not reckless. Fourth,
PAR argues that the Board's finding that Anderson was not reckless was not supported by
substantial evidence. In his response, Anderson responds to PAR's arguments and raises
two additional issues. First, Anderson argues that there was no substantial evidence that
he violated the 5-foot rule. Second, Anderson argues that his decision to take off his
rubber gloves was reasonable under the circumstances.

In workers compensation proceedings, the burden is first on the claimant to show
that he or she has a right to benefits. Once the claimant makes this showing, the burden
shifts to the employer to show an exception barring compensation applies. Messner v.
Continental Plastic Containers, 48 Kan. App. 2d 731, 751, 298 P.3d 371 (2013). Here,
the ALJ found that Anderson was entitled to an award because his injury arose from the
course of his employment. PAR did not appeal this finding to the Board or this court. The
burden is therefore on PAR to show that exceptions to the Workers Compensation Act
apply and preclude Anderson from recovering benefits.

The parties here raise issues that fall into two categories of review. Arguments
about factual findings are subject to substantial evidence review in light of the record as a
whole. K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 77-621(c)(7), (d). While the relevant statute does not define
substantial evidence, "case law has long stated that it is such evidence as a reasonable
person might accept as being sufficient to support a conclusion." Kotnour v. City of
Overland Park, 43 Kan. App. 2d 833, 837, 233 P.3d 299 (2010). When reviewing for
sufficient evidence, this court must examine
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"all the relevant evidence in the record cited by any party that detracts from such finding
as well as all of the relevant evidence in the record, compiled pursuant to K.S.A. 77-620,
and amendments thereto, cited by any party that supports such finding, including any
determinations of veracity by the presiding officer who personally observed the
demeanor of the witness and the agency's explanation of why the relevant evidence in the
record supports its material findings of fact." K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 77-621(d).

This court cannot reweigh evidence or engage in de novo review when reviewing a Board
decision for substantial evidence. Williams v. Petromark Drilling, 299 Kan. 792, 795, 326
P.3d 1057 (2014).

Arguments about whether the Board misinterpreted or misapplied a statute are
subject to de novo review. Jones v. U.S.D. No. 259, 55 Kan. App. 2d 567, 575, 419 P.3d
62 (2018). This court does not give deference to the Board's statutory interpretation.
Kansas Dept. of Revenue v. Powell, 290 Kan. 564, 567, 232 P.3d 856 (2010).

Was the Board's Finding that PAR Approved of Anderson's Failure to Wear Rubber
Gloves Supported by Substantial Evidence?

Under the Kansas Workers Compensation Act, "[c]ompensation for an injury shall
be disallowed if such injury to the employee results from: . . . the employee's willful
failure to use a reasonable and proper guard and protection voluntarily furnished the
employee by the employer." K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(1)(C). Such a willful failure
does not disqualify an employee from receiving compensation if "it was reasonable
under the totality of the circumstances to not use such equipment, or if the employer
approved the work engaged in at the time of an accident or injury to be performed
without such equipment." K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(2). Here, both the ALJ and the
Board found that Anderson failed to use appropriate safety equipment furnished by
PAR. Nevertheless, both the ALJ and the Board concluded that this did not preclude
7

Anderson from receiving benefits because PAR—through its onsite foreman—approved
of Anderson's decision not to use rubber gloves.

PAR contends that the record does not contain substantial evidence that PAR
approved of Anderson's decision to not wear rubber gloves. PAR combined this
argument with its argument that the Board misapplied the law by concluding PAR
approved of Anderson's decision not to wear rubber gloves. We note that PAR
addressed these points as issue two in its brief. This section of the brief contains only
two citations to the record.

