Motes v. Curry Cty. Adult Det.Ctr.

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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 2 Opinion Number: _____________ 3 Filing Date: November 28, 2018 4 No. A-1-CA-36048 5 AMANDA MOTES, 6 Worker-Appellee, 7 v. 8 CURRY COUNTY ADULT DETENTION 9 CENTER and NMCIA, 10 Employer/Insurer-Appellants. 11 APPEAL FROM THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION ADMINISTRATION 12 Terry S. Kramer, Workers’ Compensation Judge 13 14 15 16 Sanders, Bruin, Coll & Worley, P.A. Beth L. Hightower Clayton S. Hightower Roswell, NM 17 for Appellee 18 19 20 21 Hatcher Law Group, P.A. Scott P. Hatcher Mark A. Cox Santa Fe, NM 22 for Appellants 1 OPINION 2 ATTREP, Judge. 3 {1} Curry County Adult Detention Center (Employer or the detention center) 4 and New Mexico County Insurance Authority (Insurer) appeal a Workers’ 5 Compensation Judge’s (the WCJ) order awarding compensation to Worker 6 Amanda Motes for injuries she sustained while engaged in horseplay on 7 Employer’s premises. Employer and Insurer contend Worker is not entitled to 8 compensation because, given the nature of the horseplay, she cannot establish her 9 injuries arose out of and in the course of her employment as required for 10 compensability by NMSA 1978, Section 52-1-28(A)(1) (1987) of the Workers’ 11 Compensation Act (the Act), NMSA 1978, §§ 52-1-1 to -70 (1929, as amended 12 through 2017). We hold that substantial evidence supports the WCJ’s findings and 13 the WCJ did not err in concluding Worker’s injuries are compensable under the 14 Act. We affirm the compensation order. 15 BACKGROUND 16 {2} Worker had been working at the detention center as a booking specialist for 17 approximately five weeks when she sustained the injuries at issue in this appeal. 18 As a booking specialist, Worker was responsible for the “overall operation” of the 19 booking room and file room at the detention center. Her duties generally involved 20 classifying and booking new inmates, receiving and recording incoming 1 paperwork, medication, and visitors, and performing related filing obligations, 2 along with various other unspecified responsibilities. In her first week on the job, 3 she worked the day shift and trained with direct supervisors in the booking 4 department. After that initial training period, Worker made the switch to the night 5 shift. 6 {3} None of her direct supervisors in the booking department and no senior 7 officials in her direct chain of command worked nights. Instead, typically the most 8 senior employees on duty at night were sergeants who worked in the detention 9 chain of command, as opposed to the booking chain of command, and oversaw the 10 operations of more junior detention officers at the detention center. These 11 sergeants also served as “supervisory employee[s]” for the facility more generally 12 and served as the first point of contact for more junior employees from all 13 departments, including the booking department, when questions or concerns arose. 14 The sergeants worked from different duty stations interspersed among the 15 departments; the specific station assignment varied night to night. 16 {4} Sergeant Jayson Cloud worked as a supervisory sergeant on the night shift 17 along with other sergeants, and he worked the night Worker sustained her injuries. 18 Cloud had worked at the detention center for approximately three years at the time 19 of Worker’s injuries. He had accrued a short history of discipline in his time 20 there—he had been counseled twice for use of obscene or abusive language toward 2 1 inmates and staff, suspended for conduct unbecoming a county employee, 2 counseled for overriding facility doors while inmates were present, and 3 reprimanded for failing to report for shifts. 4 {5} The detention center’s workload at night ebbed and flowed, and the 5 sergeants and employees in booking and in detention often had downtime. Curry 6 County (the County) had promulgated and distributed a safety manual to all county 7 employees, including those employed at the detention center. The manual 8 prohibited horseplay by employees and advised that horseplay “may subject” 9 employees to disciplinary action at the discretion of department heads. Worker and 10 Cloud both signed forms acknowledging they had read and understood the 11 manual’s terms. County Manager Lance Pyle, who gave deposition testimony for 12 the WCJ’s consideration, could not recall whether Worker or Cloud had been given 13 any specific safety training above and beyond the instructions provided in the 14 County’s safety manual, and he could not produce any documentation recording 15 their attendance at any safety training sessions the County did provide from time to 16 time. 17 {6} Worker and Cloud had established a history of interacting in an apparently 18 lighthearted way when downtime arose at the detention center. Worker testified 19 that Cloud had “made it his life goal to terrorize [her] at any given moment.” She 20 added that they had on previous occasions attempted to mark each other with 3 1 markers and spray each other with bug spray and that Cloud “would do stuff like 2 that all the time.” Cloud confirmed they had in the past attempted to mark each 3 other with markers, describing the frequency as “from time to time.” 4 {7} Worker observed that theirs was not unique behavior at the detention center, 5 recalling, “I [knew] a lot of people there that [did] engage in horseplay, they [did] 6 have that sort of camaraderie between each other . . . A lot of the officers [did], the 7 