Groce v. Vanmeter Contracting, Inc.
Groce v. Vanmeter Contracting, Inc.
Opinion of the Court
Jamie Groce, an employee of VanMeter Contracting, Inc. (VanMeter), suffered a disabling injury in a workplace accident. Groce alleged that the accident was due, in part, to VanMeter's violations of workplace safety regulations, which if true, would entitle her to a 30% increase in benefits pursuant to KRS 342.165(1). The ALJ rejected her claim for enhanced benefits, but the Workers' Compensation Board (Board) reversed the ALJ. The Court of Appeals *680reversed the Board's decision and reinstated the judgment of the ALJ. Groce now appeals and, upon review, we affirm the Court of Appeals.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Groce and two other employees of VanMeter were injured during the construction of a large concrete retaining wall when the forms holding the wet concrete collapsed. Another employee was killed. Groce suffered critical injuries which required extensive hospitalization, multiple surgeries, and long-term rehabilitation treatment.
The Kentucky Occupational Safety and Health Administration (KOSHA) investigated the accident and provided the following description:
Four (4) employees were engaged in pouring concrete into a retaining wall form. The employees were working from a Form Scaffold, twenty-four (24) inches wide by twenty-four (24) foot long mounted to a Plate Girder Forming System retaining wall form 12.5 feet above the ground below. The retaining wall form was eight (8) foot wide at the base narrowing to one (1) foot wide at the top, 12.5-foot-tall and twenty-four (24) foot in length. The employees were pouring concrete into the form using a bucket and crane system and a vibrator machine to settle the concrete. The form was over 95% filled with approximately fifty-four (54) yards of concrete. As the employees were topping off the fill, they heard a loud pop and the entire form raised and toppled to the east toward the crane. Three (3) employees were thrown toward the crane and one (1) employee fell backwards into the concrete surging out from under the toppled form.
As a result of its investigation, KOSHA issued three citations against VanMeter but only one is relevant to our review.
Formwork shall be designed, fabricated, erected, supported, braced and maintained so that it will be capable of supporting without failure all vertical and lateral loads that may reasonably be anticipated to be applied to the formwork. Formwork which is designed, fabricated, erected, supported, braced and maintained in conformance with the appendix to this section will be deemed to meet the requirements of this paragraph.
Specifically, KOSHA alleged that VanMeter violated the regulation by constructing the concrete wall with forms unsupported by a telescoping push-pull pipe brace, and that the anchor bolts holding the forms were spaced too far apart and at irregular intervals. In due course, VanMeter and KOSHA resolved the citation with a Stipulation and Settlement Agreement in which VanMeter "accepted responsibility" for all three citations, agreed that all of the violations were serious, and paid a fine of $14,000.00. Of particular significance to this appeal is, the following provision of the Settlement Agreement:
[VanMeter's] agreement as set forth hereinabove and its execution of this Settlement Agreement are not admissions by [VanMeter] of any violations of the Act or the standards or regulations promulgated thereunder nor admissions of [VanMeter] of the truth of any of the *681allegations or conclusions contained in the Citations or Complaint.
Groce filed her claim for workers' compensation benefits and, as noted above, asserted a claim for the 30% benefit enhancement provided by KRS 342.165(1) for a workplace injury "caused in any degree by the intentional failure of the employer to comply with any specific statute or lawful administrative regulation made thereunder, communicated to the employer and relative to installation or maintenance of safety appliances or methods." The award enhancement of KRS 342.165(1) exists to provide a financial penalty to discourage employers from taking shortcuts that violate employee safety regulations, and correspondingly, the statute also provides a financial incentive for both employers and employees to comply with relevant safety regulations. Chaney v. Dags Branch Coal Co. ,
Groce alleged the same regulatory violations asserted by KOSHA and a violation of the general workplace safety duty of KRS 338.031(l)(a).
The Board concluded that, "regardless of the language contained in the settlement agreement," VanMeter's execution of the settlement agreement withdrawing its contest of KOSHA Citation 01 Item 003 and paying a fine was, in effect, a conclusive judicial admission to the intentional violation of 29 CFR 1926.703(a)(1). In so holding, the Board gave no weight to the agreement's plainly-stated disclaimer of any admissions. Contrary to the ALJ's findings, the Board concluded that, not only was the evidence sufficient to justify the award of enhanced benefits, but that the evidence of the settlement agreement compelled the award of enhanced benefits, provided the violation was shown to have contributed to causing the accident. Consequently, the Board remanded the claim to the ALJ with instructions to determine whether VanMeter's violation of 29 CFR 1926.703(a)(1) in any degree caused Groce's work-related accident, and to then enter an award accordingly.
