McAllister v. Illinois Workers' Compensation Comm'n , 2019 IL App (1st) 162747WC ( 2019 )


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    of this document
    Date: 2019.06.12
    Appellate Court                            12:19:35 -05'00'
    McAllister v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n,
    
    2019 IL App (1st) 162747WC
    Appellate Court          KEVIN McALLISTER, Appellant, v. THE ILLINOIS WORKERS’
    Caption                  COMPENSATION COMMISSION et al. (North Pond, Appellee).
    District & No.           First District, Workers’ Compensation Commission Division
    Docket No. 1-16-2747WC
    Filed                    March 22, 2019
    Rehearing denied         April 11, 2019
    Decision Under           Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 16-L-50097; the
    Review                   Hon. Ann Collins-Dole, Judge, presiding.
    Judgment                 Affirmed.
    Counsel on               Karolina M. Zielinska, of Elfenbaum Evers & Amarilio, P.C., of
    Appeal                   Chicago, for appellant.
    Jason D. Kolecke, of Hennessy & Roach, P.C., of Chicago, for
    appellee.
    Panel                    JUSTICE HARRIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Hudson and Moore concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    Presiding Justice Holdridge specially concurred, with opinion, joined
    by Justice Hoffman.
    OPINION
    ¶1       Claimant, Kevin McAllister, filed an application for adjustment of claim under the
    Workers’ Compensation Act (Act) (820 ILCS 305/1 et seq. (West 2014)), seeking benefits for
    a knee injury he sustained on August 7, 2014, while he was working as a sous chef for the
    employer, North Pond. Following a hearing, an arbitrator found that claimant sustained an
    accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment and awarded him
    temporary total disability (TTD) benefits, permanent partial disability (PPD) benefits, and
    medical expenses. Additionally, the arbitrator imposed penalties under sections 19(k) and 19(l)
    of the Act (id. § 19(k), (l)) and attorney fees under section 16 of the Act (id. § 16), finding the
    employer’s prior refusal to pay TTD and medical expenses related to the August 7, 2014, work
    accident was dilatory, retaliatory, and objectively unreasonable.
    ¶2       The employer sought review of the arbitrator’s decision before the Illinois Workers’
    Compensation Commission (Commission). The Commission, with one commissioner
    dissenting, found that claimant had failed to prove that his August 7, 2014, knee injury arose
    out of his employment and reversed the arbitrator’s decision. Claimant appealed the
    Commission’s decision to the circuit court of Cook County, which confirmed the
    Commission’s decision.
    ¶3       This appeal followed.
    ¶4                                       I. BACKGROUND
    ¶5       Claimant worked for the employer as a sous chef. His job duties included checking orders,
    arranging the restaurant’s walk-in cooler, making sauces, “prepping,” and cooking.
    ¶6       On August 7, 2014, claimant was at work getting ready for service while the other
    restaurant employees were beginning to set up their stations. One of the cooks was looking for
    a pan of carrots he had cooked earlier in the day. Claimant testified that the cook was “busy
    doing other things” and claimant “had some time,” so claimant began looking for the carrots.
    Claimant began his search in the walk-in cooler because that was where the cook said he had
    put the carrots. He checked the top, middle, and bottom shelves in the cooler, but he was
    unable to locate the carrots. Claimant testified that he then knelt down on both knees to look for
    the carrots under the shelves because “sometimes things get knocked underneath the shelves
    *** on[to] the floor.” He did not find anything on the floor. As claimant stood back up, his
    right knee “popped” and locked up, and he was unable to straighten his leg. He “hopped” over
    to a table where he stood “for a second,” and then hopped another 20 or 30 feet to the office
    where he told his boss about the injury.
    ¶7       During cross-examination, claimant testified that he was not carrying or holding anything
    when he stood up from a kneeling position and injured his knee. Nothing struck his knee or fell
    on his knee. He did not trip over anything, and he noticed no cracks or defects on the floor.
    Although claimant testified that it was “always wet” in the walk-in cooler, he did not notice
    “anything out of the ordinary” at the time of his injury. He did not claim that he slipped on a
    wet surface. Rather, he was simply standing up from a kneeling position when he felt his knee
    pop. Claimant agreed that the kneeling position he assumed while looking for the carrots was
    similar to the position he would be in while “looking for a shoe or something under the bed.”
    -2-
    ¶8          Shortly after the accident, the employer’s general manager took claimant to the emergency
    room (ER) at St. Joseph’s Hospital. Claimant reported experiencing a pop in his knee and a
    sudden onset of right knee pain after rising from a kneeling to standing position. After taking
    X-rays and evaluating claimant, the ER physicians assessed claimant as suffering from right
    knee pain and a possible ligamentous injury. They provided claimant with crutches and an Ace
    bandage and advised him to follow up with an orthopedic doctor and obtain a magnetic
    resonance imaging (MRI) scan.
    ¶9          On August 11, 2014, claimant saw Dr. David Garelick, an orthopedic surgeon at the
    Illinois Bone and Joint Institute. Dr. Garelick noted that he had surgically repaired the medial
    meniscus of claimant’s right knee approximately one year earlier, on August 26, 2013. The
    doctor noted that claimant was doing well following that surgery until August 7, 2014, when he
    reinjured his right knee while standing up from a squatting position. Dr. Garelick diagnosed a
    possible recurrent medial meniscus tear of the right knee and ordered an MRI of that knee.
    ¶ 10        Two days later, an MRI was performed on claimant’s right knee. The MRI showed a
    low-grade injury of the ACL without any complete disruption. There was also a bucket-handle
    tear of the medial meniscus and moderate knee joint effusion. Dr. Garelick opined that the
    recent MRI showed a re-tear of medial meniscus consistent with a bucket-handle medial
    meniscus tear. He recommended surgery.
    ¶ 11        On August 15, 2014, Dr. Garelick performed an arthroscopy and a partial medial
    meniscectomy on claimant’s right knee. Dr. Garelick removed approximately 80% of
    claimant’s medial meniscus because he concluded that the meniscal tear was not repairable.
    The postsurgical diagnosis was a bucket-handle medial meniscal tear of the right knee.
    ¶ 12        After the surgery, Dr. Garelick prescribed medication and physical therapy. Claimant
    testified that he attended only four of eight therapy sessions because therapy was expensive
    and he had to pay out of pocket, and because he was already familiar with the exercises from
    undergoing physical therapy in the past.
    ¶ 13        On September 15, 2014, Dr. Garelick released claimant to work without restrictions. He
    discharged claimant from care one week later. Claimant did not return to Dr. Garelick or to any
    other doctor for further treatment to his right knee.
    ¶ 14        As a result of the accident and his subsequent surgery, claimant was taken off work from
    August 8, 2014, until September 15, 2014, and he incurred $10,454.25 in medical expenses.
    Claimant paid out of pocket for his surgery, medication, and physical therapy. The employer
    took the position that claimant’s right knee injury did not arise out of his employment, and it
    refused to pay claimant TTD benefits or medical expenses.
    ¶ 15        Claimant returned to work on September 15, 2014, and was working at the time of the
    arbitration hearing. He testified that he typically worked no more than 10 hours per day but that
    he sometimes worked up to 16 hours. His job required him to stand for all but one hour of each
    workday. Claimant’s right leg felt sore and achy at times, and he sometimes experienced sharp
    pain after working all day. His leg felt sore after work. Claimant took Ibuprofen or aspirin for
    his pain three or more days per week.
    ¶ 16        The arbitrator found claimant sustained an accidental injury arising out of and in the course
    of his employment on August 7, 2014. She determined claimant was injured due to an
    employment-related risk because he “was injured while performing his job duties, i.e., looking
    for food products to prepare the food for service that evening.” The arbitrator found that “[t]he
    -3-
    act of looking for a food product was an act that the employer might reasonably have expected
    [claimant] to perform so that he could fulfill his assigned duties as a sous chef.” She also found
    that claimant’s current condition of ill-being was causally related to the work-related injuries
    he sustained on August 7, 2014, and awarded him TTD benefits, PPD benefits, and medical
    expenses. As stated, the arbitrator further imposed penalties under sections 19(k) and 19(l) of
    the Act and awarded claimant attorney fees under section 16 of the Act.
    ¶ 17       The employer sought review of the arbitrator’s decision before the Commission.
    Ultimately, the Commission reversed, finding claimant failed to prove that he sustained an
    accidental injury arising out of his employment. It determined claimant’s injury did not result
    from an employment-related risk as claimant was injured after “simply standing up after
    having kneeled one time” and such activity “was not particular to [claimant’s] employment.”
    The Commission, instead, found that claimant had been subjected to a neutral risk, “which had
    no particular employment or personal characteristics.” Further, it found that the evidence
    failed to show that claimant was exposed to that neutral risk to a greater degree than the general
    public. Thus, it determined claimant was not entitled to compensation under the Act. On
    judicial review, the circuit court of Cook County confirmed the Commission’s decision.
    ¶ 18       This appeal followed.
    ¶ 19                                            II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 20       On appeal, claimant argues that the Commission erred in finding that he failed to prove that
    he sustained an accidental injury arising out of his employment.
    ¶ 21       As an initial matter, the parties dispute the standard of review that should govern our
    analysis. Claimant argues that we should review the Commission’s decision de novo because
    the relevant facts are undisputed and susceptible to only one reasonable inference. The
    employer contends that the undisputed facts give rise to multiple reasonable inferences. Thus,
    the employer argues that we should affirm the Commission’s decision unless it is against the
    manifest weight of the evidence. We agree with the employer.