booking officers, and the actual guards themselves.” Other sergeants, she added, 8 engaged in similar ways during downtime and, she reported, “it was one of those 9 things where it had become a custom . . . I didn’t think anything of it . . . because it 10 was something that I saw often.” Worker also testified, in response to a question 11 about whether she had raised the subject of horseplay with her direct supervisors, 12 that she had let a supervisor know Cloud often “irritated” her. The supervisor, 13 however, brushed her off, observing that “that was how [Cloud] was.” By contrast, 14 Pyle testified that he was unaware the detention center had this culture of activity 15 during periods of downtime at all, and he emphasized that if the culture existed, “it 16 should have been reported” so that the County could take “immediate action.” But 17 neither Pyle nor Cloud could recall any reports or complaints to supervisors 18 regarding the activity, and Pyle reiterated that if reports had in fact been made, the 19 County would have investigated and taken action as appropriate. 4 1 {8} On the night she sustained her injuries, Worker recalled that work was slow 2 and she was sitting, waiting in the booking area. A few hours after her shift began, 3 she and Cloud engaged and attempted to mark each other with markers, as they had 4 in the past. Cloud withdrew, stepped into a nearby bathroom, and returned with a 5 can of bug spray. He feigned spraying Worker with the bug spray, and then 6 retreated out of the booking area. Worker gave chase, running, but she tripped on a 7 short staircase exiting the booking area. Her fall resulted in a broken right ankle 8 and fibula. The entire interaction from the initial engagement to the fall, Worker 9 testified, occurred in a span of a few minutes or less, as one continuous exchange. 10 Worker and Cloud both testified this was the first time their downtime interaction 11 had involved running. 12 {9} Worker eventually sought and received medical attention for her injuries and 13 reported the accident to Employer. After some consultation with Cloud, Worker 14 gave a fabricated account of the events giving rise to the injuries in her initial 15 report, fearing she might lose her job and receive no compensation for the injury 16 were the actual story to come out. Cloud signed off on the report. The County 17 made its standard investigation of the report and reviewed surveillance video at the 18 detention center from the night Worker sustained her injuries. After observing the 19 incident on video as it actually transpired, the County realized Worker had falsified 20 the initial report. 5 1 {10} This was not the first time surveillance video had revealed Worker 2 committing an infraction at the detention center, as she had previously been seen 3 on video using her phone in an area where phone use was prohibited and was 4 counseled for that infraction. Although Worker testified that the surveillance 5 cameras were monitored around the clock from a station near the booking area, the 6 record does not reveal when or under what conditions any surveillance might have 7 been reported up a chain of command. Based on her prior discipline, Cloud’s 8 disciplinary history, the circumstances surrounding the accident observed in the 9 surveillance video, and the falsification of the accident report, Employer eventually 10 fired both Worker and Cloud. 11 {11} Worker sought workers’ compensation for her injuries, believing they 12 constituted compensable accidental work injuries. Employer took the position that 13 Worker’s injuries had arisen not from and in the course of her employment as 14 required by statute, but instead from non-compensable horseplay. At trial, the WCJ 15 heard testimony from Worker and argument from the parties regarding the dispute. 16 The parties also submitted depositions from Cloud and Pyle, along with various 17 other exhibits and proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, for the WCJ’s 18 consideration in making the compensation determination. 19 {12} In the compensation order, the WCJ made various findings in evaluating the 20 coverage question. The WCJ found, among other things, that the injury took place 6 1 during normal work hours and on Employer’s premises, that “Cloud had engaged 2 in horseplay with Worker on previous occasions[,]” and that “Employer had not 3 counseled either [Sergeant] Cloud or Worker concerning horseplay any time prior 4 to the . . . incident.” The WCJ added that “Employer did nothing to curtail the 5 repeated horseplay at any time prior to the . . . incident.” The WCJ further found 6 that Cloud was the supervisor in charge at the time of Worker’s injury and that 7 “Employer had surveillance cameras throughout the detention center.” The WCJ 8 also declined to adopt Employer’s proposed findings that “[h]orseplay is further 9 not tolerated at [the] County and particularly in the secured areas such as the 10 booking area of the . . . .[d]etention [c]enter,” and that “[the] County, including the 11 . . . [d]etention [c]enter, does not have a ‘culture’ of horseplay.” Those proposals 12 stood in contrast to Worker’s proposed finding that “horseplay [was] commonplace 13 at the [d]etention [c]enter”—a finding implicitly, if not explicitly, adopted by the 14 WCJ. Based on his findings, the WCJ concluded Worker’s injury was compensable 15 under the Act and entered a compensation order in her favor. Employer and Insurer 16 timely filed this appeal. 