W. HAROLD ASMUS vs. WATERLOO COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT and EMPLOYERS MUTUAL COMPANIES
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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 29 / 04-1538
Filed October 13, 2006
W. HAROLD ASMUS,
Appellant,
vs.
WATERLOO COMMUNITY
MUTUAL COMPANIES,
SCHOOL
DISTRICT
and
EMPLOYERS
Appellees.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, James C.
Bauch, Judge.
Middle school teacher who filed workers’ compensation claim based
on alleged mental injury appeals from decision on judicial review upholding
workers’ compensation commissioner’s denial of that claim. AFFIRMED.
Jay P. Roberts and Carter J. Stevens of Roberts, Stevens & Lekar,
PLC, Waterloo, for appellant.
Valerie A. Landis of Hopkins & Huebner, P.C., Des Moines, for
appellees.
2
CARTER, Justice.
W. Harold Asmus (claimant), a teacher in the Waterloo Community
School District for twenty-six years, appeals from a decision on judicial
review upholding the workers’ compensation commissioner’s denial of his
disability claim based on an alleged mental injury. Claimant contends that
he is disabled from a severe state of depression caused by the stresses that
arose from an alleged tyrannical working environment at his school. The
workers’ compensation commissioner found that claimant had established
the medical causation elements of a work-engendered mental disability
claim, but had not proven the necessary elements to establish legal
causation. The district court agreed.
Claimant asserts that the commissioner erred in failing to find that he
had established both medical causation and legal causation sufficient to
sustain a claim of work-related mental disability. In the alternative, he
argues that, if legal causation does not exist, the standards for establishing
that condition work a denial of equal protection of the law. After reviewing
the record and considering the arguments presented, we affirm the
judgment of the district court.
Claimant was a teacher in the Waterloo Community School District
from 1975 until April 2000. Except for the first five years of this period, he
was a sixth grade teacher at Hoover Middle School, primarily teaching
science. Claimant was an active member of the teachers’ union and, until
shortly prior to resigning as a teacher, was the union representative for his
school building. The principal at Hoover Middle School from 1992 to 1998
evaluated claimant as a satisfactory teacher, although numerous parent
complaints about his teaching methods were noted and certain reviews
identified poor organizational skills and inability to control his temper.
3
In the fall of 1998, a new principal began working at Hoover Middle
School. Claimant professes to have had no problems in his dealings with
that principal during her first year at the school. During the 1999-2000
school year, claimant was diagnosed as suffering from tuberculosis. He
alleges that during this school year numerous conflicts with the principal
arose
that
produced
responsibilities.
great
stress
in
carrying
out
his
teaching
In April of that school year, the principal and other
teachers who claimant alleged were favored by the principal received
anonymous emails in a critical and somewhat obscene tone.
An
investigation traced the source of these emails back to claimant. A criminal
investigation resulted in a charge of harassment being brought against him.
That charge was ultimately dismissed as part of an agreement between the
prosecutors, claimant, and the school district pursuant to which claimant
agreed to resign, and the school district agreed not to lodge a professional
license complaint against him.
The sources of the stress that claimant identifies as the cause of his
depression were the following:
1. The circulation among teachers in the building of a
summary of parent input at a recent parent/teacher conference
identifying claimant by name as having intimidated students.
Evidence was produced at the arbitration hearing that these
parent complaints against claimant were in fact lodged at the
parent/teacher conference. However, the principal agreed that
it was a mistake to have circulated a summary that identified
the teacher against whom complaints had been made.
2. The principal’s refusal to recommend that certain
teachers in the building grade less leniently and more in
keeping with claimant’s philosophy of grading. Evidence
presented indicated that, in declining to support claimant’s
efforts to change the grading philosophy of other teachers, the
principal fully supported his right to apply his own grading
philosophy to his students.
3. Claimant’s science classroom, which was one of the
largest classrooms in the building, was divided into two rooms.
One of the rooms was devoted to the teaching of a remedial
4
English course. Claimant asserted that he needed the larger
room to properly teach his science classes. Evidence was
offered that the decision to divide the room was made by the
central school administration in order to accommodate a much
needed remedial English program. Claimant’s classroom was
chosen because of its size and the fact it had two doors,
thereby facilitating the division.
4. Claimant contends that the building principal altered
a district-wide school improvement plan in order to eliminate a
seventh grade teacher that the principal did not like.
Substantial evidence was offered to show that the school
improvement plan had been developed prior to the principal in
question arriving at Hoover Middle School and was a decision
of central school administration based upon input from the
various school buildings in the district.