"When facts are necessary to an argument, the record must supply those facts and
a party relying on those facts must provide an appellate court with a specific citation to
the point in the record where the fact can be verified." Friedman v. Kansas State Bd. of
Healing Arts, 296 Kan. 636, 644, 294 P.3d 287 (2013); see Supreme Court Rule
6.02(a)(4) (2018 Kan. S. Ct. R. 34). This court considers the failure to provide record
citations in an argument section a "minor, technical failure" so long as the facts relied on
in the argument are accompanied by citations in the statement of facts. See State v.
Allen, 49 Kan. App. 2d 162, 168, 305 P.3d 702 (2013). Significantly, the relevant
standard of review directs this court to consider "all the relevant evidence in the record
cited by any party that detracts from such finding as well as all of the relevant evidence
in the record . . . cited by any party that supports such finding." (Emphases added.)
K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 77-621(d). In sum, if PAR wanted this court to consider its factual
claims in support of its argument that the record lacked substantial evidence that PAR
approved of Anderson's decision not to wear gloves, PAR needed to provide citations to
the record for those claims, at the very least in its statement of facts.

The first citation in PAR's argument appears when PAR cited to the Board's
decision. PAR wrote: "Here, the Appeals Board held that although this employer has a
work culture that values and enforces safety procedures, the employee's supervisor was
8

a "bad apple" and allowed a safety violation to occur." The second appears where PAR
wrote: "There was a foreman on the ground who asked the employee if he thought he
should have his gloves on, but employee kept working."

PAR makes a myriad of assertions in its relevant argument section to demonstrate
how strongly PAR is committed to safety. For example, PAR sets out assertions of the
following: "This employer trains employees daily on safety risks. This employer
identifies safety risks and reviews applicable safety policies before every job. This
employer held a training session with its employees the day after Employee's accident to
reinforce safety rules. This employer provides all protective equipment." Beyond the
citation to the Board's decision and the claim that the onsite foreman asked Anderson if
he should be wearing gloves as discussed above, none of those assertions were
supported by citations to the record.

PAR's Statement of Facts contains the following appropriately cited facts relevant
to whether PAR approved of Anderson's actions:

"Employee admitted that he received a safety manual both through the employer
and the union."
"Each time a new job is started, a meeting called a tailboard is held to discuss the
job, order of operations, and safety hazards. That morning, the group specifically
discussed energized conductors, using personal protective equipment, including gloves
and sleeves, and using cover, like blankets and insulators called tacos to protect hot
wires. After the tailboard ended, each person, including employee, signed the job
briefing."
"Amanda Fisher is Human Resources Manager for the employer since March
2013. Ms. Fisher stated the company has a zero tolerance policy for safety violations. . . .
Ms. Fisher was not aware of any employees who violated a safety code and were not
terminated. From the time she started with the employer to the time of her deposition
(approximately 18 months), Ms. Fisher had terminated around 15 people for violation of
a safety code."
9

"Jason Stevens, the general foreman over Mr. Stewart (employee's foreman),
testified that employees are always disciplined if they are in the minimum approach
distance without rubber gloves. Mr. Stevens was aware of one other situation where a
journeyman lineman was fired for not wearing rubber gloves and sleeves."

In his response, Anderson cites his testimony during the regular hearing, as well as
deposition testimony from a PAR safety coordinator and a PAR superintendent. The
safety coordinator testified that the onsite foreman said he "knew that [Anderson] was not
wearing rubber gloves"; and when the foreman was asked why he let Anderson "go up
there without rubber gloves," he said that he and Anderson "had been working together"
and that he "had full confidence in" Anderson. When asked why he did not stop
Anderson from working without rubber gloves, the foreman replied: "[Anderson] was
precise and precision with his movements."

Additionally, the record before the ALJ and the Board indicated that PAR fired the
onsite foreman as a result of Anderson's accident. From PAR's action of firing the onsite
foreman, the ALJ and the Board could have reasonably inferred that PAR lay part of the
responsibility for the accident on the onsite foreman, who was responsible for enforcing
the safety rules.

PAR's factually supported arguments show that the company has a general
commitment to safety, evinced by prejob safety meetings and routine termination of
employees for failure to follow safety rules. PAR, however, has not contradicted the
deposition testimony from a PAR employee recounting that the onsite foreman was
aware of Anderson's failure to use rubber gloves. And nevertheless the onsite foreman
chose to let Anderson proceed without gloves because he had faith in Anderson's
methods. Accordingly, the record contains substantial evidence to support the Board's
finding that PAR, through its onsite foreman, approved of Anderson's failure to use
rubber gloves.
10


Did the Board Misinterpret the Law When It Concluded that PAR Approved Anderson's
Failure to Wear Rubber Gloves?

