Appellant Ty Stillwell (“Stillwell”) appeals a decision from the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission denying disability and medical benefits for a shoulder injury he incurred during a fight with a co-employee. Stillwell contends that the commission erroneously determined that he was at least partially responsible for causing the fight and, thus, that the so-called “aggressor defense” barred his recovery of benefits for that injury. For the reasons that follow, we hold that the commission did not err and, therefore, affirm the denial of benefits.
I. BACKGROUND
On appeal, we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from that evidence in the light most favorable to employer, the party prevailing below.
Clinchfield Coal Co. v. Reed,
Beginning in June of 2003, Stillwell worked as a groundsman and a bucket operator for appellee Lewis Tree Service (“employer”). Stillwell’s specific job duties included cutting tree limbs away from power lines, cutting up trees “as they were put on the ground,” and carrying wood. On September 30, 2003, Stillwell was working with Daniel Jones, a co-employee. The two men were part of a group of employees cutting down trees “to make a right-of-way for the power line.” Stillwell and another employee were responsible for cutting the limbs off of the felled trees and moving the wood, and Jones was responsible for “bush hogging” the remaining debris. According to Jones, however, Stillwell did not want to move the wood after it had been cut. Thus, Jones got off of his tractor and informed Stillwell that, “if [Stillwell] wanted to grind the bush, he could do it” while Jones moved the rest of the wood. Stillwell then “[came] running over [] towards [Jones],” the two men “had a few words,” and, when Jones “went to step back,” Stillwell “swung and knocked [his] hard hat off.” Jones then “grabbed” Stillwell, and the two men “fell to the ground and started rolling around and scuffling.”
The foreman approached the two men and told them to “break it up.” Jones got up, and the two men started “yelling back and forth.” When Jones tried to walk away, Stillwell grabbed him around the neck, and the men tumbled to the ground. Jones landed on top of Stillwell, causing Stillwell to break his right shoulder. The foreman then called the office and was told to fire both men immediately for fighting on the job. The foreman, therefore, fired both Jones and Stillwell.
Jones, who had been working for employer for eight years, had never been involved in any previous, similar incidents. Thus, the foreman “begged” to rehire Jones because he was the only person, other than himself, with a commercial driver’s license. Employer allowed the foreman to rehire Jones.
By application dated October 30, 2003, Stillwell filed a claim for disability and medical benefits, alleging that the injury to
his right shoulder was incurred when a “co-worker attacked [him] on [the] job site.” Employer denied the claim, asserting that
During the hearing before the deputy commissioner, Still-well testified that, on the day of the fight, Jones had criticized Stillwell’s work by stating that Stillwell “didn’t know what [he was] doing.” Stillwell responded that, “if [he was] doing such a bad job that he could come over and he could do it.” Stillwell testified that he then “turned around and [Jones] had pulled the tractor behind [Stillwell] and jumped off and was standing there, he was all red in the face and mad.” According to Stillwell, Jones then said, “well, here you go — here's my truck, you do my job and I’ll do yours.” Stillwell said that he told Jones, “just get on the tractor and do your job” and that he was “just doing the best [he] can.” According to Stillwell, “when [he] went to turn around [Jones] jumped on [him] and that was when [he] hit the ground” and broke his shoulder. Stillwell also testified that, after the foreman intervened, Stillwell told Jones to “cut it out,” but that Jones then “tackled [him] again.”
Stillwell admitted, however, that he knew he was not “supposed to fight on this job.” The foreman similarly testified that, if employees fight, they are to be fired “immediately,” no “ifs, ands, or buts about it.” The foreman also testified that, prior to the fight, Stillwell had once called Jones a “tattletale” because Jones had reported Stillwell to the foreman for poor job performance.
By opinion dated August 19, 2004, 1 the deputy commissioner held that Stillwell carried his burden of proving an injury by accident. The deputy commissioner reasoned that, although Stillwell “probably struck the first blow,” the two employees were “equally at fault in the fight.” And, because employer only fired one of the two employees involved in the accident, the deputy commissioner concluded that “the employer cannot use the willful misconduct defense successfully in this matter.”
Employer appealed to the full commission, which, by opinion dated May 20, 2005, reversed the award of benefits. The commission reasoned that, because Stillwell failed to carry his burden of proving that he was not the aggressor in the fight, he also “failed to prove that his injury arose out of his employment.” Stillwell appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
The sole issue on appeal is whether the commission erred in determining that Stillwell failed to carry his burden of establishing that his shoulder injury arose out of his employment. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
“The question of ‘[wjhether an accident arises out of the employment is a mixed question of law and fact and is reviewable by the appellate court.’ ”
Cleveland v. Food Lion L.L.C.,
“The language ‘arising out of refers to the origin or cause of the injury____”
Briley v. Farm Fresh, Inc.,
In
Farmers’ Manufacturing Co. v. Warfel,
Accordingly, where a claimant’s injuries are incurred during a fight with another employee, those injuries “arise out of’ the employment only if the fight “ ‘[1] was not a mere personal matter, but grew out of a quarrel over the manner of conducting the employer’s business,
and
... [2]
the injured employee was not responsible for the assault.’