    ¶ 22       “Whether a claimant’s injury arose out of or in the course of his employment is typically a
    question of fact to be resolved by the Commission, and the Commission’s determination will
    not be reversed unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence.” Kertis v. Illinois
    Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2013 IL App (2d) 120252WC
    , ¶ 13, 
    991 N.E.2d 868
    .
    “However, when the facts are undisputed and susceptible to but a single inference, the question
    is one of law subject to de novo review.” Suter v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n,
    
    2013 IL App (4th) 130049WC
    , ¶ 15, 
    998 N.E.2d 971
    .
    ¶ 23       In this case, the facts relating to the circumstances and mechanics of claimant’s injury are
    undisputed, i.e., the parties agree that claimant injured his right knee at work while standing up
    from a kneeling position after looking for a missing pan of carrots in the walk-in cooler.
    However, those undisputed facts were subject to more than a single inference. Specifically, the
    facts could support different inferences as to whether looking for the misplaced carrots was
    required by or incidental to claimant’s job duties. The facts could also support different
    inferences as to whether the risk of injury that claimant confronted at the time of his injury was
    peculiar to or enhanced by his employment. Accordingly, we review the Commission’s
    decision under the manifest weight of the evidence standard. See Young v. Illinois Workers’
    Compensation Comm’n, 
    2014 IL App (4th) 130392WC
    , ¶ 18, 
    13 N.E.3d 1252
     (applying a
    manifest weight standard of review where the facts presented were subject to more than a
    -4-
    single inference as to whether the claimant’s act of reaching into a box was “one to which the
    general public was equally exposed or whether claimant was exposed to an increased risk by
    reaching beyond normal limits by virtue of his employment”). For a finding of fact to be
    against the manifest weight of the evidence, a conclusion opposite to the one reached by the
    Commission must be clearly apparent. Caterpillar, Inc. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    228 Ill. App. 3d 288
    , 291, 
    591 N.E.2d 894
    , 896 (1992).
    ¶ 24       We now turn to the merits of claimant’s argument. To recover benefits under the Act, a
    claimant bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that his injury
    “ar[ose] out of” and “in the course of” his employment. 820 ILCS 305/1(d) (West 2014). Both
    elements must be present to justify compensation. First Cash Financial Services v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    367 Ill. App. 3d 102
    , 105, 
    853 N.E.2d 799
    , 803 (2006). In the present case, the
    parties do not dispute that claimant’s injury occurred “in the course” of his employment. The
    disputed issue in this appeal concerns the “arising out of” element of a workers’ compensation
    claim.
    ¶ 25       The requirement that the injury arise out of the employment concerns the origin or cause of
    the claimant’s injury. Sisbro, Inc. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    207 Ill. 2d 193
    , 203, 
    797 N.E.2d 665
    ,
    672 (2003). The occurrence of an accident at the claimant’s workplace does not automatically
    establish that the injury “arose out of” the claimant’s employment. Parro v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    167 Ill. 2d 385
    , 393, 
    212 N.E.2d 882
    , 885 (1995). Rather, “[t]he ‘arising out of’
    component is primarily concerned with causal connection” and is satisfied when the claimant
    has “shown that the injury had its origin in some risk connected with, or incidental to, the
    employment so as to create a causal connection between the employment and the accidental
    injury.” Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 203
    .
    ¶ 26       After determining the mechanism of a claimant’s injury (which is undisputed in this case),
    the Commission’s first task in determining whether the injury arose out of the claimant’s
    employment is to categorize the risk to which the claimant was exposed in light of its factual
    findings relevant to the mechanism of the injury. First Cash Financial Services, 367 Ill. App.
    3d at 105. There are three types of risks to which employees may be exposed: (1) risks that are
    distinctly associated with employment; (2) risks that are personal to the employee, such as
    idiopathic falls; and (3) neutral risks that do not have any particular employment or personal
    characteristics. Potenzo v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    378 Ill. App. 3d 113
    , 116,
    
    881 N.E.2d 523
    , 527 (2007); see also Brady v. Louis Ruffolo & Sons Construction Co., 
    143 Ill. 2d 542
    , 552, 
    578 N.E.2d 921
    , 925 (1991) (noting that “neutral” in workers’ compensation
    terms means “neither personal to the claimant nor distinctly associated with the employment”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    ¶ 27       “Injuries resulting from a risk distinctly associated with employment, i.e., an
    employment-related risk, are compensable under the Act.” Steak ’n Shake v. Illinois Workers’
    Compensation Comm’n, 
    2016 IL App (3d) 150500WC
    , ¶ 35, 
    67 N.E.3d 571
    . “Risks are
    distinctly associated with employment when, at the time of injury, ‘the employee was
    performing acts he was instructed to perform by his employer, acts which he had a common
    law or statutory duty to perform, or acts which the employee might reasonably be expected to
    perform incident to his assigned duties.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting Caterpillar Tractor Co. v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    129 Ill. 2d 52
    , 58, 
    541 N.E.2d 665
    , 667 (1989)); see also The Venture—Newberg-
    Perini, Stone & Webster v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2013 IL 115728
    , ¶ 18, 
    1 N.E.3d 535
     (stating the supreme court “has found that injuries arising from three categories of
    -5-
    acts are compensable: (1) acts the employer instructs the employee to perform; (2) acts which
    the employee has a common law or statutory duty to perform while performing duties for his
    employer; (3) acts which the employee might be reasonably expected to perform incident to
    his assigned duties”). “A risk is incidental to the employment when it belongs to or is
    connected with what the employee has to do in fulfilling his duties.” Orsini v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    117 Ill. 2d 38
    , 45, 
    509 N.E.2d 1005
    , 1008 (1987).
    ¶ 28        Alternatively, neutral risks—risks that have no particular employment characteristics—
    “generally do not arise out of the employment and are compensable under the Act only where
    the employee was exposed to the risk to a greater degree than the general public.” Metropolitan
    Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n,
    
    407 Ill. App. 3d 1010
    , 1014, 
    944 N.E.2d 800
    , 804 (2011). “Such an increased risk may be
    either qualitative, such as some aspect of the employment which contributes to the risk, or
    quantitative, such as when the employee is exposed to a common risk more frequently than the
    general public.” Id.; see also Campbell “66” Express, Inc. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    83 Ill. 2d 353
    , 357, 
    415 N.E.2d 1043
    , 1045 (1980) (finding the Commission could reasonably conclude
    from the evidence presented “that the necessity for a truck driver to be on the highway at all
    times of the day and night, and in all kinds of weather, subjected the claimant *** to a greater
    risk of injury from [a] tornado than that to which the general public in that vicinity was
    exposed”); Chmelik v. Vana, 
    31 Ill. 2d 272
    , 280, 
    201 N.E.2d 434
    , 439 (1964) (stating that
    “[t]he regular and continuous use of the parking lot by employees, most particularly at quitting
    time when there is a mass and speedy exodus of the vehicles on the lot, would result in a degree
    of exposure to the common risk beyond that to which the general public would be subjected”).
    ¶ 29        When categorizing risk, the “first step *** is to determine whether the claimant’s injuries
    resulted from an employment-related risk.” Steak ’n Shake, 
    2016 IL App (3d) 150500WC
    ,
    ¶ 38. “[W]hen a claimant is injured due to an employment-related risk—a risk distinctly
    associated with his or her employment—it is unnecessary to perform a neutral-risk analysis to
    determine whether the claimant was exposed to a risk of injury to a greater degree than the
    general public.” Young, 
    2014 IL App (4th) 130392WC
    , ¶ 23.
    ¶ 30        Here, the Commission determined claimant was not injured as the result of an
    employment-related risk. That finding is supported by the record and an opposite conclusion
    from that reached by the Commission is not clearly apparent.
    ¶ 31        The record shows claimant worked for the employer as a sous chef. His job duties included
    checking orders, arranging the employer’s walk-in cooler, making sauces, “prepping,” and
    cooking. Claimant was injured as he stood up from a kneeling position after volunteering to
    look for a misplaced pan of carrots for a coworker. However, he did not establish that he was
    instructed to perform, or that he had a duty to perform, that particular activity. Further, it does
    not appear the activity was incidental to his employment, in that it was not necessary to the
    fulfillment of his specific job duties. Ultimately, it was for the Commission to decide whether
    the risk to which claimant was subjected was incidental to his work for the employer. In this
    instance, the record was such that the Commission could properly find that the risk to claimant
    was too far removed from the requirements of his employment to be considered an
    employment-related risk. We find no error in the Commission’s determination that the activity
    at issue had no particular employment characteristics and, therefore, claimant was not injured
    as the result of an employment-related risk.
    -6-
    ¶ 32       Next, the Commission did characterize the risk to which claimant was exposed as a neutral
    risk; however, it also found that claimant failed to establish that he was exposed to that neutral
    risk to a greater degree than the general public and, therefore, his injury was noncompensable.
    Again, the record contains support for that decision, and an opposite conclusion is not clearly
    apparent.