PAR next argues that the Board erred by misinterpreting the law when it
concluded that PAR approved Anderson's choice not to wear rubber gloves. PAR argues
that "[h]ere, the Appeals Board held that although this employer has a work culture that
values and enforces safety procedures, the employee's supervisor was a 'bad apple' and
allowed a safety violation to occur. The Board erroneously applied the law by improperly
substituting allow for approve." PAR argues that the Board erroneously did not apply the
plain meaning of the word "approve" from K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(2). According to
PAR, "[b]y its plain language, the legislature clearly intended to require that the employer
approve of an action, which is a higher bar than allowing an action."

PAR's citation to the Board's conclusion that the onsite foreman was a "bad apple"
is incorrect; PAR also misrepresents the Board's conclusion. PAR cited the "bad apple"
quote as occurring at volume I, page 132 of the record. Page 132 contains no references
to the "bad apple" quote. Rather, the "bad apple" quote appears on page 136.
Additionally, the Board wrote, just two sentences before the "bad apple" quote, that
"PAR, through the foreman [], approved and allowed Anderson to perform the work
without using rubber gloves." The Board did not "substitut[e] [the word] allow for [the
word] approve," as PAR maintains. The Board, by its plain language, concluded that
PAR, through the onsite foreman both "approved and allowed" Anderson's behavior.
(Emphasis added.) Anderson cites to the correct "approved and allowed" quote in his
argument on this issue in his appellate brief.

PAR cites to one case in support of its argument that the Board misapplied the law
by substituting the word "allow" for the word "approve"—Lira v. Preferred Personnel,
Inc., No. 1,067,794, 2014 WL 1758045 (Kan. Work. Comp. App. Bd. April 10, 2014).
11

The case involved a worker, Gonzalo Lira, who injured his eye while working without
safety glasses. Lira's employer had a strict safety policy requiring workers to wear glasses
at all times; Lira was aware of this policy. Lira reported to his supervisors that his glasses
were stolen during a lunch break, but the supervisors did not give him more glasses. Lira
nonetheless testified that the supervisors "would have given him glasses if the glasses had
been available." 2014 WL 1758045, at *4. An employee from the staffing company that
employed Lira testified that the staffing company maintained a supply of safety glasses
for employees that were kept at the location where Lira worked. The day after his glasses
were stolen, Lira returned for another shift and worked without safety glasses because he
did not obtain new ones; he was injured during this shift. The Board denied Lira
compensation because it found he recklessly disregarded the company safety rule
requiring glasses and was therefore barred from recovering under K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 44-
501(a)(1)(D). 2014 WL 1758045, at *5-6.

PAR argues that "[l]ike the employee in Lira who returned to work before
replacing his safety glasses, there must be an element of personal responsibility for an
employee who has been repeatedly instructed on safety rules and provided with
equipment." Anderson, however, correctly points out that the issue in Lira was not
whether Lira's supervisors approved of his failure to wear glasses. Rather, the only issues
on appeal before the Board were (1) whether Lira recklessly violated a workplace safety
rule and, therefore, (2) whether Lira was entitled to workers compensation benefits.
Although the Board concluded that Lira was reckless, it did not consider whether his
supervisors approved of his actions. 2014 WL 1758045, at *6.

PAR's argument, at its core, is that, for the purposes of K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-
501(a)(1)(C), PAR did not "approve" Anderson's actions because (1) PAR strongly
emphasizes safety and compliance with safety rules and (2) the onsite foreman "asked
[Anderson] if he thought he should have his gloves on, but employee kept working." The
only case PAR cites, however, is one that does not address supervisor approval.
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We are unable to locate any authority from this court or from our Supreme Court
defining "approve" within the context of K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(1)(C). While this
court need not defer to the statutory interpretation of the Workers Compensation Board, it
can be a useful reference. Vera-Ruiz v. Dupree Landscaping and Lawn Services, Inc., No.
1,066,283, 2015 WL 4716614 (Kan. Work. Comp. App. Bd. July 29, 2015), is similar to
this case. In Vera-Ruiz, a landscaper injured his eye when he failed to wear employer-
approved safety glasses, but instead wore his own sunglasses. The employer required
employees to wear specific shatterproof glasses furnished by the employer, and Vera-
Ruiz' supervisor gave him two pairs of safety glasses.

