OPINION
This is a special action review of an Industrial Commission award for a noncompensable claim. Two issues are presented:
(1) Whether the administrative law judge applied the correct legal standard to the psychiatric evidence.
(2) Whether the award is reasonably supported by the evidence.
Since we answer both of these inquiries in the affirmative, we affirm.
The petitioner employee (claimant) allegedly suffered two separate industrial injuries on January 14, 1985, and June 3, 1985, while employed by the respondent employer, Arizona Department of Economic Security (ADES).
On January 14, 1985, while employed as an administrative assistant, the claimant fainted at his desk and was taken to an emergency room. He could not recall any particular incident precipitating this faint. Petitioner had passed out at work before. Shortly after the incident, petitioner was taken to St. Luke’s Hospital Emergency room and was admitted to the hospital by his attending physician, Dr. Dugall. Following this incident, petitioner was off work for one month, following which he was placed on a one-month paid administra
In May 1985, the claimant began working for the Arizona Department of Health Services (ADHS) — Environmental Health Section. He was hired by the office manager, Manuel Dominguez, and had no problems until his immediate supervisor, Beverly Westgaard, returned from an extended sick leave. The claimant testified that he had difficulty with Ms. Westgaard from the first day. She was hostile, “screamed” at him, and seemed to resent that he had been hired in her absence by her supervisor, Mr. Dominguez. The claimant testified that Ms. Westgaard told him that “she had heard reports about him,” and that “she was going to teach him to be a supervisor.”
On June 3, 1985, Ms. Westgaard asked petitioner if he would perform the payroll clerk’s function until a replacement could be hired, as the payroll clerk had unexpectedly resigned. The claimant immediately became nauseous, went to the bathroom and vomited, and then returned to his desk and fainted. He was taken to an emergency room. He has been told that he can never return to work and he remains under the care of his treating cardiologist, psychologist and psychiatrist.
Claimant filed a worker’s report of injury on the theory that the conditions at work and the conduct of his supervisors caused him stress which in turn caused a stress-related cardiac condition and fainting. Specifically, he alleged that his employer discriminated against him because he had a hearing impairment and talked loudly, excluded him from meetings, had others write his contracts, did not give him enough work to do, gave him make-work, and did not give him a Personnel Description Questionnaire (PDQ) or a Personal Performance Evaluation (PPE). The claimant also testified that he was omitted from a department organizational chart when this was against the agency’s own protocol.
The respondent carrier, State Compensation Fund (Fund), denied the compensability of both claims and the claimant timely requested a consolidated hearing. Two hearings were held at which voluminous testimony was taken from twelve lay and medical witnesses.
On July 14, 1986, the administrative law judge entered a consolidated award denying compensability, finding that “the job duties of the applicant and/or the conduct of his supervisors were not unexpected, unusual or extraordinary insofar as stresses imposed on the applicant.” This award was reviewed and subsequently affirmed by the Industrial Commission on October 16, 1986. The claimant then brought this special action.
First, we address the claimant’s argument that the administrative law judge applied an inappropriate standard of proof. The claimant concedes that this is a mental injury claim controlled by A.R.S. § 23-1043.01(B). It provides:
A mental injury, illness or condition shall not be considered a personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of employment and is not compensable pursuant to this chapter unless some unexpected, unusual or extraordinary stress related to the employment or some physical injury related to the employment was a substantial contributing cause of the mental injury, illness or condition, (emphasis added.)
However, claimant contends that the Administrative Law Judge erred in interpreting this standard. Claimant contends that “unexpected, unusual or extraordinary stress” does not require that the “stress” be unexpected, unusual or extraordinary but rather that the reaction of the person to stress be unexpected, unusual or extraordinary. To support this interpretation, claimant first cites to the testimony of Dr. Catherine O’Connel, Ph.D., a psychologist, Dr. Daniel Baker, Ph.D., a psychologist, to the effect that “stress” always involves the patients’ subjective perception of events, not the events themselves. Claimant therefore concludes that to interpret “stress” in A.R.S. § 23-1043.01(B) as referring to an objective event or “stressor” is to require a medically impossible differentiation between the source of the stress and the individual’s reaction. While we agree that it may be difficult for doc
The law sometimes requires that bright lines be drawn, and this court has done so, in Archer v. Industrial Comm’n.,
... Petitioner’s argument ... is that the deceased because of his own emotional makeup, experienced greater emotional stress than his fellow employees. In our opinion ... the test for determining the measure of emotional stress is not a subjective one (i.e., how the employee reacts to the job), but an objective one (i.e., do the duties imposed by the job subject the claimant to greater stress than his fellow employees.)
Archer at 203,
The court went on to hold that from an objective standpoint, the deceased’s duties in his job were not in and of themselves stressful, nor did his particular duties subject claimant to any stress not shared by other employees. Id. Thus the court denied petitioner’s claim. See also the recent case of Lapare v. Industrial Comm’n.,
Petitioner suggests that Archer is an abberation, unsupported by previous law. We cannot agree. Prior to Archer, in Sloss v. Industrial Comm’n.,
[T]he stresses to which the applicant was exposed in his employment were the same as, and no greater than those imposed upon all other Highway Patrolmen.
Sloss at 12,
This is not to say that a claimant’s preexisting . disposition can never be a factor in deciding compensability. In Findley, supra for example, the claimant admittedly had a “perfectionist personality” which added to the trauma experienced. Findley at 275,
Claimant also cites to Ramonett v. Industrial Comm’n,
It is important to note that when we approach these outer limits of compensability, the normal rules ... such as the rule that employer takes an employee as he finds him ... simply do not apply.
Archer, 127 Ariz at 204,
Claimant also cites subsection (C) of A.R. S. § 23-1043.01, which provides:
C. If compensation is payable ... for a mental injury, illness or condition, the only employee liable is the employee’s last employer in whose employment the requirements of subsection B are met.
Claimant alleges that this subsection C “provides that when the employee’s response is unusual, unexpected or extraordinary, a compensable, psychiatric claim has been established.” We simply find no evidence for claimant’s position in subsection C. That subsection is designed to limit who is responsible for compensable claims, which are defined by Subsection (B). It neither expands nor modifies the definition of a compensable mental injury claim.
We therefore find the administrative law judge applied the proper standard in this case.
Claimant’s second alleged source of error is that the administrative law judge’s Findings and Decision are not supported by substantial evidence. Specifically, claimant disputes the finding that he was not treated any differently than his fellow employees.
On appeal, this court will not disturb an award if it is reasonably supported by the evidence. Malinski v. Industrial Commission,
For the foregoing reasons, the award is affirmed.