17 DISCUSSION 18 {13} Employer and Insurer raise several factual and legal arguments in response 19 to the WCJ’s compensation order. They contend the record cannot support the 20 WCJ’s finding that Cloud was a supervisor at the detention center such that any 7 1 knowledge he had, and any toleration he exhibited, regarding a custom of 2 horseplay at the facility might be imputed to Employer. They also dispute the 3 finding that Employer had notice of past horseplay at the detention center based on 4 Employer’s operation of surveillance cameras. Employer and Insurer present those 5 factual challenges in support of their main legal argument—that the Act and our 6 prior cases examining horseplay establish a threshold requirement for 7 compensation that an employer have notice of a history of horseplay in the 8 employment environment. They maintain that Worker has not established the 9 requisite notice as a matter of law, and thus contend the WCJ erred in concluding 10 Worker’s injuries are compensable under the Act. 11 I. Standard of Review 12 We review the whole record in workers’ compensation cases to determine {14} 13 whether substantial evidence supports the WCJ’s findings. See Lewis v. Am. Gen. 14 Media, 2015-NMCA-090, ¶ 17, 355 P.3d 850. We review the evidence in the light 15 most favorable to the decision, and we defer to the WCJ’s resolution of conflicts in 16 the evidence. See Rodriguez v. McAnally Enters., 1994-NMCA-025, ¶ 11, 117 17 N.M. 250, 871 P.2d 14. In cases involving “uncertain, doubtful, or ambiguous 18 findings,” we are “bound to indulge every presumption to sustain the judgment.” 19 Kincaid v. WEK Drilling Co., 1989-NMCA-111, ¶ 28, 109 N.M. 480, 786 P.2d 20 1214 (operating under prior version of Rule 1-052(A) NMRA); see also Jones v. 8 1 Auge, 2015-NMCA-016, ¶ 2, 344 P.3d 989 (explaining that “on appeal, a 2 reviewing court liberally construes findings of fact adopted by the fact finder in 3 support of a judgment” and “such findings are sufficient if a fair consideration of 4 all of them taken together supports the judgment entered below” (alteration, 5 internal quotation marks, and citations omitted)). In reviewing the whole record, 6 we examine the findings both expressly and implicitly made, along with any 7 refusals to adopt proposed findings proffered by a party, in determining whether 8 the WCJ’s final conclusions are justified. See Molinar v. Larry Reetz Constr., Ltd., 9 2018-NMCA-011, ¶ 42, 409 P.3d 956 (examining “express” and “concomitant 10 implied” findings); Jones v. Beavers, 1993-NMCA-100, ¶ 18, 116 N.M. 634, 866 11 P.2d 362 (explaining that “[t]he trial court’s refusal to adopt the requested findings 12 of fact is tantamount to a finding against [the requesting party] on each of these 13 factual issues”); see also State ex rel. King v. UU Bar Ranch Ltd. P’ship, 200914 NMSC-010, ¶ 44, 145 N.M. 769, 205 P.3d 816 (“When a trial court rejects 15 proposed findings of facts or conclusions of law, we assume that said facts were 16 not supported by sufficient evidence.”). We review de novo the WCJ’s application 17 of law to the facts found, and we may affirm the WCJ’s order if it reaches the right 18 result, even for reasons the order does not address. See Maez v. Riley Indus., 201519 NMCA-049, ¶ 31, 347 P.3d 732. Finally, to the extent the dispute here raises 20 questions about the appropriate interpretation of the Act, we review such questions 9 1 de novo. See Romero v. Laidlaw Transit Servs., Inc., 2015-NMCA-107, ¶ 8, 357 2 P.3d 463. 10 1 II. Compensable Injuries Under the Act 2 The Act directs that claims for compensation are only to be allowed “when {15} 3 the worker has sustained an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his 4 employment[.]” Section 52-1-28(A)(1); see also Rodriguez v. Permian Drilling 5 Corp., 2011-NMSC-032, ¶ 9, 150 N.M. 164, 258 P.3d 443 (“The Act provides the 6 exclusive remedy for an employee to receive compensation for an injury arising 7 out of and in the course of his employment.” (internal quotation marks and citation 8 omitted)). That an injury may be caused entirely by the negligence of the injured 9 does not generally change the compensation determination. See § 52-1-8(C) (“In 10 an action to recover damages for a personal injury sustained by an employee . . . it 11 shall not be a defense . . . that the injury . . . was caused, in whole or in part by the 12 want of ordinary care of the injured employee where such want of care was not 13 willful.”). Instead, the relevant language presents two distinct conditions for 14 compensation: (1) the “arising out of” condition typically calls for a kind of 15 causation analysis, while (2) the “in the course of” condition makes reference “to 16 the time, place[,] and circumstances under which the injury occurred.” Wilson v. 17 Richardson Ford Sales, Inc., 1981-NMSC-123, ¶ 9, 97 N.M. 226, 638 P.2d 1071. 18 Both conditions are satisfied where an injury can be characterized as “reasonably 19 incidental to the employment” or “flowing [from the employment] as a natural 20 consequence.” Id. Whether an injury can be described as reasonably incidental to 11 1 the employment will depend “upon the practices permitted” in the employment and 2 “the customs of the employment environment generally.” Id. (internal quotation 3 marks and citation omitted). More recently, our Supreme Court has observed a 4 critical inquiry in evaluating the Act’s two compensation conditions is whether 5 “the injury was sustained during the commission of an activity that is reasonable 6 and foreseeable both as to its nature and manner of commission.” Rodriguez, 20117 NMSC-032, ¶ 9 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). 