Nevertheless, on the day Vera-Ruiz was injured, his supervisor noticed that he was
wearing glasses not provided by the employer. The supervisor asked Vera-Ruiz if the
glasses were safety glasses, and Vera-Ruiz said they were; the supervisor did not check
the glasses to verify this claim. Because the crew was halfway to a job site when the
supervisor realized Vera-Ruiz was wearing improper glasses, the supervisor "allowed
claimant to work with his own glasses." 2015 WL 4716614, at *4. Later that day, Vera-
Ruiz injured his eye when an object shattered his self-provided glasses and hit his eye.

The business owner testified that the supervisor "would be outside the scope of his
employment if he allowed [Vera-Ruiz] to wear other glasses on the day of Vera-Ruiz'
accident." The business owner also told Vera-Ruiz' supervisor after the accident that the
supervisor "was wrong to allow [Vera-Ruiz] to work without [appropriate] safety
glasses." 2015 WL 4716614, at *5. Both the ALJ and the Board in Vera-Ruiz concluded
that the employer approved Vera-Ruiz' failure to wear appropriate safety glasses. 2015
WL 4716614, at *1, *6.

Here, PAR, as a whole, seems to take a hard-line stance on safety rule
enforcement, including enforcement of the 5-foot rule. Nevertheless, given the testimony
13

of the PAR employee—that Anderson's onsite foreman approved Anderson's decision to
proceed without gloves—Anderson highlights the following deposition testimony in his
brief:

"Q: Did [the onsite foreman] tell you that he knew that [Anderson] was not
wearing rubber gloves?
"A: Yes, he did say that.
"Q: Did you ask him why he let Mr. Anderson go up there without rubber gloves,
anything to that effect?
"A: Yeah. He said him and [Anderson] had been working together and that he
had full confidence in [Anderson].
"Q: Did you understand by that that [Anderson] had operated that way in the past
sometime?
"A: I guess you could come to that [conclusion], yes.
. . . .
"Q: Did you ask [the onsite foreman] why he didn't stop it?
"A: Yes.
"Q: And what did he say?
"A: He said [Anderson] was precise and precision with his movements."

While, as in Vera-Ruiz, PAR management as a whole did not approve the
foreman's choice, the foreman was nonetheless acting in a supervisory capacity
representing PAR onsite. From the testimony above, one could reasonably conclude that
the foreman did not just passively permit Anderson to work without gloves on one
occasion. Rather, one could conclude that the foreman routinely allowed Anderson to
work without rubber gloves and developed a rationale for doing so. The Board therefore
did not rely on an error of law when it concluded that PAR, via the onsite foreman,
approved Anderson's actions in this case.

PAR also argues in its brief that if this court finds that PAR did not approve
Anderson's actions, then it should next determine that Anderson's failure to abide by the
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5-foot rule was "willful." K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(1)(C) only bars an employee
from compensation if the injury was caused by the failure to use protection furnished by
the employer if said failure was "willful." As discussed earlier, PAR has failed to show
that either (1) the record lacked substantial evidence to support the finding that PAR
approved Anderson's actions or (2) the Board misapplied the law when it concluded that
PAR approved Anderson's actions. Because substantial evidence supports the Board's
conclusion that PAR approved Anderson's nonuse of rubber gloves when this accident
occurred, we need not determine whether Anderson's failure to use rubber gloves was
"willful."

Was the Board's Finding that Anderson Was Not Reckless Supported by Substantial
Evidence?

K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(1)(D) bars an employee from receiving workers
compensation benefits if the injury results from "the employee's reckless violation of
their employer's workplace safety rules." Here, both the ALJ and the Board concluded
that Anderson's actions were not reckless. The Board adopted the ALJ's analysis on the
recklessness issue. PAR argues that the record does not provide substantial evidence for
the Board's conclusion.