Upon VanMeter's appeal, the Court of Appeals rejected the Board's analysis and reversed. This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
We review an appeal of a workers' compensation case with these standards in mind. "While we [generally] give great deference to the ALJ's factual findings, questions of law, [as this is,] we review de novo. " Parker v. Webster County Coal, LLC (Dotiki Mine),
A. The employer's settlement of the KOSHA citations was not dispositive of the KRS 342.165(1) safety violation issue.
Groce had the burden of proof in demonstrating that a safety violation had occurred so as to qualify for a safety violation benefit enhancement. Cabinet for Workforce Development v. Cummins,
The Board reversed the ALJ's conclusion and disregarded his findings of fact based upon its own conclusion of law that VanMeter's settlement agreement with KOSHA constituted a judicial admission that VanMeter knowingly violated an applicable safety regulation. A judicial admission is defined as "a formal act done in the course of judicial proceedings which waives or dispenses with the necessity of producing evidence by the opponent and bars the party himself from disputing it." Goldsmith v. Allied Building Components,
The Court of Appeals rejected the Board's analysis and we agree. In construing the settlement agreement as a conclusive admission to a safety violation, the Board totally disregarded a crucial element of the settlement agreement: the explicit provision in which KOSHA and VanMeter disclaim its effect as an admission to the alleged violation. This provision precludes the use of the agreement as a conclusive judicial admission of a safety violation. Were we to conclude otherwise, the settlement of KOSHA and other regulatory processes would be greatly impeded as parties facing collateral litigation in a different forum would have every incentive to resist settlement.
Even without the express admission-disclaimer language, an agreement resolving the citations is not conclusive evidence in the workers' compensation action. "[A]n adjudicative determination by an administrative tribunal does not preclude relitigation in another tribunal of the same or a related claim based on the same transaction if the scheme of remedies permits assertion of the second claim notwithstanding the adjudication of the first claim." Berrier v. Bizer,
Groce places great emphasis upon the decision of this Court in Chaney v. Dags Branch Coal Co., but we find that emphasis to be misplaced. Chaney holds that "[a]n employer is presumed to know what specific state and federal statutes and regulations concerning workplace safety require; thus, its intent is inferred from the failure to comply."
B. The ALJ determined from the evidence that the employer did not violate employee safety regulations.
Finally, although KOSHA's citations and investigative report, and the terms of the settlement agreement may be considered as some evidence of the alleged regulatory violations, it remains for the ALJ in the workers' compensation action to determine whether, as a matter of fact, the violations occurred and, if so, whether they were intentional and a contributing cause of the injury-producing accident. "The fact that the employer settled the KOSHA citation without admitting a violation is immaterial. In the context of a workers' compensation claim, it is the responsibility of the ALJ to determine whether a violation of a statute or administrative regulation has occurred." Brusman v. Newport Steel Corp.,
In this instance, the ALJ did not merely conclude that Groce had failed to meet her evidentiary burden of proving that VanMeter violated 29 CFR 1926.703(a)(1) by failing to use the required push-pull pipe bracing and by failing to properly space the anchor bolts on the concrete forms; rather, the ALJ found from the evidence that VanMeter had used push-pull pipe bracing and had spaced its bolts within four-foot intervals. Thus, the ALJ affirmatively found that these alleged violations did not occur. Groce directs us to no evidence *684that compels a finding in opposition to the ALJ's determination.
The ALJ also expressly rejected the safety deficiencies identified by Groce's co-worker, Steve Nelson, relating to the anchor bolt spacing and the use of tie-downs. The ALJ found that Nelson, while an experienced laborer in building concrete structures, was not qualified to give an opinion establishing safety requirements. The ALJ also found that Groce had failed to establish VanMeter's violation of the general safety duty of KRS 338.031(1)(a) under the standards provided in Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government v. Offutt,
It is fundamental that the Board "shall not substitute its judgment for that of the administrative law judge as to the weight of evidence on questions of fact." KRS 342.285(2). The ALJ "has the sole discretion to determine the quality, character, and substance of the evidence, and may reject any testimony and believe or disbelieve various parts of the evidence ...." Halls Hardwood Floor Co. v. Stapleton,
In summary, the ALJ methodically examined the evidence supporting Groce's allegations of a safety violation and was unconvinced. Upon review, we are unable to conclude that the evidence in Groce's favor was so overwhelming as to compel a reversal of the ALJ's findings. If the party with the burden of proof fails to convince the ALJ of the safety violation, that party must then establish on appeal that the evidence in their favor was so overwhelming as to compel a favorable finding. Hanik v. Christopher & Banks, Inc.,
III. CONCLUSION
When reviewing a decision of the Workers' Compensation Board, the Court of Appeals will affirm unless the Board has misconstrued or overlooked controlling law, or has so flagrantly erred in evaluating the evidence that a gross injustice has occurred. Western Baptist Hospital v. Kelly,
All sitting. All concur.
Two of the alleged violations are not relevant because it is undisputed that they did not cause or contribute to the accident.
KRS 338.031 states: "(1) Each employer: (a) Shall furnish to each of his employees' employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to his employees; (b) Shall comply with occupational safety and health standards promulgated under this chapter. (2) Each employee shall comply with occupational safety and health standards and all rules, regulations, and orders issued pursuant to this chapter which are applicable to his own actions and conduct."
As explained by the Court of Appeals, the rationale behind this rule is that the mission of KOSHA in enforcing 29 CFR 1926.703 is different from the mission of the Board in enforcing KRS 342.165(1). As an illustration, suppose a KOSHA investigation erroneously concluded an employee failed to use available safety equipment, thus implicating the 15% reduction in benefits provision of KRS 342.165(1). We do not apply res judicata in a related workers' compensation claim because the exclusion of evidence that the worker did in fact use the safety equipment would frustrate the objective of KRS Chapter 342 to ensure that injured workers are fairly compensated for their workplace injuries, even though administrative proceedings in another forum may have reached a different, though erroneous, position concerning the facts of the accident. That is, the workers' compensation system, and the appellate courts who may later review a claim, should not be bound by an erroneous decision made by KOSHA.
Citing Nelson Tree Services, Inc. v. Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.