”
Id.
at 104,
The commission found, and the parties agree, that the fight “grew out of a quarrel about work issues,” specifically, Still-well’s “performance of his job.” Thus, Stillwell successfully established that the fight was not personal in nature, but rather, was related to employer’s business.
The commission also found, however, that Stillwell failed to prove that he was not responsible for the fight. Credible evidence in the record supports this finding. Specifically, Jones testified that, after the two men exchanged words, Stillwell “swung and knocked [Jones’] hard hat off.” Jones responded by grabbing Stillwell and pulling him to the ground. After the foreman broke up the fight, the two men resumed arguing. Stillwell then grabbed Jones around the neck, and the men tumbled to the ground again, causing Stillwell to break his shoulder.
From these facts, the commission could reasonably have concluded that Stillwell, by striking the first blow, initiated the physical confrontation. Similarly, by grabbing Jones after the foreman interceded, Stillwell actively sought to continue that confrontation. Thus, Stillwell did not carry his burden of
proving that he was without fault in causing the fight that resulted in his shoulder injury. And, because Stillwell instigated the fight, his shoulder injury did not arise out of his employment because it was not caused by his employment, but rather, by his own conscious decision to engage in a physical altercation on the jobsite.
See Farmers’,
Stillwell argues, however, that the commission improperly placed the burden upon him to establish that he was “not responsible” for the assault. He reasons that the issue of whether he was the aggressor in the fight is analogous to the issue of whether he engaged in “willful misconduct” within the meaning of Code § 65.2-306(A)(5). Because the “willful misconduct” defense is an affirmative defense,
see
Code § 65.2-306(B), “the employer has the burden to prove that claimant’s conduct ... was in ‘willful’ disregard of a reasonable rule established by employer____”
Brockway v. Easter,
We disagree. What Stillwell characterizes as the “aggressor defense” is, in fact, not an affirmative defense at all. It is well-established that it is the claimant who has the burden of proving a causal connection between the injury and the employment sufficient to establish that the injury arose out of the employment.
See, e.g., A.N. Campbell & Co. v. Messenger,
In
AN. Campbell & Co.,
for example, the claimant was shot “three or four times” while he was carrying a battery “down a public road in the direction of and towards his company’s operations.”
Id.
at 378,
The holdings in
AN. Campbell & Co.
and
Hopson
were therefore predicated on the claimant’s failure to establish the first of the elements identified in
Farmers’,
specifically, that the altercation was not a personal matter, but rather, grew out of a quarrel over the manner of conducting the employer’s business.
See Farmers’,
For these reasons, we hold that credible evidence supports the commission’s finding that Stillwell’s shoulder injury did not “arise out of’ his employment. Thus, we affirm the denial of benefits.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The deputy commissioner issued her original opinion on August 9, her first amended opinion on August 16, and her second amended opinion on August 19.
. This is analogous to cases involving "horseplay,” where this Court has held that an employee may recover workers’ compensation benefits if the "injury arises from the
unilateral
act of a co-worker upon a
nonparticipating
claimant.”
Dublin Garment Co.
v.
Jones,
. We disagree with Stillwell’s assertion that, by denying workers’ compensation benefits to an employee who initiates a fight, this Court is impermissibly ‘‘revert[ing] to the doctrines of negligence.”
Farmers’,
. Quoting at length from Larson's
Worker’s Compensation Law
§§ 8.01 [5][a] & [c], Stillwell also contends that this Court should reject the so-called "aggressor defense,” reasoning that the language from
Farmers'
— which he refers to as
dicta
— "has been misunderstood and misapplied here and in other cases." Stillwell concludes that
Farmers’
“cannot be considered as binding precedent” on this issue. However, in
Farmers',
the Virginia Supreme Court clearly intended to "construe[ ] the [statutoiy] language ‘arising out of and in the course of the employment.’ "
Garrett,
. Stillwell also argues that the so-called "aggressor defense” should only be available in cases "when it is shown by the employer that a claimant was hurt while attempting to injure another person based on some motive unrelated to the workplace.” However, in such cases, the injury would not have arisen out of the employment, regardless, because the claimant would be unable to prove the first of the two elements identified in Farmers’. Stillwell’s suggested "fix” would, therefore, have the practical effect of eliminating the issue altogether.
. We also disagree with Stillwell’s assertion that, by requiring him to prove that he was "not responsible" for the fight, the commission impermissibly required him to "prove a negative.” The issue of whether an employee was responsible for a fight is a question of fact: either
Stillwell instigated the fight, or he did not. And, as noted by the Virginia Supreme Court, "the general principle ... that no man shall be called upon to prove a negative” has no application where the "negative has a corresponding affirmative.”
Hinchman v. Lawson,