Caselaw defines "substantial evidence" as "such evidence as a reasonable person
might accept as being sufficient to support a conclusion." Kotnour, 43 Kan. App. 2d at
837. When reviewing for sufficient evidence, this court must examine

"all the relevant evidence in the record cited by any party that detracts from such finding
as well as all of the relevant evidence in the record, compiled pursuant to K.S.A. 77-620,
and amendments thereto, cited by any party that supports such finding, including any
determinations of veracity by the presiding officer who personally observed the
demeanor of the witness and the agency's explanation of why the relevant evidence in the
record supports its material findings of fact." K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 77-621(d).
15


The applicable workers compensation statutes do not define recklessness.
Accordingly, courts determining whether an employee recklessly violated an employer
safety policy for the purposes of K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(1)(D) look to other areas
of law for guidance. This court has looked to the Restatement (Second) of Torts and
statutory criminal law for definitions of recklessness for prior workers compensation
cases. See Gould v. Wright Tree Service, Inc., No. 114,482, 2016 WL 2811983, at *10
(Kan. App. 2016) (unpublished opinion).

The Restatement (Second) of Torts § 500(a) (1965) recognizes two kinds of
reckless conduct. In the first, "the actor knows, or has reason to know . . . of facts which
create a high degree of risk of physical harm to another, and deliberately proceeds to act,
or to fail to act, in conscious disregard of, or indifference to, that risk." In the second, "the
actor has such knowledge, or reason to know, of the facts, but does not realize or
appreciate the high degree of risk involved, although a reasonable man in his position
would do so."

Under the Kansas Criminal Code, a person acts recklessly "when such person
consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk that circumstances exist or that
a result will follow, and such disregard constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of
care which a reasonable person would exercise in the situation." K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 21-
5202(j).

The ALJ properly cited to Gould's Tree Service, along with other cases, for the
appropriate definition of "reckless." The ALJ found that Anderson's conduct was
"negligent, but it does not rise to the level of gross, culpable or wanton negligence
constituting recklessness." The ALJ based this decision on the competing testimony in
the record. While Anderson testified he removed his rubber gloves because it "allowed
him to perform his job of operating the saw easier," Eric Younghans, a PAR
16

superintendent who was not onsite for the accident but who investigated the accident,
suggested that Anderson "wanted to minimize the time he wore rubber gloves and sleeves
on a hot day." Additionally, the ALJ considered the fact that Anderson's onsite foreman,
who was in charge of enforcing safety rules, "allowed [Anderson] to perform his work in
violation of [PAR's] safety rules."

Here, PAR argues that Anderson's decision to forego rubber gloves while using
the saw near the powerlines was "reckless on its face." PAR states: "It is beyond reason
to find that this employee appreciated the risk, violated the rule, admitted an intentional
decision, and still was not found to have acted recklessly while exposing himself and his
apprentice to a high risk of injury or death." PAR writes without any citation to authority
that "[w]here there is an intentional violation that creates an appreciable risk of bodily
harm or death—not only to the worker but to the young apprentice in the bucket with
him—that action must be reckless."

PAR's claims that Anderson committed an "intentional violation" are inaccurate.
While Anderson did testify that he "intentionally" took off his gloves, he never testified
that he believed he was within 5 feet of an electrified source when he did so. The
applicable safety rule makes it a violation not simply to take off one's rubber gloves, but
to do so while within 5 feet of an electrified source. Accordingly, PAR's attempts to
characterize Anderson's actions as an "intentional violation" of the safety rule are
inaccurate and misleading.

PAR seeks to juxtapose the case at hand with ones where the Board and courts
have concluded an employee was not reckless. PAR writes that "[o]ftentimes when the
employee's action is not reckless, it is because they do not realize or appreciate the risk."
In support of this argument, PAR cites to cases like Mahathey v. American Cable &
Telephone, No. 1,060,756, 2012 WL 5461478, at *5 (Kan. Work. Comp. App. Bd.
October 8, 2012), where PAR explains, the Board concluded that an "employee's action
17

was not reckless when he mistakenly believed the safety measure was in place." As
Anderson points out in his brief, Mahathey is, in fact, similar to the case at hand because
nothing in the record disproves that Anderson had a good-faith belief that he was more
than 5 feet from an electrified source.