    ¶ 33       Claimant testified that he was not carrying or holding anything when he stood up from a
    kneeling position and injured his knee. Nothing struck his knee or fell on his knee. Claimant
    did not trip over anything, and he did not notice any cracks or defects in the floor. Although
    claimant testified that it was “always wet” in the walk-in cooler, he did not notice “anything
    out of the ordinary,” and he did not claim that he slipped on a wet surface. Rather, he was
    simply standing up from a kneeling position when he felt his knee pop. Claimant agreed that
    the kneeling position he assumed while looking for the carrots was similar to the position he
    would be in while “looking for a shoe or something under the bed.” Ultimately, claimant failed
    to establish that his employment increased or enhanced his risk of injury in any way. See
    Caterpillar Tractor, 
    129 Ill. 2d at 62-63
     (finding the claimant, who was injured while
    traversing a curb to reach his vehicle, was subjected to a noncompensable neutral risk);
    Noonan v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    , ¶ 30, 
    65 N.E.3d 530
     (finding the claimant was not exposed to the neutral risk of reaching to retrieve a
    dropped pen to a greater degree than the general public); Dukich v. Illinois Workers’
    Compensation Comm’n, 
    2017 IL App (2d) 160351WC
    , ¶ 36, 
    86 N.E.3d 1161
     (denying
    compensation where the claimant, who fell on pavement that was wet from rainfall, presented
    no evidence suggesting her employment duties contributed to her fall or enhanced her risk of
    slipping).
    ¶ 34       We hold the Commission’s determination that claimant failed to show that his injury arose
    out of his employment was not against the manifest weight of the evidence. Although that
    holding is dispositive of claimant’s appeal, we take this opportunity to address the special
    concurrence’s contention that only a neutral-risk analysis should govern claims like the one in
    the case at bar, i.e., those that involve “everyday activities” or common bodily movements. For
    the reasons that follow, we find that proposition of law is flawed and reject its application in
    both this case and those cases that are similarly situated.
    ¶ 35       As support for its contention, the special concurrence relies heavily on this court’s decision
    in Adcock v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 130884WC
    , 
    38 N.E.3d 587
    . There, the claimant welded locks while seated on a rolling chair. 
    Id. ¶ 3
    . “He
    stated that his job required nonstop movement in the chair, including moving back and forth
    along the length of [his] workstation and swiveling from one point to another.” 
    Id. ¶ 13
    .
    Ultimately, the claimant injured his left knee as he attempted to turn his chair and his body to
    perform a welding task. 
    Id. ¶ 3
    . The Commission denied the claimant benefits under the Act,
    finding his injury did not arise out of his employment as the claimant’s “ ‘act of turning in his
    swivel chair did not expose him to a greater risk than that to which the general public is
    exposed, and it was not a risk distinctive to his employment.’ ” 
    Id. ¶ 20
    .
    ¶ 36       On review, a divided panel of this court characterized the mechanism of the claimant’s
    injury—turning in a chair—as “an activity of everyday life.” 
    Id. ¶ 33
    . Further, it held the
    claimant’s risk of injury was not one that was distinctly associated with his employment but,
    instead, “a neutral risk of everyday living faced by all members of the general public.” 
    Id.
     As a
    result, to obtain compensation, the claimant had to show that he was exposed to that neutral
    -7-
    risk to a greater degree than the general public. 
    Id.
     In the end, the majority held the claimant
    made such a showing by presenting evidence that his job “required him to turn in a chair more
    frequently than members of the general public while under time constraints” and reversed the
    Commission’s decision. 
    Id. ¶ 34
    .
    ¶ 37       In reaching its decision, the Adcock majority set forth the following proposition of law:
    “The Commission should not award benefits for injuries caused by everyday activities
    like walking, bending, or turning, even if an employee was ordered or instructed to
    perform those activities as part of his job duties, unless the employee’s job required
    him to perform those activities more frequently than members of the general public or
    in a manner that increased the risk. In other words, a ‘neutral risk’ analysis should
    govern such claims.” 
    Id. ¶ 39
    .
    Under the Adcock majority’s rule, a claimant who is injured while performing “everyday
    activities” or common bodily movements can only obtain compensation under the Act by
    comparing his or her activities or movements to those of the general public. Per Adcock, this is
    true even in situations where the activity or movement is directly related to the specific duties
    of employment. Accordingly, pursuant to Adcock (and the special concurrence), bodily
    movements, including turning, bending, kneeling, pushing, pulling, reaching, stretching, etc.,
    must always be viewed as common to the general public and cannot be considered distinct or
    peculiar to the nature of an individual’s employment. Infra ¶ 88 (“the risks presented by such
    everyday activities [(such as bending or kneeling)] are not peculiar to any particular line of
    employment”).
    ¶ 38       Here, the special concurrence proposes adherence to the neutral-risk definition and
    analysis adopted by the majority in Adcock. Infra ¶ 80. However, we note that Adcock’s
    analysis is at odds with other decisions of this court—decided both before Adcock (Young,
    
    2014 IL App (4th) 130392WC
    ; Autumn Accolade v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n,
    
    2013 IL App (3d) 120588WC
    , 
    990 N.E.2d 901
    ; O’Fallon School District No. 90 v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    313 Ill. App. 3d 413
    , 
    729 N.E.2d 523
     (2000)) and after that decision was issued
    (Steak ’n Shake, 
    2016 IL App (3d) 150500WC
    ; Mytnik v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation
    Comm’n, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152116WC
    , 
    67 N.E.3d 946
    ; Noonan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    ). In particular, the risk analysis utilized in those cases does not automatically
    exclude from the definition of an employment-related risk activities that might involve
    common bodily movements or which Adcock terms “everyday activities.” Accordingly, we
    reject Adcock and its legal analysis. In doing so, we hold that the definition of a neutral risk as
    set forth in Adcock is inconsistent with the purpose of the Act, overly broad, and unsupported
    by supreme court precedent.
    ¶ 39       Initially, we find Adcock’s statement of law is contrary to the intentions of the Act, as well
    as the requirement that it must be liberally construed. “The purpose of the Workmen’s
    Compensation Act is to protect the employee against risks and hazards which are peculiar to
    the nature of the work he is employed to do.” Fisher Body Division, General Motors Corp. v.
    Industrial Comm’n, 
    40 Ill. 2d 514
    , 517, 
    240 N.E.2d 694
    , 696 (1968); see also Ceisel v.
    Industrial Comm’n, 
    400 Ill. 574
    , 582, 
    81 N.E.2d 506
    , 511 (1948) (“What the law intends is to
    protect the employee against the risks and hazards taken in order to perform the master’s task
    ***.”). As stated, “[t]o obtain compensation under th[e] Act, an employee bears the burden of
    showing, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he or she has sustained accidental injuries
    arising out of and in the course of the employment.” 820 ILCS 305/1(d) (West 2014). Further,
    -8-
    the Act is “a remedial statute,” which “should be liberally construed to effectuate its main
    purpose—providing financial protection for injured workers.” Interstate Scaffolding, Inc. v.
    Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    236 Ill. 2d 132
    , 149, 
    923 N.E.2d 266
    , 275 (2010).
    ¶ 40        The special concurrence concludes that Adcock is more consistent with the Act’s purpose
    than the rationale applied in this case. However, the manner in which Adcock addresses “the
    arising out of” element gives the Act a narrow construction by broadening the definition of a
    neutral risk. Such a broad definition bears little resemblance to supreme court precedent (see
    infra ¶ 62 of this opinion for supreme court cases applying a neutral-risk type of analysis).
    Again, injuries resulting from a neutral risk do not have any particular employment
    characteristics. Potenzo, 
    378 Ill. App. 3d at 116
    . They generally do not arise out of the
    employment and, for such injuries to be compensable, a claimant must establish exposure to
    the neutral risk to a greater degree than the general public. Metropolitan Water, 407 Ill. App.
    3d at 1014. An Adcock analysis will, in effect, place an extra evidentiary burden on many
    employees who are injured while performing their job duties or activities closely connected
    with the fulfillment of their assigned duties by requiring those employees to present evidence
    comparing their activities with those of the general public. In addition, as pointed out by the
    special concurrence in Adcock:
    “The problem with the majority’s analysis is that many workers are employed for the
    very purpose of engaging in actions and movements performed by the general public.
    This method of analysis then leads us *** to perform a neutral-risk analysis when a
    worker has been injured performing the very tasks he was hired to perform. If workers’
    injuries are first examined to determine whether they were reaching, turning, bending,
    squatting, or engaging in other common bodily movements at the precise moment of
    injury, virtually all industrial injuries could be categorized as neutral risks.” 
    2015 IL App (2d) 130884WC
    , ¶ 56 (Stewart, J., specially concurring, joined by Harris, J.).
    ¶ 41        Further, our supreme court has set forth, without qualification, the following principles for
    determining whether an injury arises out of employment:
    “The ‘arising out of’ component is primarily concerned with causal connection. To
    satisfy this requirement it must be shown that the injury had its origin in some risk
    connected with, or incidental to, the employment so as to create a causal connection
    between the employment and the accidental injury. [Citation.] Stated otherwise, ‘an
    injury arises out of one’s employment if, at the time of the occurrence, the employee
    was performing acts he was instructed to perform by his employer, acts which he had a
    common law or statutory duty to perform, or acts which the employee might
    reasonably be expected to perform incident to his assigned duties. [Citations.] A risk is
    incidental to the employment where it belongs to or is connected with what an
    employee has to do in fulfilling his duties. [Citation.]’ ” Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 203-04
    .