8 III. Injuries Resulting From Horseplay 9 In horseplay cases, which have not often been examined in New Mexico, we {16} 10 have elaborated on the standard inquiry. Historically, both participants and non11 participants were out of luck when it came to recovering for injuries caused by 12 horseplay—their injuries were said not to have arisen from and in the course of 13 employment but from some risk foreign to the employment environment. See 14 Woods v. Asplundh Tree Expert Co., 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 7, 114 N.M. 162, 836 15 P.2d 81. This rule was then relaxed for non-participants, as courts observed the 16 risks created by fellow workers might often constitute risks of the employment 17 environment itself. Id. Participants, by contrast, often remained without a route to 18 recovery. Id. Eventually, however, the participant/non-participant distinction fell 19 out of favor; and in Woods, this Court recognized a longstanding “trend against the 20 rule denying recovery solely on the basis of participation [in horseplay] and toward 12 1 the elimination of distinctions based on fault.” Id. ¶ 10. We observed that two tests 2 for evaluating compensability had gained prominence in other jurisdictions, both of 3 which had been shaped by the trend. See id. ¶¶ 8, 11-12 (identifying the “New 4 York rule” and the “course of employment test”). Both, we determined, reflected 5 critical compensation inquiries consistent with New Mexico law. Id. ¶¶ 13-14, 27. 6 We thus concluded both tests may often be useful in determining whether 7 horseplay injuries satisfy the Act’s “arising out of” and “course of employment” 8 requirements. Id.; see also Esckelson v. Miners’ Colfax Med. Ctr., 2014-NMCA9 052, ¶ 8, 324 P.3d 393 (confirming, more recently, that the Woods analysis applies 10 to “cases in which a worker is injured while engaging in horseplay”). 11 {17} The first test Woods identified had come to be known as the “New York 12 rule.” Woods, 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 8. The test asks simply whether the activity 13 giving rise to the injury had “become a regular incident of the employment, rather 14 than an isolated act.” Id. Our analysis in Woods revealed that two basic 15 considerations should guide the application of the New York rule. See id. ¶ 21. 16 First, we examined the nature and extent of prior activity similar to the activity 17 giving rise to the injury. And second, we considered the nature of the specific 18 employment environment more generally and whether it may be expected to 19 include activity similar to that giving rise to the injury. Id. 13 1 {18} The second compensability test, which Woods identified as “the course of 2 employment test,” asks a different question—evaluating whether the activity 3 giving rise to the injury amounts “to a substantial deviation from the employment.” 4 Id. ¶ 11 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Under this test, injuries 5 remain compensable unless they have arisen from substantial deviations. Id. We 6 highlighted in Woods several considerations that should guide the evaluation of 7 whether a horseplay deviation is substantial. See id. ¶ 22. Those considerations 8 include: (1) the scope and gravity of the deviation; (2) the completeness of the 9 deviation; (3) the extent to which horseplay has become an accepted part of the 10 employment environment; and (4) the extent to which the specific employment 11 environment may be expected to include “such horseplay.” Id. Given those 12 considerations, we observed in Woods that application of the course of 13 employment test may often render more injuries compensable than application of 14 the New York rule. Id. ¶ 24. This is the case because injuries arising from various 15 isolated acts, for example, which might fail under the New York rule, might 16 nevertheless be coverable under the course of employment test. Id. But whether an 17 injury may be compensable under one test but not the other, the Woods court 18 cautioned, should not generally matter—the worker “should be able to prevail in 19 New Mexico if he or she can factually satisfy either one.” Id. ¶ 13. 14 1 {19} Before examining each test in light of the facts in this case, we address 2 Employer and Insurer’s threshold notice argument. Employer and Insurer point to 3 language from Woods and ask us to impose as a threshold condition for recovery 4 the requirement that an employer have notice of the horseplay activity giving rise 5 to the injury. In the course of adopting both the New York rule and the course of 6 employment test, Woods observed that the old participant/non-participant 7 distinction would generally no longer be dispositive in making a compensation 8 determination. Id. ¶ 15. Instead, Woods recognized, the nature and extent of an 9 injured party’s participation may often illuminate whether an employer had “actual 10 or constructive notice” of or “reason to foresee” the activity giving rise to the 11 horseplay. Id. And these questions are instructive under both tests. See id. 12 Employer and Insurer have seized on these observations in Woods regarding notice 13 and submit that the notice question is properly treated as a threshold inquiry 14 divorced from the two tests. But asking the notice question in isolation is 15 inconsistent with various principles within our workers’ compensation 16 jurisprudence. Moreover, because notice is but one consideration pertinent to the 17 analyses required by the two tests, examining it in isolation will amount to both an 18 incomplete and redundant exercise. 