PAR next, without providing any citations to legal authority or to the record,
argues that "[a]s a matter of law, an employee's conduct is reckless when the following
occurs:

● "l. An employee is extensively trained on the employer's safety policy." (Nothing
in PAR's statement of facts states that Anderson was "extensively trained," just that he
received a safety manual through PAR and his union, and PAR conducted tailboard
safety meetings before each job.)
● "2. The safety rule is an industry standard." (There is nothing in the statement of
facts to support this.)
● "3. An employee has significant experience in his field." (The relevant portion of
the statement of facts says Anderson started working as a lineman for PAR in 2009.)
● "4. An employee is provided with personal protective equipment." (This is not in
the statement of facts or PAR's relevant argument section, but in a different argument
section.)
● "5. An employee has personal protective equipment on site and available when
the accident occurred." (This is not in the statement of facts or PAR's relevant argument
section, but in a different argument section.)
● "6. An employee testifies it was his decision to not use personal protective
equipment." (This is not in the statement of facts or PAR's relevant argument section, but
in a different argument section.)
● "7. Employee voluntarily removes his personal protective equipment in violation
of the employer's safety rule." (This is not in the statement of facts or PAR's relevant
argument section, but in a different argument section.)
● "8. Employee works in a profession where there is an increased risk of serious
injury or death." (There is nothing in PAR's statement of facts to support this claim; PAR
also does not provide a cite to the record for this claim.)
18

● "9. Employee exposed not only himself but another person to high risk or serious
injury or death." (There is no citation to the record in PAR's brief that establishes this as a
fact. The relevant facts supported by citations are: (1) an apprentice was up in the bucket
with Anderson, and (2) the union voted to not allow Anderson to work with apprentices.
No record citations establish that Anderson's failure to wear rubber gloves imperiled the
apprentice.)
● "10. Employee's ability to train apprentices was revoked by an independent
organization due to his failure to follow a mandatory and well-established rule." (The
properly cited portion of PAR's statement of facts is as follows: "The Southwestern Line
Constructors Joint Apprenticeship and Training Program revoked [Anderson]'s ability to
work with apprentices 'based on prior incidents that involved apprentices while under
[employee's] supervision.'" This is insufficient to support PAR's claim here.)
● "11. The employer holds tailboards (meetings to discuss safety protocol) before
every job." (This is supported in PAR's statement of facts.)
● "12. Employer regularly enforces the safety rule with testimony of Amanda
Fisher establishing that 15 employees were terminated for safety violations in about a
year and half." (This is supported by appropriate citations in PAR's statement of facts.
But terminating 15 employees for safety violations does not weigh on whether
Anderson's specific actions in this instance were reckless.)

The only record cite PAR provides in its argument is to testimony from a PAR
employee, who stated that while he could not speak for everyone, all the linemen he
observed during his 20-year career wore protective gear when they were within 5 feet of
an energized source. The employee further testified that "[i]f I was close, within reach or
anything, I put them on personally, because I—I don't want to die." As discussed above,
PAR's failure to provide citations to the record weighs strongly against its substantial
evidence arguments. When reviewing the Board's decision for substantial evidence, we
consider

"all the relevant evidence in the record cited by any party that detracts from such finding
as well as all of the relevant evidence in the record, compiled pursuant to K.S.A. 77-620,
and amendments thereto, cited by any party that supports such finding, including any
19

determinations of veracity by the presiding officer who personally observed the
demeanor of the witness and the agency's explanation of why the relevant evidence in the
record supports its material findings of fact." (Emphases added.) K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 77-
621(d).

On the other hand, Anderson's brief contains numerous citations to the record in
support of his argument that his conduct was not reckless. First, Anderson contends that
he did not recklessly violate the 5-foot rule because he did not violate the 5-foot rule at
all. Anderson argues that no substantial evidence supports the ALJ's and the Board's
findings that he violated the 5-foot rule.