    See also Ace Pest Control, Inc. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    32 Ill. 2d 386
    , 388, 
    205 N.E.2d 453
    , 454
    (1965) (“The *** Act was not intended to insure employees against all accidental injuries but
    only those which arise out of acts which the employee is instructed to perform by his employer;
    acts which he has a common law or statutory duty to perform while performing duties for his
    employer [citations]; or acts which the employee might be reasonably expected to perform
    incident to his assigned duties.”); Venture—Newberg-Perini, 
    2013 IL 115728
    , ¶ 18 (“This
    court has found that injuries arising from three categories of acts are compensable: (1) acts the
    employer instructs the employee to perform; (2) acts which the employee has a common law or
    -9-
    statutory duty to perform while performing duties for his employer; (3) acts which the
    employee might be reasonably expected to perform incident to his assigned duties.”);
    Caterpillar Tractor, 
    129 Ill. 2d at 58
     (“[f]or an injury to ‘arise out of’ the employment its
    origin must be in some risk connected with, or incidental to, the employment so as to create a
    causal connection between the employment and the accidental injury” and “an injury arises out
    of one’s employment if, at the time of the occurrence, the employee was performing acts he
    was instructed to perform by his employer, acts which he had a common law or statutory duty
    to perform, or acts which the employee might reasonably be expected to perform incident to
    his assigned duties”).
    ¶ 42       Thus, supreme court precedent makes clear that an injury should be deemed to have
    resulted from an employment risk when the risk causing the injury originates from one of the
    following three types of acts—acts (1) the claimant was instructed to perform by his employer,
    (2) the claimant had a common law or statutory duty to perform, or (3) that were incidental to
    the claimant’s assigned duties. Risks attendant to these categories of activities have their origin
    in the claimant’s employment. When an employee is injured while performing such acts it
    cannot be said that he is subject to a neutral risk, i.e., a risk that has no particular employment
    characteristics and is common to the general public.
    ¶ 43       The special concurrence suggests that, while proof that an act falls within one of the three
    categories of acts identified by the supreme court is necessary to establish the “arising out of”
    requirement, such proof alone is not sufficient to satisfy that requirement. Infra ¶ 87.
    According to the special concurrence, once one of the above three types of acts is established,
    supreme court precedent requires an additional analysis be undertaken to determine whether
    the case involves a risk that is distinct or peculiar to the employment versus a risk that is
    common to the general public. Infra ¶ 88. Our research reveals no supreme court decision that
    supports such an analysis. In fact, Sisbro itself contradicts the special concurrence’s
    interpretation of its language:
    “[W]hether ‘any normal daily activity is an overexertion’ or whether ‘the activity
    engaged in presented risks no greater than those to which the general public is exposed’
    are matters to be considered when deciding whether a sufficient causal connection
    between the injury and the employment has been established in the first instance. We
    have never found a causal connection to exist between work and injury and then, in a
    further analytical step, denied recovery based on a ‘normal daily activity exception’ or
    a ‘greater risk exception.’ ” 
    207 Ill. 2d at 211-212
    .
    ¶ 44       We find that it is when any of the aforementioned three categories of acts are determined to
    be present that the risk resulting in injury is “distinctly associated with the employment,” i.e.,
    not a neutral risk that is subject to a neutral-risk analysis. See Brady, 
    143 Ill. 2d at 552
    . For
    example, in County of Peoria v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    31 Ill. 2d 562
    , 564, 
    202 N.E.2d 504
    , 505
    (1964), an off-duty sheriff’s deputy was struck by a vehicle and killed while attempting to push
    a car from a ditch. The employer argued the decedent was not entitled to compensation, in part,
    because “he was subjected to the accident by virtue of risks to which the general public is
    exposed and not by reason of his employment.” 
    Id.
     The supreme court disagreed, stating that
    “[w]hile there is no legal duty upon a member of the general public to stop and give aid
    [citation], the proof [in the case before it] established the existence of such duty upon all
    deputies in the *** sheriff’s office.” 
    Id.
     It then held as follows: “It is the presence of that duty
    here which, in our judgment, distinguishes decedent from a member of the general public in his
    - 10 -
    assistance at the scene of this accident, and exposed him to a risk greater than that faced by the
    public generally.” (Emphasis added.) 
    Id. at 564-65
    . Stated another way, the fact that the
    employee had a legal duty to act, i.e., a common law or statutory duty to act (category number
    two in the three aforementioned categories specified in Venture—Newberg-Perini), means that
    his injury was the result of an employment-related risk—a risk that was distinct to his
    employment.
    ¶ 45       The nature of an employee’s work and the specific duties he or she is required to perform
    are what determine whether an employee is subjected to an employment risk rather than a
    neutral risk. In fact, in County of Peoria, the supreme court distinguished cases where “the risk
    in which the accident had its origin was not connected with [the employee’s] employment in
    any manner” and where the employee was injured while “not performing any of the duties of
    his employment.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. at 565
    . The analysis employed by
    both Adcock and the special concurrence is flawed because it would require injuries resulting
    from “everyday activities” or common bodily movements to automatically be deemed to have
    resulted from neutral risks, i.e., those that have no particular employment characteristics and
    are common to the general public, without any inquiry into, or consideration of, the nature of
    an employee’s work for the employer and his specific job duties.
    ¶ 46       The special concurrence suggests that the phrase “incidental to” employment (the phrase
    used by the supreme court to describe the third category of compensable acts) is excessively
    vague and renders the majority analysis in this case unworkable. Infra ¶ 80. It asserts courts
    will struggle to determine what actions are “incidental to” employment without any evidence
    on the subject. However, our supreme court instructs that “[a] risk is incidental to the
    employment when it belongs to or is connected with what the employee has to do in fulfilling
    his duties.” (Emphasis added.) Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 45
    . Contrary to the special concurrence’s
    argument, there is no guesswork here. The Commission, in exercising its judgment, may
    determine what acts are incidental to a claimant’s employment by considering evidence of the
    nature of the employment and the claimant’s specific job duties. If the act the claimant is
    performing at the time of injury was not necessary to the fulfillment of his specific job duties,
    then the act is not incidental to the employment.
    ¶ 47       Conversely, an Adcock-type analysis presents its own definitional problem and invites
    decisions by the Commission based on speculation or gut level assumptions in the absence of
    evidence. Under Adcock, the Commission would be called upon to determine whether the
    claimant’s risk of injury stems from an “everyday activity,” a term that is left undefined in
    Adcock and by the special concurrence, and, if it does, whether there is some feature of the
    employment that enhances the common risk, either quantitatively or qualitatively, beyond that
    faced by the general public. Under Adcock, an employee whose injury involves a common
    bodily movement must always establish that he was exposed to an increased risk of injury,
    either quantitatively or qualitatively, as compared with the general public. However, on what
    evidence would the Commission be able to deem an employee’s common bodily movements,
    or their frequency, the same as or different from the common bodily movements engaged in by
    the general public? What sort of evidence would be necessary to establish how often and in
    what manner members of the general public typically reach, bend, turn, or twist? Would the
    parties routinely be required to hire expert witnesses to address the Adcock neutral-risk
    analysis? In none of our previous decisions involving employment-risk versus neutral-risk
    alternatives was evidence presented that would have allowed the Commission to gauge the
    - 11 -
    general public’s common bodily movements. Without such evidence, an Adcock analysis will
    necessarily rest on speculation and conjecture, an infirmity that is not present under the
    majority analysis.
    ¶ 48        Ultimately, we find it is clearer and more straightforward to focus the employment risk
    inquiry on whether the injury-producing act was required by the claimant’s specific job duties
    and not whether it could further be considered an “activity of everyday living.” Activities
    necessary to the fulfillment of a claimant’s job duties present risks that are distinct or peculiar
    to the employment and, as a result, are not common to the general public. In our previous
    appellate court decisions addressing this issue—Steak ’n Shake, Mytnik, Young, and Autumn
    Accolade—the claimants were performing activities required by their employment and best
    characterized as employment-related risks. Although the special concurrence suggests each of
    these claimants might “arguably” have been held entitled to benefits under a neutral-risk
    analysis (infra ¶ 105), there is no indication in any of these cases that evidence existed which
    would have supported an Adcock-type neutral-risk analysis, such as evidence of the general
    public’s frequency of wiping tables (Steak ’n Shake), bending (Mytnik), or reaching (Young
    and Autumn Accolade).
    ¶ 49        The special concurrence further cites our decision in Noonan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    , as an example of how the majority standard is unworkable. Infra ¶ 107. In that
    case, the claimant worked for the employer as a clerk, and his job duties included filling out
    forms. Noonan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    , ¶ 4. Evidence showed the claimant injured his
    wrist when he reached to retrieve a dropped pen while seated in a rolling chair and fell out of
    his chair. 
    Id. ¶ 5
    . Employing the same analysis we employ here, we agreed with the
    Commission’s determination that the claimant’s injury did not arise out of his employment. 
    Id. ¶ 36
    .
    ¶ 50        The special concurrence suggests that, under the majority analysis, there was no basis to
    deny benefits in Noonan because the claimant was injured while performing an act incidental
    to his job duties. Infra ¶ 107. We disagree with that characterization. The special concurrence
    essentially defines “incidental to employment” in a way that is the equivalent of the
    “positional-risk doctrine,” in that it would require no more than that a claimant be present at
    work to support a finding of compensability. See Brady, 
    143 Ill. 2d at 552
     (“Under the
    positional risk doctrine, an injury may be said to arise out of the employment if the injury
    would not have occurred but for the fact that the conditions or obligations of the employment
    placed claimant in the position where he was injured by a neutral force, meaning by ‘neutral’
    neither personal to the claimant nor distinctly associated with the employment.” (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.)). That is not the majority holding. Rather, we recognize that an
    injury arises out of employment when the employee was performing acts “which the employee
    might reasonably be expected to perform incident to his assigned duties” and that “[a] risk is
    incidental to the employment where it belongs to or is connected with what an employee has to
    do in fulfilling his duties.” (Emphasis added and internal quotation marks omitted.) Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 204
    . In Noonan, the claimant was reaching to retrieve a pen that he dropped as a result
    of his own clumsiness. The evidence did not establish that he was performing an act that was
    “incidental to,” or what he had to do in, the fulfillment of his specific job duties. Thus, it was
    not against the manifest weight of the evidence for the Commission to find that the risk
    resulting injury did not “belong to” or was “connected with” what the claimant “had to do” in
    filling out forms. See 
    id.
