Jimmie Garrett brought an action against her employer, K-Mart Corporation, seeking damages for injuries she incurred when she fell while at work. The trial court granted K-Mart’s motion to dismiss, and Garrett appeals.
The injury at issue occurred on September 19, 1987. Appellant sought benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act (the Act), OCGA § 34-9-1 et seq., but her claim was denied based on the findings of the administrative law judge and the State Board of Workers’ Compensation that appellant’s injury did not arise out of her employment, see OCGA § 34-9-1 (4), but rather was caused by a pre-existing condition that was not aggravated by her work with appellee. See
Borden Foods Co. v. Dorsey,
We agree with appellant that an injury which does not “arise out of’ the employment is not covered by the Act, even where the injury may have occurred “in the course of” the employment. “Injury” as defined in OCGA § 34-9-1 (4) “means only injury by accident arising out of
and
in the course of the employment.” (Emphasis supplied.) It has long been established that both “[a]rising out of and in the course of the employment must concur before the workers’] compensation act can apply to an injury to an employee. [Cit.]”
Lumbermen’s Mut. Cas. Co. v. Babb,
However, a judgment right for any reason is to be affirmed.
Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Walker,
*376
A review of the factual determinations made by the ALJ and the Board reveals that several significant matters had been established adversely to appellant, including (1) that both parties to this appeal were subject to the Act; (2) that her fall was caused only by her preexisting Meniere’s Syndrome; (3) that appellant’s condition was not aggravated by her work with appellee; (4) that there was nothing on the job which contributed to appellant’s fall; and (5) that there was no peculiar danger to which her work exposed her. In her complaint, appellant’s allegations do not directly contradict the above findings. Rather, the basis for appellant’s complaint is that appellee, through its agents, knew about her tendency to faint (of which she asserts she was unaware) and therefore had superior knowledge of the dangers of appellant’s work place, yet appellee continued to employ her in conditions which it knew were especially dangerous to her. (We note that appellant’s pleadings do not involve any breach of professional responsibility. Compare
Downey v. Bexley,
Construing appellant’s pleadings liberally, the most likely interpretation to be given them is that she is alleging a breach of her employer’s duty to furnish her with a safe working place under OCGA § 34-7-20. However, in Southern Wire &c., supra, the Supreme Court held that where an employer and employee are under the provisions of the Act, a claim by the employee that the employer failure to furnish the employee with a safe place to work, even if wilfully done, is encompassed within the Act.
Thus, under
Southern Wire &c.,
supra, the question whether appellant’s injury arose out of appellee’s failure to provide her with an alternate, or safer, work place, was also an issue for adjudication by the ALJ and the Board pursuant to the Act. In the case sub judice, the ALJ and the Board determined that appellant’s injury did not arise out of her existing work environment, i.e., that her work place was not the contributing proximate cause of the injury. See
Greene v. Transport Ins. Co.,
Finally, to the extent that appellant’s pleadings may be construed to assert a cause of action under the Georgia Equal Employment for the Handicapped Code, OCGA § 34-6A-1 et seq., it appears that even if appellant qualifies as a handicapped person under OCGA § 34-6A-2 (2), a matter on which we intimate no opinion, her suit must nevertheless fail in that OCGA § 34-6A-4 (a) places no burden on any employer “to modify his physical facilities or grounds in any way or exercise a higher degree of caution for a handicapped individual than for any person who is not a handicapped individual.” Therefore, because appellant’s allegations disclose with certainty that she would not be entitled to relief under any state of probable facts, see generally
Frady v. Irvin,
Judgment affirmed.