Next, Anderson argues that if he did violate the 5-foot rule, it was not because he
was consciously disregarding the risk of electrocution or unconsciously disregarding a
risk of electrocution so great that a reasonable man would have acted differently. Rather,
Anderson argues he had a "good faith belief" he was more than 5 feet from an energized
source. Anderson cites to his testimony that he was aware of the 5-foot rule at all times
and that he used rubber gloves and sleeves earlier in the day when he believed he was
within 5 feet of an energized source. PAR does not cite to any evidence in the record that
contradicts Anderson's testimony that he believed he was not within 5 feet of an
energized source.

Anderson points out that even PAR's witnesses admitted that a lineman must rely
on his or her "best judgment" to determine whether he or she is within 5 feet of an
energized source. Linemen do not use rulers to determine compliance with the 5-foot
rule, but they are instead constantly using common sense to make judgment calls.
Anderson correctly cites to testimony from a PAR employee deposition in support of this
argument. Judgment calls, by their nature, are not precise and can be wrong.

20

PAR does not explicitly argue that Anderson should have known he was within 5
feet. For example, PAR argues in its brief the following:

"Employee appreciated the risk. Employee knew where the nearest energized
source was located. Employee was holding wires that were long enough to reach the
energized source because they were going to be connected to the new pole location.
Based on the physical distance of his body, employee was within five feet of an energized
source. Looking at his reach, including the length of the cables he was holding, he was
arguably zero feet from the risk. There was potential for contact. Employee was working
in an elevated bucket with his apprentice . . . who would have been exposed to the same
risks and any errors in employee's judgment. Employee's actions created a risk of harm to
others, namely [the apprentice]. There is absolutely a perceptible danger of death or
physical harm when a person is working in that close of proximity to a high voltage line
without any protective measures. Employee put himself and his apprentice in harm's way.
That is more than negligent and simply not failing to take proper care—it is reckless."

This paragraph, like the list discussed earlier, contains no citations to the record. PAR's
statement of facts provides no citations to the record regarding the length of the cables.
PAR's statement of facts provides no citations to the record indicating that Anderson
exposed the apprentice to "the same risks" based on Anderson's failure to wear gloves.
PAR's postincident report that was properly before the ALJ concluded that Anderson was
within 5 feet of an energized source. Notably, the report was based on estimates, and the
authors of the report noted that "[t]he exact location of contact could not be determined."
The ALJ and the Board must, however, have agreed that Anderson was, in fact, within 5
feet of an energized source because both ruled that Anderson violated the 5-foot rule.

Because the burden is on PAR to prove that the recklessness exception of K.S.A.
2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(1)(D) applies, we will not consider arguments PAR failed to make.
See Messner, 48 Kan. App. 2d at 751. PAR failed to argue that there was substantial
evidence in the record that Anderson should have known he was within 5 feet of an
electrified source. This court therefore cannot consider the theory of recklessness where
21

one disregards a risk of which one "should have known." This leaves only the theory of
recklessness wherein one disregards a known risk. PAR does not cite to any evidence
contradicting Anderson's claim that he did not believe he was within 5 feet of an
electrified source when the accident occurred.

This court cannot reweigh evidence when conducting a substantial evidence
review. Williams, 299 Kan. at 795. Here, the Board adopted the ALJ's recklessness
analysis. In the ALJ's decision, the ALJ pointed to evidence including Anderson's
testimony that "he thought he was either more than five feet from an energized source,
very close to the five-feet limit, or within five feet but by inches." Anderson correctly
pointed out on appeal to the Board that Anderson's actual testimony was that he did not
believe he was within 5 feet, but if he was, it was by 1/2 inch. When ruling on the
recklessness issue, the ALJ also had testimony before it from a PAR employee suggesting
he believed Anderson took off the rubber gloves because he did not want to wear them in
the heat. This does not contradict or disprove Anderson's claim that he did not believe he
was within 5 feet, it merely suggests but does not prove an alternative state of mind at the
time of the accident. The ALJ had before it conflicting testimony about Anderson's state
of mind, which is relevant to whether Anderson was reckless by disregarding a known
risk. Because the ALJ ruled that Anderson was negligent but not reckless, this necessarily
required the ALJ to weigh the conflicting evidence. This court cannot reweigh that
evidence. Substantial evidence existed in the record to support the ALJ's and the Board's
conclusion that Anderson did not recklessly violate the 5-foot rule. Accordingly, PAR's
substantial evidence argument fails.