    - 12 -
    ¶ 51       We note the special concurrence explicitly asserts that injuries involving common bodily
    movements can never be found to have resulted from a risk that is peculiar or distinct to a
    particular line of employment. Infra ¶ 88 (“[T]he risks presented by *** activities [(like
    bending or kneeling)] are not peculiar to any particular line of employment.”). However, it
    contradicts that explicit assertion when addressing this court’s decision in O’Fallon, 
    313 Ill. App. 3d 413
    . In that case, the claimant was a teacher who was “assigned to hall duty.” 
    Id. at 414
    . Evidence showed she experienced back pain after she “turned, twisted, and began to
    pursue” a child who was running in the hallway. 
    Id. at 415
    . Initially, both the arbitrator and the
    Commission denied the claimant benefits on the basis that the claimant’s injuries did not arise
    out of her employment. 
    Id. at 414
    . This court disagreed with that conclusion, stating as follows:
    “Contrary to the arbitrator’s conclusion and the Commission’s initial decision,
    claimant’s injury did have an origin in a risk arising out of her employment. [The]
    [c]laimant was ordered specifically to undertake the risk of pursuing a running student.
    The need to turn, twist, and pursue a child, thereby stressing her back, is a risk that
    would not have existed but for [the] claimant’s employment obligations as hall
    monitor.” 
    Id. at 417
    .
    Significantly, the claimant’s risk of injury was not deemed to have been a neutral one—one
    common to the general public—and, in finding claimant’s risk of injury originated in her
    employment, this court did not engage in any analysis to determine whether the claimant’s risk
    of injury was either quantitatively or qualitatively enhanced by some aspect of her
    employment. 
    Id.
     Rather, it was because the claimant was performing acts she was instructed to
    perform that she was exposed to an employment-related risk and not one that was common to
    the general public. 
    Id.
    ¶ 52       The special concurrence states that it agrees with the analysis employed in O’Fallon and
    finds O’Fallon distinguishable from Adcock on the basis that “the risk at issue in O’Fallon was
    distinctly associated with (i.e., ‘peculiar to’) the claimant’s employment, rendering a neutral
    risk analysis unnecessary and inappropriate.” Infra ¶ 100. Again, however, O’Fallon involved
    common bodily movements like turning and twisting. How are these common bodily
    movements any different from the acts of bending, reaching, or kneeling, which the special
    concurrence suggests can never be distinctly associated with, or peculiar to, an individual’s
    employment? Rather than distinguishable, we find O’Fallon and Adcock are factually similar
    in that they both involved claimants who were performing acts required by their employment
    and acts that also happened to involve common bodily movements. As discussed, the claimant
    in O’Fallon injured her back as she turned and twisted her body to pursue a student (
    313 Ill. App. 3d at 415
    ), whereas the claimant in Adcock injured his left knee when he “rotated his left
    knee inward and turned his body to weld” (
    2015 IL App (2d) 130884WC
    , ¶ 3).
    ¶ 53       Ultimately, the analysis employed in O’Fallon is inconsistent with the analysis employed
    in Adcock. The special concurrence’s attempt to distinguish the two cases fails and will only
    result in confusion for those attempting to reconcile them.
    ¶ 54       The special concurrence in this case also maintains that the supreme court’s decisions in
    Caterpillar Tractor, 
    129 Ill. 2d 52
    , and Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d 38
    , are consistent with the analysis
    employed in Adcock and contradicted by the majority holding. Infra ¶ 80. However, aside from
    stating the same well known propositions of workers’ compensation law, neither supreme
    court decision in any way supports Adcock, nor do they conflict with our analysis in this case.
    - 13 -
    ¶ 55        In Caterpillar Tractor, the claimant was a carton packer who completed his shift, left his
    employer’s building to go to his car, and was injured as he stepped off a curb on the employer’s
    property. 
    129 Ill. 2d at 56
    . When considering whether the claimant’s injury arose out of his
    employment, the supreme court “first consider[ed] whether the [claimant’s] injury resulted
    from the condition of the employer’s premises.” 
    Id. at 59
    . Finding that it did not, the court
    “next consider[ed] whether the claimant was subjected to a greater degree of risk than the
    general public because of his employment.” 
    Id. at 61
    . Ultimately, it determined that the
    claimant did not prove that he was exposed to a risk not common to the general public. 
    Id. at 62
    .
    ¶ 56        Caterpillar Tractor is factually distinguishable from Adcock. In particular, the claimant in
    Caterpillar Tractor was not injured while performing his job duties and there was no apparent
    connection to the claimant’s employment other than that he was injured while on the
    employer’s premises. Moreover, nothing in the supreme court’s analysis indicates an intention
    to employ an Adcock-like analysis for cases involving common bodily movements. Caterpillar
    Tractor simply sets forth the same general principles of workers’ compensation law as a
    multitude of other cases. Neither the facts of that case nor the supreme court’s rationale require
    a different analysis than we employ here.
    ¶ 57        The supreme court’s decision in Orsini is also not factually similar to Adcock (or the class
    of cases to which the special concurrence seeks to apply it), and it does not support Adcock’s
    definitions of risk. In Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 41
    , the claimant was employed by a service station
    as an automobile mechanic. While awaiting the delivery of parts needed to complete work for
    his employer, the claimant began adjusting the carburetor on his personal automobile. 
    Id. at 42
    .
    He was then injured when his car malfunctioned and suddenly lurched forward, pinning his
    legs between the car and a work bench. 
    Id.
     Ultimately, the supreme court affirmed the
    Commission’s decision that the claimant’s injury did not arise out of his work for the
    employer. 
    Id. at 49
    .
    ¶ 58        In reaching its decision, the supreme court, again, set forth several well-established
    principles for compensability under the Act, including that (1) an injury arises out of
    employment if it “has its origin in some risk so connected with, or incidental to, the
    employment as to create a causal connection between the employment and the injury,” (2) that
    to arise out of employment “the risk of injury must be a risk peculiar to the work or a risk to
    which the employee is exposed to a greater degree than the general public,” and (3) that a risk
    is incidental to employment “when it belongs to or is connected with what the employee has to
    do in fulfilling his duties.” 
    Id. at 45
    . The court next noted prior, similar decisions that held “the
    risk of injury in repairing or working on one’s personal automobile is not ordinarily related or
    incidental to the duties for which [a mechanic] is employed.” 
    Id. at 46
    . Further, it stated that, in
    those cases, the risk from repairing one’s own vehicle was deemed “personal in nature” and
    “totally unrelated either to the duties of [the mechanic’s] employment or the condition of [the]
    employer’s premises.” (Emphases added.) 
    Id.
    ¶ 59        The supreme court went on to point out that the claimant’s injury in the case before it
    “came about solely as a result of a defect in [the claimant’s] car” and was not due to the
    requirements of his employment. 
    Id. at 46-47
    . The court also stated the claimant’s car “served
    no purpose relative to his employment duties” and that he had “voluntarily exposed himself to
    an unnecessary danger entirely separate from the activities and responsibilities of his job.”
    (Emphasis added.) 
    Id. at 47
    . Further, the court noted as follows:
    - 14 -
    “This court has consistently held that where the injury results from a personal risk, as
    opposed to a risk inherent in the claimant’s work or workplace, such injuries are not
    compensable. [Citations.] Conversely, in those cases where liability was imposed, the
    injury to the employee occurred as a direct result of a defect in the employer’s premises
    or was directly related to the specific duties of employment.” (Emphasis added.) 
    Id. at 47-48
    .
    Ultimately, the court emphasized that the claimant’s injuries were “strictly personal and totally
    unrelated to the duties of employment or the conditions of the employer’s premises.”
    (Emphasis added.) 
    Id. at 48
    .
    ¶ 60        A review of the supreme court’s analysis in Orsini in its entirety reflects that it does not
    stand for the proposition set forth in Adcock and advocated by the special concurrence in this
    case. First, Orsini is factually distinguishable from those situations addressed by Adcock and
    the special concurrence, where an employee is injured while inarguably performing his job
    duties and those duties involve common bodily movements or “everyday activities.” In Orsini,
    the claimant was not performing any activities necessary or incidental to the fulfillment of his
    job duties. There was also no “everyday activity” or common bodily movement involved in his
    injury. Second, the supreme court’s decision demonstrates the importance that the nature of a
    claimant’s employment and his specific job duties should play when an arising-out-of
    determination is made. In fact, the court in Orsini stated several times in its decision that the
    claimant’s injury was in no way related to the duties of his employment. Significantly, it stated
    that liability is found to exist under the Act when the employee’s injury “was directly related to
    the specific duties of employment.” 
    Id. 47-48
    .
    ¶ 61        We find Orsini, given its emphasis on the duties of a claimant’s employment relative to
    risk, is consistent with our unanimous decision in Young and the following determination in
    that case:
    “[W]hen a claimant is injured due to an employment-related risk—a risk distinctly
    associated with his or her employment—it is unnecessary to perform a neutral-risk
    analysis to determine whether the claimant was exposed to a risk of injury to a greater
    degree than the general public. A neutral risk has no employment-related
    characteristics. Where a risk is distinctly associated with the claimant’s employment, it
    is not a neutral risk.” Young, 
    2014 IL App (4th) 130392WC
    , ¶ 23.