19 {20} For instance, a danger arises that any generalized notice inquiry may be 20 understood in its negligence-related sense. Understood that way, notice might tell 15 1 us something about an employer’s negligence in allowing certain activity or an 2 employee’s assumption of the risk. But, as we have repeatedly explained, the 3 “policies served” by workers’ compensation law differ from those served by tort 4 law, and mingling their principles is often unhelpful to the task at hand. See, e.g., 5 Lessard v. Coronado Paint & Decorating Ctr., Inc., 2007-NMCA-122, ¶ 9, 142 6 N.M. 583, 168 P.3d 155; see also Segura v. J.W. Drilling, Inc., 2015-NMCA-085, 7 ¶ 11, 355 P.3d 845 (“Workers[’] compensation law is ‘sui generis’ and New 8 Mexico courts have repeatedly declined to mingle its principles with those in other 9 areas of law.”). The Act, in fact, explicitly disavows many of those classic 10 negligence-related concepts, and our Supreme Court recently has observed our 11 compensation system is designed to “eliminate[] employer defenses that frequently 12 prevented injured workers from recovering for workplace injuries under the 13 common law.” Rodriguez v. Brand W. Dairy, 2016-NMSC-029, ¶ 13, 378 P.3d 13; 14 see also NMSA 1978, § 52-5-1 (1990) (“The workers’ benefit system in New 15 Mexico is based on a mutual renunciation of common law rights and defenses by 16 employers and employees alike.”). 17 {21} A closely related problem occurs when an isolated notice question makes 18 concepts like “personal knowledge, personal acquiescence, [and] personal failure 19 to prevent recurrence” dispositive in our compensation law. 2 Arthur Larson et al., 20 Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law § 23.05[2], at 23-8 (2017) (cautioning that 16 1 these concepts “have no place in compensation law”); see also Crilly v. Ballou, 91 2 N.W.2d 493, 502 (Mich. 1958) (“The employer’s knowledge, actual or 3 constructive, [its] acquiescence, [its] condonation, are not essential to the 4 compensability of an injury under our statute.”). As we recognized in Woods, a 5 long line of authority had observed those concepts may tell us nothing at all about 6 compensability, because “[t]he test of liability under the statute is not the master’s 7 dereliction, whether his own or that of his representatives acting within the scope 8 of their authority.” Woods, 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 7 (quoting Leonbruno v. 9 Champlain Silk Mills, 128 N.E. 711, 712 (N.Y. 1920) (Cardozo, J.)). The relevant 10 question, instead, is “the relation of the service to the injury, of the employment to 11 the risk.” Id. (quoting Leonbruno, 128 N.E. at 712). 12 {22} Moreover, proper evaluation of any foreseeability or notice question must 13 maintain the requisite focus on the “arising out of” and “in the course of” elements 14 under the Act—considerations the New York rule and the course of employment 15 test are designed to explore. See 2 Larson, supra, § 23.05[2], at 23-7 (“The 16 controlling issue is whether the custom had in fact become part of the employment; 17 the employer’s knowledge of it can make it neither more nor less a part of the 18 employment—at most it is evidence of incorporation of the practice into the 19 employment.”); see also Crilly, 91 N.W.2d at 502 (“If the employer is indisposed, 20 remote from the operation, engrossed in other affairs, even enjoying a well-earned 17 1 respite in the Caribbean, will there be a suspension of compensation for operations 2 developed in his absence, or their natural concomitants?”). Evaluation of the nature 3 and extent of the horseplay and the nature and history of the employment 4 environment, in other words, will often more closely probe the notice and 5 foreseeability questions as those concepts must be understood for purposes of the 6 Act. See Woods, 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 21 (applying New York rule and analyzing 7 nature of the horseplay and history, custom, and nature of employment 8 environment); id. ¶ 26 (applying course of employment test and analyzing nature 9 of the horseplay and history, custom, and nature of employment environment). 10 {23} Application of the tests themselves, in addition, will ordinarily answer the 11 question of whether any specific activity should have been foreseeable without the 12 need for separate inquiry. See 2 Larson, supra, § 23.05[2], at 23-8 (“[A]lmost any 13 practice which had continued long enough to qualify as a ‘custom’ and as ‘part and 14 parcel’ of the employment could be found to be within the constructive knowledge 15 of the employer.”). Any activity constituting a regular incident of employment 16 under the New York rule should thus satisfy any foreseeability requirement for 17 purposes of the compensation determination, as should any activity not constituting 18 a substantial deviation under the course of employment test. See Wilson, 198119 NMSC-123, ¶ 9 (“An injury reasonably incidental to the employment . . . is 20 compensable.”); cf. Woods, 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 25 (summarizing application of 18 1 course of employment test and highlighting critical questions of whether the 2 activity is “a usual practice on the job,” and whether the job is “the type of 3 employment that induce[s]” the activity); 2 Larson, supra, § 23.05[2], at 23-7 4 (stating that “[t]he controlling issue is whether the custom had . . . become part of 5 the employment”). 