Did the Board Misinterpret the Law When It Concluded that Anderson Was Not
Reckless?

As discussed previously, K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-501(a)(1)(D) bars an employee
from receiving workers compensation benefits if the injury results from "reckless
22

violation of their employer's workplace safety rules." Here, both the ALJ and the Board
concluded that Anderson's actions were not reckless. The Board adopted the ALJ's
analysis on the recklessness issue. PAR argues that the Board misinterpreted the law
when it concluded that Anderson was not reckless. In its brief, PAR combined this
argument with its previous argument that the Board lacked substantial evidence for its
conclusion that Anderson was not reckless. Much of our earlier analysis is therefore
useful here as well. This court, however, reviews de novo arguments that the Board
committed errors of law.

As described previously, PAR argues that Anderson's conduct was "reckless on its
face" and that the Board "erroneously applied the legal definition of recklessness and its
conclusion lacked analysis." Further, PAR argues that "[b]ecause there is a finding that
the five-foot rule was violated, it is arbitrary and capricious to find that the violation is
not reckless."

PAR cites to three Board cases. In the first, Valenzuela v. Basic Energy Services,
No. 1,065,257, 2013 WL 5521853 (Kan. Work. Comp. App. Bd. September 17, 2013), an
employee was injured when he stuck his hand into a running pump engine. The employee
claimed the machine was off when he put his hand in and a different employee later
turned the pump on. Two other employees, however, testified that the employee put his
hand in when he knew the pump was already running. The ALJ and the Board credited
the other employees' testimony and concluded the employee was reckless because he put
"his hand in moving machinery, a known and obvious danger." 2013 WL 5521853, at *3.

Next, PAR again cites to Mahathey. In Mahathey, an employee failed to properly
hook a ladder to a safety wire and was injured in a fall. The Board concluded that the
employee was not reckless because "[i]t was not until after the ladder fell that claimant
came to the realization that the hooks were not on the suspension wire." 2012 WL
23

5461478, at *5. The Board concluded that because the employee did not know he was
violating the policy, he was not acting recklessly.

Finally, PAR cites Cox v. Ability Systems, Inc., No. 1,061,686, 2013 WL 1384403
(Kan. Work. Comp. App. Bd. March 26, 2013). In Cox, the Board concluded that an
employee was negligent, but not reckless, when he failed to wear a seatbelt. The
employee, the Board found, was in the habit of wearing his seatbelt but simply forgot on
this occasion; this did not equate to recklessness. 2013 WL 1384403, at *4.

Anderson points out in his brief that these cases show that when an employee
makes a good-faith mistake, the employee is still allowed to receive benefits. PAR's
argument that Anderson's actions were "reckless on [their] face" relies strongly on its
mischaracterization of Anderson's failure to wear gloves as "intentional." As discussed
earlier, while Anderson intentionally took off his gloves, he did not believe he was within
5 feet of an energized source when he did so. Also, as discussed previously, the record
contains substantial evidence that Anderson believed he was not within 5 feet of an
energized source; this evidence is not contradicted or disproved. Thus, Anderson did not
"intentionally" or recklessly break the 5-foot rule. This case is more analogous to Cox
and Mahathey than it is to Valenzuela.

In sum, we conclude that the Board, by adopting the ALJ's recklessness analysis,
correctly applied the law to the evidence before it. As a result, PAR's argument fails by
incorrectly defining "reckless."

Anderson argues that the Board's finding that he violated the 5-foot rule was not
supported by substantial evidence and, thus, he did not violate a safety rule at all.
Anderson also argues that his decision not to wear rubber gloves was reasonable under
the totality of the circumstances and, thus, entitles him to benefits under K.S.A. 2017
24

Supp. 44-501(a)(2). Because we have rejected all of PAR's arguments, we need not
address these two arguments of Anderson.

Affirmed.
 
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