    ¶ 62        The special concurrence asserts that the majority analysis cannot be reconciled with at least
    three previous decisions of this court. Infra ¶ 90. Assuming, arguendo, that the special
    concurrence is correct, the same is true of the analysis employed by Adcock and the special
    concurrence as highlighted herein. However, while there may be a lack of complete uniformity
    among appellate decisions, we maintain that Young, the cases upon which Young relied
    (including Autumn Accolade), and its progeny are consistent with the manner in which the
    neutral-risk analysis has historically been applied. This court has stated that “[n]eutral risks
    include stray bullets, dog bites, lunatic attacks, lightning strikes, bombing, and hurricanes.”
    Illinois Institute of Technology Research Institute v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    314 Ill. App. 3d 149
    ,
    163, 
    731 N.E.2d 795
    , 806-07 (2000). Supreme court case authority bears this out,
    demonstrating that it has performed a neutral-risk analysis, thereby considering whether a
    claimant was exposed to a common risk to a greater degree than the general public, in those
    circumstances which show no apparent connection to the employee’s job duties. See Brady,
    
    143 Ill. 2d at 545
     (truck crashed into the employer’s building); Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v.
    - 15 -
    Industrial Comm’n, 
    131 Ill. 2d 478
    , 481, 
    546 N.E.2d 603
    , 604 (1989) (slip and fall in a mall
    common area); Caterpillar Tractor, 
    129 Ill. 2d at 56
     (stepping off a curb); Doyle v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    95 Ill. 2d 103
    , 104-05, 
    447 N.E.2d 310
    , 311 (1983) (vehicle accident while exiting
    the employer’s parking lot); Campbell “66” Express, 
    83 Ill. 2d at 355
     (tornado); Jones v.
    Industrial Comm’n, 
    78 Ill. 2d 284
    , 285, 
    399 N.E.2d 1314
    , 1315 (1980) (car door closed on
    employee’s hand in the employer’s parking lot); Eisenberg v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    65 Ill. 2d 232
    , 233, 
    357 N.E.2d 533
    , 534 (1976) (assault on employee while walking to her car after
    work); Thurber v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    49 Ill. 2d 561
    , 562-63, 
    276 N.E.2d 316
    , 316 (1971)
    (inexplicable attack by coworker); Inland Steel Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    41 Ill. 2d 70
    , 71, 
    241 N.E.2d 450
    , 451 (1968) (severe storm); J.I. Case Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    36 Ill. 2d 386
    , 387,
    
    223 N.E.2d 847
    , 848 (1966) (lightning strike); Chmelik, 
    31 Ill. 2d at 274
     (struck by automobile
    in parking lot); Hill-Luthy Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    411 Ill. 201
    , 202, 
    103 N.E.2d 605
    , 606
    (1952) (lighting cigarette and injured by a defective match head); Permanent Construction Co.
    v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    380 Ill. 47
    , 48, 
    43 N.E.2d 557
    , 558 (1942) (contraction of typhoid
    fever); Borgeson v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    368 Ill. 188
    , 189, 
    13 N.E.2d 164
     (1938) (stray bullet).
    ¶ 63       In other cases, the supreme court has declined to find that an accidental injury was the
    result of a neutral risk when the employee was performing his job duties. As stated, in County
    of Peoria, 
    31 Ill. 2d at 564
    , an off-duty sheriff’s deputy was found subject to an employment
    risk rather than a neutral risk based on his specific job duties, duties which, because of his
    employment, he had a legal obligation to perform.
    ¶ 64       Additionally, the supreme court’s holding in Memorial Medical Center v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    72 Ill. 2d 275
    , 
    381 N.E.2d 289
     (1978), is instructive. There, the claimant, who was
    employed in the housekeeping department of a hospital, was injured when she “bent over” to
    polish a spot on a door’s kickplate. 
    Id. at 278
    . The Commission found the claimant sustained a
    compensable injury, and the employer appealed. 
    Id. at 277
    . On review, the employer argued
    “that the act of bending forward [was] a routine motion not peculiar to [the claimant’s] work,
    that the true cause of her disability was her obesity[,] and that the evidence show[ed] that she
    was not, as a result of her employment, subjected to any greater risk than the public at large.”
    
    Id. at 279
    . The supreme court rejected the employer’s argument and determined the
    Commission’s finding of compensability was not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
    
    Id. at 281
    . This decision illustrates that when given the opportunity to broadly hold that
    common bodily movements, such as bending, are always subject to a neutral-risk analysis, the
    supreme court has declined to do so.
    ¶ 65       The special concurrence further asserts that the majority approach is “in tension” with
    supreme and appellate court decisions that involve the denial of compensation where the
    employee’s health has so deteriorated that the performance of any normal daily activity could
    have caused the claimant’s injury. Infra ¶¶ 96-97; see Hansel & Gretel Day Care Center v.
    Industrial Comm’n, 
    215 Ill. App. 3d 284
    , 286, 
    574 N.E.2d 1244
    , 1245 (1991) (day-care worker
    who was seated in a child-sized chair and experienced pain in her knee as she attempted to
    stand); Hopkins v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    196 Ill. App. 3d 347
    , 348, 
    553 N.E.2d 732
    , 733 (1990)
    (employee who turned in his chair to answer a coworker’s question and felt a pop in his back);
    Greater Peoria Mass Transit District v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    81 Ill. 2d 38
    , 40, 
    405 N.E.2d 796
    ,
    797 (1980) (bus driver who suffered a shoulder injury after she dropped paperwork, leaned
    over, lost balance, and struck her shoulder); County of Cook v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    68 Ill. 2d 24
    , 27, 
    368 N.E.2d 1292
    , 1293 (1977) (employee who suffered a stroke as she arose from her
    - 16 -
    desk to go to lunch); Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    44 Ill. 2d 207
    , 209, 
    254 N.E.2d 522
    , 523 (1969) (employee who turned in his chair after hearing a
    noise and experienced back pain). It maintains that none of the above-cited cases “makes
    sense” under the majority’s analysis because, under our analysis, the reviewing courts in those
    cases “would each have found an injury arising out of the claimant’s employment without any
    need to perform a neutral risk analysis.” Infra ¶ 97.
    ¶ 66        Again, we must disagree. First, the special concurrence seems to suggest that each of the
    cases it cites involved a claimant who was performing acts connected with or incidental to his
    or her employment, and that compensation was denied irrespective of such circumstances.
    Infra ¶ 97. However, the opposite is true. See Board of Trustees, 
    44 Ill. 2d at 214-15
     (stating
    that the claimant’s back injury, which occurred when he turned in his chair, “was not caused by
    a risk incidental to the employment”). In the cases cited, the injuries at issue were found to be
    unrelated to employment and to have arisen, instead, from a risk personal to the employee as
    shown by the medical evidence. See Greater Peoria Mass Transit District, 
    81 Ill. 2d at 41
    (“[T]he risk of [shoulder] dislocation was personal to [the claimant] and her injury [was]
    thereby rendered noncompensable under the Act.”). In particular, medical evidence
    demonstrated that each employee had prior health issues and such degenerated physical
    conditions that any activity could have caused the injuries the claimants ultimately
    experienced. However, even in the absence of such medical evidence, the risks at issue in those
    cases likely would have been deemed neutral risks under the same approach that we employ in
    this case.
    ¶ 67        Second, the special concurrence ignores the fact that, in order to satisfy the “arising out of”
    component, a claimant bears the burden of establishing not only that a workplace accident
    occurred but, in addition, that it caused his injury. Cassens Transport Co. v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    262 Ill. App. 3d 324
    , 330, 
    633 N.E.2d 1344
    , 1348 (1994) (“The claimant in a
    worker’s compensation proceeding has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the
    credible evidence that the injury arose out of and in the course of employment, and that
    involves as an element a causal connection between the accident and the condition of
    claimant.”). In other words, even if a claimant can establish an accident originating from an
    employment-related risk, he or she must still establish a causal connection between that
    accident and the resulting condition of ill-being. Certainly, where the evidence presented at
    arbitration supports a finding that the risk of injury was due to a degenerated physical
    condition, or was otherwise solely personal to the employee, recovery can and should be
    denied.
    ¶ 68        Once again, “neutral risks *** have no particular employment or personal characteristics.”
    Illinois Institute, 
    314 Ill. App. 3d at 162
    . In this case and the others we rely on that employ a
    similar analysis, issues of personal risk and degenerated physical conditions do not appear to
    have been at issue. Instead, the Commission and the reviewing courts were essentially
    presented with employment-risk and neutral-risk alternatives. Under such circumstances, it is
    appropriate to first consider whether the risk at issue had employment-related characteristics
    and evidence of such should not be disregarded in favor of automatically finding that an injury
    arises from a neutral risk simply because the act involves a common bodily movement or
    “everyday activity.” This is the critical point on which we disagree with Adcock and the special
    concurrence.
    - 17 -
    ¶ 69        Ultimately, what makes a risk distinct or peculiar to the employment is its origin in, or
    relationship to, the specific duties of the claimant’s employment. A risk that is required by the
    claimant’s employment and necessary to the fulfillment of the claimant’s job duties removes it
    from the realm of what is common to the general public (a neutral risk) even if the activities
    attendant to the risk have neutral characteristics, i.e., involve common bodily movements.