6 {24} Given the purpose of and ground covered by the New York rule and the 7 course of employment test, we conclude the analytically sounder approach applies 8 the tests first and reveals and incorporates their respective answers to the notice 9 question along the way. We decline the invitation to establish any threshold notice 10 requirement or preliminary inquiry in this context. 11 IV. 12 The WCJ Did Not Err in Determining Worker’s Injuries Are Compensable 13 Regardless when the notice question is to be resolved, Employer and Insurer {25} 14 also contend that the WCJ erred in imputing notice to Employer based on a 15 determination that Cloud was a supervisor engaged in horseplay with Worker and 16 Employer’s use of surveillance cameras. Employer and Insurer add that the WCJ 17 erred in concluding Worker’s injuries are compensable under either the New York 18 rule or the course of employment test. The WCJ omitted explicit application of 19 either test from his compensation order. As noted above, however, we have often 20 explained that any combination of a denial of requested findings and the adoption 21 of others may establish sufficient substance for our review. See, e.g., Jones, 199319 1 NMCA-100, ¶ 18; Woods, 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 26 (reviewing WCJ’s “findings, as 2 well as the effect of what he refused to find”); see also Maez, 2015-NMCA-049, ¶ 3 31 (stating that we may affirm a compensation order if it is right for a reason not 4 addressed by the WCJ). Here, the substance of the WCJ’s findings and associated 5 denials allow for our review of the compensation award under both tests, and we 6 conclude both tests are satisfied in this case. 7 A. The New York Rule 8 The New York rule, as previously noted, asks whether activity giving rise to {26} 9 an injury constitutes a regular incident of employment as opposed to an isolated 10 act. Woods, 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 8. The WCJ made various findings aiding an 11 examination of that question. The WCJ found that Worker’s injury occurred during 12 regular work hours and on Employer’s premises and that Worker and Cloud had 13 previously engaged in horseplay of the same or similar nature on multiple 14 occasions. Worker’s testimony supported both findings; she testified that she and 15 Cloud had engaged in this kind of activity at work, as frequently as “all the time.” 16 Cloud’s testimony added support, as he testified they had engaged in this kind of 17 behavior “from time to time.” The WCJ added findings that Worker had no direct 18 supervisor on duty at the time she suffered the injury and that Cloud was serving as 19 a supervising employee for the entire facility at the time, as he often had in the 20 past. Worker and Cloud gave testimony in support of those findings without 20 1 qualification; Pyle’s testimony added only the qualification that Cloud may have 2 served as more a point of contact for Worker than as a supervisor. The WCJ also 3 found that Employer had counseled neither Worker nor Cloud for their horseplay 4 at any time prior to the night Worker sustained her injuries and that Employer had 5 in fact done nothing at all to curtail the “repeated horseplay” occurring at the 6 detention center prior to the night of the injury. Pyle and Cloud’s testimony 7 supported those findings as they could recall no incidents of counseling or 8 reprimand for prior horseplay. Worker’s testimony corroborated the findings, as 9 she had observed the facility seemed to have a “custom” of similar activity but 10 could recall no instances of counseling or reprimand for the behavior. 11 {27} Our whole record review reveals not only that the WCJ’s findings were 12 supported by the substantial evidence identified, but also that the evidence on these 13 questions was largely undisputed. Beyond Worker’s testimony and Cloud’s 14 deposition, there is little in the record regarding any history or absence of 15 horseplay, its frequency, its nature or circumstances, or, more generally, the nature 16 of the environment at the detention center at night. The limited additional evidence 17 exploring those considerations came in the form of Pyle’s deposition, which 18 revealed only that Pyle was “unaware” of any history or reports of horseplay. 19 Neither his deposition nor any other evidence in the record, however, provided any 20 information regarding how often he or any other supervisory employee had 21 1 occasion to observe the employment environment at night. Whether Pyle’s 2 deposition created any conflict with the rest of the evidence presented is unclear 3 given the limited information regarding his familiarity with the work environment 4 at night; regardless, the WCJ was free to resolve any conflict in favor of the 5 testimony given by Worker and Cloud. See Salazar v. City of Santa Fe, 19836 NMCA-134, ¶ 15, 102 N.M. 172, 692 P.2d 1321 (“We will not disturb the trial 7 court’s resolution of conflicting evidence[.]”). 