5. An issue arose regarding an alleged willful
circumvention of claimant in the process of teacher’s
applications for special training. Substantial evidence was
presented that, although claimant, during the time that he was
union representative for the building, was required to approve
such applications as to form, the applicants who were alleged
to have circumvented his review did this after claimant had
been replaced as union representative. The dispute arose
during a transition period, and the affected teachers indicated
they much preferred to go to the new union representative
because claimant unduly cross-examined them concerning
their effort to secure special training.
6. An alleged pervasive atmosphere of favoritism of some
teachers and intimidation of others (including claimant)
engendered by the dictates of the building principal.
With regard to the sixth circumstance listed above, claimant
presented a large volume of evidence that things were not going well at
Hoover Middle School after the new principal arrived. At least nine teachers
in addition to claimant testified that the new principal did in fact engender
an appearance of favoring some teachers and intimidating others. Many of
these teachers agreed that the principal appeared to be unreasonably
antagonistic toward claimant. In response to these witnesses, the school
district called the former building principal and assistant principal who
testified that there had been a great deal of strife among teachers in the
building during the time that they were the chief administrators there.
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They characterized many of the teachers as strong-minded individuals who
thrived on conflict.
In 1990 claimant had sought the help of a psychiatrist and was
diagnosed as acutely depressed. He was treated regularly for three years
during which he was taking the drug Prozac. His psychiatrist indicated that
at the end of the three-year period claimant’s depression was in remission.
When claimant’s problems with the criminal law arose in April 2000 as a
result of his insulting email to the principal and others, he resumed seeing
this psychiatrist.
claimant
was
That doctor testified at the arbitration hearing that
suffering
from
a
recurring
major
depression
and
posttraumatic stress disorder from child abuse he had suffered at the
hands of his stepfather.
This witness testified that claimant equated the principal with his
abusive stepfather and that the stresses thus produced were a major cause
of his current depressive state. In the witness’s opinion, claimant will never
be able to teach again. A psychiatrist that examined claimant on behalf of
the school district did not agree that the workplace conditions were a
producing cause of claimant’s depression and was of the opinion that, as a
result of previously existing mental problems, he misperceived the
situations of which he has complained as a vendetta by the building
principal.
In reviewing the evidence presented, the deputy industrial
commissioner concluded that, although the medical evidence presented
supported a claim of medical causation for purposes of proving a mentally
induced injury arising out of the employment, the evidence did not meet the
standard of legal causation that a claimant must show in order to prove a
compensable mental injury. After an exhaustive review of the testimony
given by all of the witnesses, the deputy concluded that the stressors
6
claimed were not sufficiently greater or unusual compared to stress
experienced by other individuals in like or similar jobs, including those in
the Waterloo Community School District, to satisfy the requirements for
legal causation.
In reviewing the deputy’s decision, the workers’ compensation
commissioner adopted the deputy’s findings and conclusions and further
noted that the claimant’s allegations of stress, whether because of the
specific circumstances alleged or due to the general climate within the
school, would not be entirely unusual in a teaching setting.
The
commissioner ruled that “[t]he claimant’s evidence in this case was not
strong enough to cross the line” into levels of unusual stress required for
proof of legal causation.
I. The Legal Causation Issue.
In Dunlavey v. Economy Fire & Casualty Co., 526 N.W.2d 845, 853-58
(Iowa 1995), this court recognized that a purely mental injury may be
compensable under the workers’ compensation laws in the absence of an
accompanying physical injury. In order for a mentally injured worker to
prevail on such a claim, Dunlavey required proof of both medical causation
and legal causation. Dunlavey, 526 N.W.2d at 853. Medical causation
simply requires a claimant to establish that the alleged mental condition
was in fact caused by employment-related activities. Legal causation, on
the other hand, presents a question of whether the policy of the law will
extend responsibility to those consequences that have in fact been produced
by the employment.
Id.
Dunlavey formulated the standard for legal
causation as whether the claimant’s stress was “of greater magnitude than
7
the day-to-day mental stresses experienced by other workers employed in
the same or similar jobs, regardless of their employer.” Id. at 858. 1
In reaching their respective decisions in the present case, both the
deputy workers’ compensation commissioner and the commissioner strictly
adhered to the Dunlavey standard of legal causation. They evaluated all of
the specific instances that claimant asserts caused him abnormal levels of
stress and concluded that events of the same or similar nature would not be
abnormal in the teaching profession. With respect to the generalized claim
of a pervasive atmosphere of intimidation testified to by many witnesses, the
commissioner noted that this climate, which was attributed to the building
principal, would not be an unusual perception in the workplace.