    Although case law has defined neutral risks as those that have no particular employment or
    personal characteristics, it has not similarly defined employment risks as having no particular
    neutral characteristics.
    ¶ 70        Finally, the special concurrence suggests that our analysis expands liability for benefits
    beyond what the legislature intended and would require a finding of compensability for all
    injuries simply because they occurred at work. Infra ¶ 113. However, as illustrated by this case
    and our decision in Noonan, that is simply not the case. It is the manner in which the special
    concurrence would analyze what is “incidental to” employment, essentially equating it with
    “positional risk,” that collapses the distinction between the “arising out of” and “in the course
    of” components of compensation, and not the majority decision. The special concurrence
    appears critical of the term “incidental to,” suggesting that it encompasses activities with no
    significant relationship to employment. Infra ¶ 114. However, the special concurrence ignores
    the fact that this term is used by supreme court in defining when a risk originates in
    employment. See Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 203
    ; Caterpillar Tractor, 
    129 Ill. 2d at 58
    ; Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 45
    .
    ¶ 71        The special concurrence also ignores that “[a] risk is incidental to the employment when it
    belongs to or is connected with what the employee has to do in fulfilling his duties.” (Emphasis
    added.) Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 45
    . If “incidental to” employment were to be defined to include
    any action that occurs within the time and space boundaries of the employment, then we would
    agree that such a definition would “arguably authorize compensation for positional risks.”
    Infra ¶ 113. However, as shown by our analysis in this case, that is not the way the term has
    been defined. Rather, we adhere to the supreme court’s definition of the term, which does not
    encompass every activity or risk encountered by an employee while at work no matter how
    minor and separated it is from the specific duties of employment.
    ¶ 72        We note the special concurrence asserts that our analysis will require a finding of
    compensability for injuries that result from the “everyday activity” of walking. Infra ¶ 113.
    Specifically, it contends that, under our approach, “any injuries that occur while an employee
    is performing an act that is necessary to the fulfillment of the employee’s work duties (even an
    activity of daily living such as walking to one’s workstation at the employer’s premises) ‘arise
    out of’ the employment and are therefore compensable if the Act’s other requirements are
    met.” (Emphasis in original.) Infra ¶ 113. Again, we do not hold that any particular type of
    injury is automatically compensable, much less any injury that is only connected to the
    employment by the mere fact that it occurred on the employer’s premises. See Caterpillar
    Tractor, 
    129 Ill. 2d at 59-62
     (traversing a curb on the employer’s premises did not arise out of
    the claimant’s employment); Prince v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    15 Ill. 2d 607
    , 611-612, 
    155 N.E.2d 552
    , 554 (1959) (stating idiopathic falls on a level floor “present no risk or hazard that is not
    encountered in many places” and “confront all members of the public”). But see Rysdon
    Products Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    34 Ill. 2d 326
    , 330, 
    215 N.E.2d 261
    , 263 (1966) (holding
    that Commission’s finding that an injury from an unexplained fall arose out of employment
    was not against the manifest weight of the evidence where it “could reasonably have inferred
    - 18 -
    [from the evidence presented] that the claimant’s fall was due to his having been overcome or
    affected by [workplace] fumes, or to his tripping on the uneven [workplace] floor”). Without
    more, an injury resulting from “walking” as suggested by the special concurrence would not be
    due to an employment risk.
    ¶ 73       Here, we simply hold that an “arising out of” determination requires an analysis of the
    claimant’s employment and the work duties he or she was required or expected to perform.
    Only after it is determined that a risk is not employment-related should the Commission
    consider and apply a neutral-risk analysis. As stated, the evidence in this case was such that the
    Commission could properly find that claimant’s injury did not stem from an employment-
    related risk. The risk posed to claimant from the act of standing from a kneeling position while
    looking for something that had been misplaced by a coworker was arguably not distinctly
    related to his employment. Claimant’s work for the employer did not require him to perform
    that specific activity. Further, it was the Commission’s prerogative to find claimant’s act of
    searching for the misplaced pan of food was too remote from the specific requirements of his
    employment to be considered incidental to his assigned duties. As a result, the Commission’s
    determination that claimant was not injured due to an employment risk was supported by the
    record and not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
    ¶ 74       Certainly, categorization of risk and, ultimately, whether an injury arises out of one’s
    employment is not always easily resolved. Factual circumstances have and will arise where the
    line between what constitutes an employment risk as opposed to a neutral risk is difficult to
    ascertain. However, as stated by the supreme court, “no all inclusive rule can be laid down”
    and “each case must be decided with reference to its own circumstances.” Borgeson, 
    368 Ill. at 190
    . Ultimately, the resolution of whether an injury stems from an employment risk, a neutral
    risk, or a personal risk is one of fact that is within the province of the Commission to decide
    based on the particular circumstances of each case. On review, as always, this court should
    give deference to the Commission’s factual findings by employing a manifest-weight-of-the-
    evidence standard of review.
    ¶ 75                                III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 76     We affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County, which confirmed the
    Commission’s decision.
    ¶ 77      Affirmed.
    ¶ 78       PRESIDING JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE, specially concurring:
    ¶ 79       I agree that the Commission’s finding that the claimant failed to prove an accidental injury
    arising out of his employment was not against the manifest weight of the evidence. I therefore
    join in the majority’s judgment. However, I do so for reasons that are different from those
    espoused by the majority. In my view, the majority’s analysis departs dramatically from
    governing precedent and would lead to an unwarranted and unworkable expansion of the
    Workers’ Compensation Act (Act) (820 ILCS 350/1 et seq. (West 2014)). I write separately to
    clarify the analysis that I believe should govern claims like the claim asserted in this case.
    ¶ 80       The majority holds that an accidental injury “arises out of” a claimant’s employment for
    purposes of the Act so long as, at the time of injury, the claimant was performing an act that
    - 19 -
    was “incidental to” (or “necessary to the fulfillment of”) his work duties, even if the act at issue
    was an activity of everyday living and even if the employment did not increase the risk of
    injury in any way. This holding contravenes a basic principle of our workers’ compensation
    law: the rule that a claimant may not recover benefits under the Act unless his employment
    subjected him to some risk or hazard beyond that which is regularly faced by members of the
    general public. See, e.g., Caterpillar Tractor Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    129 Ill. 2d 52
    , 59
    (1989) (“if the injury results from a hazard to which the employee would have been equally
    exposed apart from the employment, *** it is not compensable”); Orsini v. Industrial Comm’n,
    
    117 Ill. 2d 38
    , 45 (1987) (“If the injury results from a hazard to which the employee would
    have been equally exposed apart from the employment, then [the injury] does not arise out of
    [the employment].”); Adcock v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 130884WC
    , ¶ 38 (“if the injury is caused by an activity of daily life to which all members of
    the public are equally exposed ***, then there can be no recovery under the Act, even if the
    employee was required to perform that activity by virtue of his employment”); O’Fallon
    School District No. 90 v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    313 Ill. App. 3d 413
    , 416 (2000) (“If *** the
    employee’s exposure to the risk is equal to that of the general public, the injury is not
    compensable.”); Hansel & Gretel Day Care Center v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    215 Ill. App. 3d 284
    , 293 (1991) (ruling that, to establish that an injury suffered at work “arises out of” the
    employment, “[a] claimant must show that the injury is due to a cause connected to the
    employment,” and that “recovery is denied *** where the activity engaged in presents risks no
    greater than those to which the general public is exposed”); see also Karastamatis v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    306 Ill. App. 3d 206
    , 209-10 (1999). By disregarding this well-established principle,
    the majority has essentially collapsed the distinction between “arising out of” the employment
    and “in the course of” the employment, thereby extending the Act well beyond its intended
    scope. The majority has also substantially reduced the circumstances under which a neutral
    risk analysis would apply. Moreover, the majority has crafted a vague and unworkable
    standard for determining when an injury arises out of the employment, a standard that will
    encourage ad hoc judicial decisions as courts struggle to determine which actions are
    “incidental to” a claimant’s employment (often in the absence of any evidence on the subject).
    The rule we announced in Adcock, which the majority overturns today, is clearer and more
    workable than the rule applied by the majority here. It is also more consistent with the Act’s
    purpose and with governing precedent.
    ¶ 81       In order to recover benefits under the Act, a claimant bears the burden of proving by a
    preponderance of the evidence that his injury “ar[ose] out of” and occurred “in the course of”
    his employment. 820 ILCS 305/2 (West 2014). The requirement that the injury arise out of the
    employment concerns the origin or cause of the claimant’s injury. Sisbro, Inc. v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    207 Ill. 2d 193
    , 203 (2003). The occurrence of an accident at the claimant’s
    workplace does not automatically establish that the injury “arose out of” the claimant’s
    employment. Parro v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    167 Ill. 2d 385
    , 393 (1995); Adcock, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 130884WC
    , ¶ 27. “The ‘arising out of’ component is primarily concerned with causal
    connection.” Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 203
    . An injury “arises out of” the employment if it “has its
    origin in some risk so connected with, or incidental to, the employment as to create a causal
    connection between the employment and the injury.” Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 45
    ; see also Sisbro,
    
    207 Ill. 2d at 203
    .