8 {28} Despite the evidence demonstrating that horseplay was a regular incident of 9 employment at the detention center, Employer and Insurer maintain the fact that 10 Employer had policies in place prohibiting horseplay should weigh heavily in their 11 favor. In support, they rely on Woods and our decision in Cox v. Chino 12 Mines/Phelps Dodge, 1993-NMCA-036, 115 N.M. 335, 850 P.2d 1038, both of 13 which affirmed non-compensability determinations where employers had probative 14 policies in place. A closer look at each case reveals that neither gave as much 15 weight to the policies as Employer and Insurer would have us impart here. 16 {29} Whether Cox can tell us much is questionable; it was a case featuring not 17 horseplay but sexual harassment, and we expressed reservations there about 18 whether horseplay cases and sexual harassment cases were sufficiently analogous 19 for purposes of borrowing legal principles. See 1993-NMCA-036, ¶ 15. We 20 maintain those concerns today. Even were the contexts comparable, Cox 22 1 highlighted in reaching its conclusion not only the employer’s policy prohibiting 2 harassment, but also the worker’s concessions she had never previously 3 experienced harassment in her lengthy career and she was unaware of any other 4 history of harassment in the workplace. See id. Policy prohibitions aside, those 5 concessions were integral to the imported New York rule analysis in Cox. See id. 6 (noting, in addition to specific policy prohibitions in place, “[c]laimant’s claim 7 fails because sexual harassment was not a regular incident of the employment”). 8 Our record, by contrast, reveals no such concessions. 9 {30} The Woods record gave rise to a similarly fact-specific analysis, featuring 10 evidence that horseplay of the kind giving rise to the subject injury was 11 exceptionally rare. See 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 6. Because the horseplay was so 12 uncommon, moreover, we concluded it appropriate to draw the inference that the 13 employer’s horseplay prohibitions largely controlled the employment environment, 14 and that inference supported the conclusion the activity did not constitute a regular 15 incident of employment. See id. Neither the fact of exceptional rarity nor the 16 associated inference that a written policy has controlled the customs of the 17 environment, however, are supported on our record here. 18 {31} Instead, based on our whole record review, we determine that substantial 19 evidence supported the WCJ’s findings that Worker and Cloud had previously 20 engaged in horseplay, that Employer had not previously counseled Worker or 23 1 Cloud regarding the horseplay, and that Employer had done nothing else to curtail 2 repeated horseplay at the detention center. Those findings in turn support a 3 determination that the activity giving rise to the injury constituted a regular 4 incident of employment, as opposed to an isolated act, satisfying the New York 5 rule and answering at the same time in the affirmative the question of whether the 6 activity was reasonably foreseeable. See id. ¶ 19 (highlighting case where 7 compensability was justified because “the risks incident to this employment 8 included risks associated with the friendly jostling customary to the restaurant”). 9 The WCJ’s findings identified here are sufficient on their own to establish the 10 activity at issue was reasonably foreseeable for purposes of any notice requirement 11 under our cases and the language of the Act. Having settled that question, it is not 12 necessary to address whether the associated findings Employer and Insurer 13 challenge—i.e., that Cloud was a supervisor and his knowledge could be imputed 14 to Employer and that the surveillance cameras gave Employer notice of the 15 horseplay—were supported by substantial evidence. 16 {32} Satisfaction of the New York rule, we note, ends our inquiry under Woods, 17 as the claimant need only prevail under one of the applicable analytical 18 frameworks to establish the injury is compensable. See id. ¶ 13. The parties having 19 addressed the course of employment test in their briefing, however, we examine 20 that test as well. 24 1 B. Course of Employment Test 2 The course of employment test, as previously explained, asks whether {33} 3 activity causing an injury constitutes a substantial deviation from employment and 4 examines: (1) the scope and gravity of any deviation; (2) the completeness of any 5 deviation; (3) the acceptance of horseplay in the environment; and (4) the extent to 6 which the environment may be expected to include similar horseplay. Application 7 of these considerations reveals that Worker’s injury arose out of and in the course 8 of her employment as required by the Act. 9 {34} With respect to the third and fourth factors, the WCJ’s findings neglected to 10 address specifically the questions of whether horseplay had become accepted in the 11 environment and whether the environment might be expected to include similar 12 horseplay. The WCJ’s findings, however, that Worker and Cloud had previously 13 engaged in similar activity and that Employer failed to “curtail the repeated 14 horseplay” at the facility address these questions implicitly, and they provide 15 substance sufficient for purposes of our whole record review. See Molinar, 201816 NMCA-011, ¶ 42 (examining “express” and “concomitant implied” findings). As 17 to the third factor—the extent that horseplay was accepted or tolerated at the 18 detention center—Worker testified in support of various contentions, as identified 19 in our analysis of the New York rule. In short, Worker testified that horseplay was 20 widespread among employees and that Cloud had often engaged in similar 25 1 behavior previously. She testified that her direct supervisor had brushed her off 2 when she had confided that Cloud was “irritating” her. She added that despite this 3 history, she was unaware of any instances of counseling or reprimand of any 4 employee for horseplay. Cloud added testimony that he and Worker had engaged 5 in similar behavior previously and that he also could not recall any instances of 6 counseling or reprimand for horseplay. Pyle was likewise unaware of any instances 7 of counseling or reprimand. As to the fourth factor—whether the environment 8 might generally be expected to include horseplay—Worker testified that the 9 facility featured substantial downtime and she had been waiting during a familiar 10 lull in work when the horseplay on the night in question began. All this evidence 11 taken together suggests both the third and fourth course of employment 12 considerations weigh in Worker’s favor here. See Woods, 1992-NMCA-046, ¶ 25 13 (emphasizing considerations of whether “horseplay was a usual practice on the 14 job” and whether there were “lulls in activity or shared tasks that would encourage 15 horseplay”). 