Although the standard of legal causation involves an issue of law, see
Dunlavey, 526 N.W.2d at 853, the application of that standard to a
particular setting requires the commissioner to render an outcome
determinative finding of fact. A court on judicial review is bound by that
fact-finding if it is supported by substantial evidence.
Evidence is substantial for purposes of reviewing the decision of an
administrative agency when a reasonable person could accept it as
adequate to reach the same finding.
Second Injury Fund of Iowa v.
Bergeson, 526 N.W.2d 543, 546 (Iowa 1995); Second Injury Fund of Iowa v.
Shank, 516 N.W.2d 808, 812 (Iowa 1994). The fact that two inconsistent
conclusions may be drawn from the same evidence does not prevent the
agency’s findings from being supported by substantial evidence. Munson v.
Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 513 N.W.2d 722, 723 (Iowa 1994); Reed v. Iowa Dep’t
of Transp., 478 N.W.2d 844, 846 (Iowa 1991). In situations in which the
workers’ compensation commissioner has rendered a finding that the
1In
the later case of Brown v. Quik Trip Corp., 641 N.W.2d 725, 728-29 (Iowa 2002),
we formulated a different standard for those situations in which the mental injury can be
readily traced to a specific event.
8
claimant’s evidence is insufficient to support the claim under applicable
law, that negative finding may only be overturned if the contrary appears as
a matter of law. Ward v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 304 N.W.2d 236, 238 (Iowa
1981); Wetzel v. Wilson, 276 N.W.2d 410, 412 (Iowa 1979); Auxier v.
Woodward State Hosp.-Sch., 266 N.W.2d 139, 144 (Iowa 1978).
In applying these principles to the present case, we conclude that,
while evidence presented by the claimant would permit a finding of legal
causation, it does not compel such finding. The ultimate decision in such
instances is entrusted to the agency. Consequently, the decision of the
workers’ compensation commissioner and the district court must be
affirmed. 2
II. The Equal Protection Challenge.
Claimant contends that the legal requirements for establishing a
mental injury serve to deny a claimant equal protection of the law under the
state and federal constitutions because an additional burden is placed on
mental injury claimants that does not exist in establishing compensable
physical injury. This assertion is premised on the fact that ordinarily it is
not required as a condition of compensability that workplace hazards must
be of a specified magnitude in order to produce a compensable injury, see
Floyd v. Quaker Oats, 646 N.W.2d 105, 108 (Iowa 2002), while such a
requirement has been imposed with respect to mental injury claims.
Claimant insists that there is no rational basis for drawing this distinction.
We have recognized that, under both federal and state embodiments
of equal protection when social or economic legislation is at issue, the states
have wide latitude and such legislation will be presumed to be valid if the
2The
case of Humboldt Community Schools v. Fleming, 603 N.W.2d 759 (Iowa 1999),
relied on by claimant, presents an opposite example of the application of the substantialevidence rule. In that case, the claimant prevailed because the agency found in the
claimant’s favor concerning the magnitude of the stress that existed.
9
classification drawn is rationally related to legitimate state interests.
Sanchez v. State, 692 N.W.2d 812, 817 (Iowa 2005). We are satisfied that
the classification at issue here does not affect a fundamental right and
therefore review it under a rational-basis standard. Classifications do not
deny equal protection of the law simply because they result in some
inequality. Claude v. Guar. Nat’l Ins. Co., 679 N.W.2d 659, 665 (Iowa 2004).
They deny equal protection only if the lines drawn do not rationally advance
a legitimate government purpose. Id.
In searching for a rational governmental purpose supporting the
Dunlavey standard of legal causation in mental injury cases, we need only
examine the reasons set forth in that opinion for adopting the standard that
was chosen. After considering several different standards of causation in
mental injury cases, some more restrictive than the one chosen and some
less restrictive, we opted for the standard that was approved because we
feared that if only causation in fact was required this would convert the
workers’ compensation system into general mental health insurance
because few workers with nontraumatic mental problems could not show
that job stress somehow contributed to that condition. Dunlavey, 526
N.W.2d at 855-56; see also Brown v. Quik Trip Corp., 641 N.W.2d 725, 728
(Iowa 2002). The need to protect against that undesirable consequence
provides a rational basis for the standard of legal causation that has been
adopted. We have considered all issues presented and conclude that the
judgment of the district court should be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All justices concur except Hecht, J., who takes no part.
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