16 {35} With respect to the first and second factors, we note again as a prefatory 17 matter that specific findings on scope, gravity, and completeness are not contained 18 in the WCJ’s order. Nevertheless, as we have often remarked, we may draw 19 various reasonable inferences from the facts found in determining whether a “fair 20 construction of all of them, taken together,” supports the judgment. Robey v. 26 1 Parnell, 2017-NMCA-038, ¶ 41, 392 P.3d 642 (quoting H.T. Coker Constr. Co. v. 2 Whitfield Transp., Inc., 1974-NMCA-002, ¶ 9, 85 N.M. 802, 518 P.2d 782). The 3 WCJ’s order provides sufficient substance for our review, given the findings 4 actually made and the ultimate conclusion of compensability, which implicitly 5 determined that Worker’s injury arose out of and in the course of her employment. 6 See id. (“If, from the facts found, the other necessary facts may be reasonably 7 inferred, the judgment will not be disturbed.” (internal quotation marks and citation 8 omitted)); Salazar, 1983-NMCA-134, ¶ 15 (“[T]he trial court’s findings answered 9 the factual questions . . . necessary to determine whether decedent had returned to 10 the course and scope of his employment.”). 11 {36} As to the first and second factors, Worker’s testimony that the whole 12 incident occurred over the course of just a few moments near the booking area 13 supports a determination that any deviation was narrow in scope and neither grave 14 nor complete. Cf. Salazar, 1983-NMCA-134, ¶¶ 14-15 (affirming conclusion that 15 two-and-a-half hour deviation from commute home in employer vehicle 16 constituted no abandonment of employment). Cloud’s testimony regarding 17 duration corroborated Worker’s account. Worker’s testimony regarding the 18 frequent downtime and the horseplay that often arose at work during the downtime 19 also support a determination that any deviation was narrow in scope and neither 20 grave nor complete. See, e.g., Whitehurst v. Rainbo Baking Co., 1962-NMSC-126, 27 1 ¶ 24, 70 N.M. 468, 374 P.2d 849 (“That there was no temporary abandonment of 2 the employment is evidenced by the fact that while taking the coffee break 3 appellant was, at the same time, waiting for the delivery of a truck part in order to 4 complete his work.”); see also, e.g., Dehart v. Betty Breaux Pers., Inc., 535 So. 2d 5 456, 458 (La. Ct. App. 1988) (“The courts have consistently recognized that, 6 during idle periods in the course of employment, working men will engage in 7 jocular activities with fellow employees”); 2 Larson, supra, 23.07[6], at 23-27 8 (“[I]t is suggested that the idleness factor is relevant to this extent, that the duration 9 and seriousness of the deviation which will be called substantial should be 10 somewhat smaller when the deviation necessitates the dropping of active duties 11 than when it does not.”). 12 {37} Employer and Insurer nevertheless contend that Woods compels a 13 conclusion that the deviation here was substantial. Woods, however, featured a 14 record supporting findings that (1) the horseplay was highly unusual given the 15 history of the employment environment as reported by employees, and (2) the 16 resulting deviation was substantial, in the form of rapid, violent escalation of a 17 physical confrontation between employees of different employers. See 1992- 18 NMCA-046, ¶¶ 4, 6. The record here, by contrast, reveals that horseplay had 19 become an expected part of the environment, it occurred often during downtime, 20 and any deviation was minor, brief, and incomplete. See, e.g., Petrik v. JJ 28 1 Concrete, Inc., 2015 SD 39, ¶ 22, 865 N.W.2d 133 (concluding injury arising from 2 “running through job site, . . . [h]owever misguided” or rare, was “momentary and 3 impulsive deviation during a lull in work” and therefore insubstantial). In sum, 4 substantial evidence supports the determination that any deviation was 5 insubstantial, satisfying the course of employment test, as well as resolving that the 6 activity here was reasonably foreseeable for purposes of compensation under the 7 Act. 8 {38} We, therefore, conclude that, regardless whether the New York rule or the 9 course of employment test is applied, substantial evidence supports the WCJ’s 10 findings and the WCJ properly determined that Worker’s injuries are compensable 11 under the Act because the injuries arose out of and in the course of employment as 12 required by Section 52-1-28(A)(1) of the Act. 13 CONCLUSION 14 {39} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the WCJ’s compensation order. 15 {40} IT IS SO ORDERED. 16 17 _____________________________ JENNIFER L. ATTREP, Judge 18 WE CONCUR: 19 ___________________________ 29 1 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge 2 ___________________________ 3 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge 30

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