    - 20 -
    ¶ 82        To determine whether an injury arose out of a risk connected to the employment, we must
    first identify the risk to which the claimant was exposed when he was injured at work. First
    Cash Financial Services v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    367 Ill. App. 3d 102
    , 105 (2006). As the
    majority notes, there are three types of risks to which employees may be exposed: (1) risks that
    are “distinctly associated” with employment; (2) risks that are personal to the employee, such
    as idiopathic falls; and (3) neutral risks that do not have any particular employment or personal
    characteristics. Potenzo v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    378 Ill. App. 3d 113
    , 116
    (2007). A risk “distinctly associated” with a claimant’s employment is a risk that is “peculiar to
    the claimant’s work” (Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 45
     (1987); Karastamatis, 306 Ill. App. 3d at 209),
    i.e., a risk to which the general public is not exposed (Karastamatis, 306 Ill. App. 3d at 209).
    As noted, a neutral risk is a risk that has “no particular employment or personal
    characteristics,” i.e., a risk “to which the general public is equally exposed.” First Cash
    Financial Services, 367 Ill. App. 3d at 105. Injuries resulting from neutral risks are deemed to
    arise out of the employment only where the employee was exposed to the risk to a greater
    degree than the general public, either qualitatively or quantitatively, by virtue of his
    employment. Springfield Urban League v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2013 IL App (4th) 120219WC
    , ¶ 27; Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago v.
    Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    407 Ill. App. 3d 1010
    , 1014 (2011). Injuries
    resulting from personal risks do not arise out of the employment and are therefore not
    compensable under the Act. Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 47
     (noting that the Illinois Supreme Court
    “has consistently held that where the injury results from a personal risk, as opposed to a risk
    inherent in the claimant’s work or workplace, such injuries are not compensable”).
    ¶ 83        Accordingly, “[f]or an injury to have arisen out of the employment, the risk of injury must
    be a risk peculiar to the work or a risk to which the employee is exposed to a greater degree
    than the general public by reason of his employment.” 
    Id. at 45
    ; Noonan v. Illinois Workers’
    Compensation Comm’n, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    , ¶ 18. “[I]f the injury results from a
    hazard to which the employee would have been equally exposed apart from the employment,
    or a risk personal to the employee, it is not compensable.” Caterpillar Tractor Co., 
    129 Ill. 2d at 59
    ; see also Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 45
    ; Noonan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    , ¶ 18.
    ¶ 84        In this case, the claimant was injured while standing up from a kneeling position, which is
    an activity of everyday living. There is no evidence that his injury was caused by a risk
    personal to him, such as an idiopathic fall. Moreover, the risk of injury that the claimant
    confronted was not peculiar to his work (i.e., it was not “distinctly associated” with his
    employment). Rather, as the Commission correctly found, it was a neutral risk of everyday
    living faced by all members of the general public. Thus, the claimant’s injury is compensable
    only if the claimant was exposed to this risk to a greater degree than the general public because
    of his employment. Adcock, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 130884WC
    , ¶ 33; Springfield Urban League,
    
    2013 IL App (4th) 120219WC
    , ¶ 27.
    ¶ 85        The claimant failed to make that showing here. The claimant testified that he was not
    carrying or holding anything when he stood up from a kneeling position and injured his knee.
    Nothing struck his knee or fell on his knee. The claimant did not trip over anything, and he
    noticed no cracks or defects on the floor. Although the claimant testified that it was “always
    wet” in the walk-in cooler, he did not notice “anything out of the ordinary,” and he did not
    claim that he slipped on a wet surface. Rather, he was simply standing up from a kneeling
    position when he felt his knee “pop.” The claimant agreed that the kneeling position he
    - 21 -
    assumed while looking for the carrots was similar to the position he would be in while “looking
    for a shoe or something under the bed.” Thus, the claimant’s own testimony confirms that the
    claimant was injured while performing an activity of daily living (standing up from a kneeling
    position on a normal surface) and that his employment did not increase or enhance the risk of
    injury in any way.1 The Commission’s decision denying benefits was therefore not against the
    manifest weight of the evidence.2
    ¶ 86       Although the majority agrees that the claimant failed to show that his injury arose out of his
    employment, it takes issue with my analysis. Specifically, the majority rejects Adcock’s ruling
    that claims for injuries caused by activities of daily living (such as walking, turning, bending,
    and kneeling), should be analyzed under neutral risk principles even if they occur while the
    claimant is performing acts incidental to his work duties. Supra ¶ 38. In rejecting Adcock’s
    analysis and holding, the majority relies heavily upon our supreme court’s statement that
    “ ‘an injury arises out of one’s employment if, at the time of the occurrence, the
    employee was performing acts he was instructed to perform by his employer, acts
    which he had a common law or statutory duty to perform, or acts which the employee
    might reasonably be expected to perform incident to his assigned duties.’ ” (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Supra ¶ 41 (quoting Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 204
    ).
    See also The Venture—Newberg-Perini, Stone & Webster v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation
    Comm’n, 
    2013 IL 115728
    , ¶ 18; Ace Pest Control, Inc. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    32 Ill. 2d 386
    ,
    388 (1965). The majority interprets this statement as establishing that an injury results from a
    risk that is “distinctly associated with the employment” (and therefore “arises out of” the
    employment under the Act) whenever the employee is injured while performing any act that is
    “incidental to” with his employment duties, which the majority defines as any act that is
    “necessary to the fulfillment” of the employee’s job duties. According to the majority, such
    injuries are deemed to “arise out of the employment” without the need to perform a neutral risk
    analysis, i.e., without the employee having to show that his employment increased the risk
    beyond the risk faced by members of the general public.
    ¶ 87       In my view, the majority misinterprets the supreme court’s statement and applies it in an
    unduly expansive manner that contravenes the Act. In Sisbro and in other decisions, our
    supreme court has stated that “an injury arises out of one’s employment if, at the time of the
    occurrence, the employee was performing *** acts which the employee might reasonably be
    expected to perform incident to his assigned duties.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 204
    . However, our supreme court has made it clear that this is merely
    another way of stating the requirement that, for an injury to “arise out of” the employment
    1
    The claimant argues that his testimony that he knelt down to look for the carrots under the walk-in
    cooler because “sometimes things get knocked underneath the shelves *** on[to] the floor” suggested
    that his job required him to kneel more frequently than members of the general public. However, the
    claimant offered no testimony as to how often he knelt down to look for food items under the cooler. He
    testified only about the single occasion that led to his injury. Given the evidence presented, the
    Commission was not required to infer that the claimant was required to kneel more often than members
    of the general public. The Commission’s inference that the claimant knelt only once at work was
    reasonable and was not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
    2
    As the majority notes, the undisputed facts in this case are susceptible to different reasonable
    inferences. Therefore, I agree with the majority that the manifest weight of the evidence standard
    applies. See supra ¶ 23.
    - 22 -
    under the Act, the risk that produced the injury must be causally connected to (or “incidental
    to”) the employment. See id. Thus, in making the statement at issue, the supreme court was
    simply declaring that, in order to satisfy the Act’s “arising out of” requirement, the claimant
    must have been injured while doing something incidental to his employment duties.3 This
    describes a necessary condition for satisfying the Act’s “arising out of” requirement; it does
    not describe a sufficient condition for satisfying that requirement. It means that a claimant may
    not prove that his injury “arose out of” his employment without showing that the injury
    occurred while he was doing something incidental to his job duties. However, it does not
    suggest that the claimant may satisfy the “arising out of” requirement in every instance merely
    by making that showing. In other words, Sisbro suggests that only injuries sustained during the
    performance of work-related acts arise out of the employment, not that all such injuries always
    arise out of the employment.
    ¶ 88       This makes perfect sense. For purposes of the Act, the dispositive question is whether the
    risk that led to the injury had its origin in the employment. Id. at 203. As noted above, a risk has
    its origin in the employment only if (1) the risk is “peculiar to the employment” (i.e., a
    job-related risk that is not faced by members of the general public) or (2) the risk is common to
    the general public but is increased or enhanced in some way by virtue of the employment,
    thereby exposing the claimant to hazards not shared by the public. Not all acts that are
    necessary to the fulfillment of an employee’s job duties (or otherwise incidental to those
    duties) present such risks. For example, the employment might require the employee to
    perform activities of daily living incidental to his job duties, such as walking, bending, or
    kneeling. Although these everyday activities might be necessary to the fulfilment of the
    employee’s job duties, the risks presented by such everyday activities are not peculiar to any
    particular line of employment. Such risks have their origin in the employment only if the
    employment increased the risks beyond that which is faced by members of the general public
    (for example, by requiring the employee to perform those activities of daily living more often
    than members of the general public or in a manner that enhances the risk of injury). Unless the
    employment increases or enhances the risk in one of these ways, injuries that occur while an
    employee is performing activities of daily living do not arise out of the employment, even if
    they are incidental to the employee’s job duties.
    ¶ 89       The majority’s expansive interpretation of our supreme court’s statement in Sisbro and
    other cases is inconsistent with these principles and with governing case law. Our supreme
    court has never held that injuries caused by activities of daily living “arise out of” the
    employment merely because such activities are necessary or incidental to the claimant’s work
    duties. To the contrary, our supreme court has made it clear that an injury sustained at work
    “arises out of the employment” only if the risk causing the injury originates in the employment
    (id.), i.e., only if the employment exposes the claimant to a risk to which members of the
    general public are not equally exposed, either because the risk is peculiar to the employment or
    because the risk is enhanced by the employment. Caterpillar Tractor Co., 
    129 Ill. 2d at 58-59
    ;
    3
    Injuries caused by activities that have no such causal connection to the claimant’s job duties are
    not compensable, even if they occur “in the course of” the employment (i.e., during work hours while
    the claimant is at work). See, e.g., Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d 38
    .
    - 23 -
    Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 45
    . The majority’s reading of Sisbro and other cases contravenes this
    principle and extends the Act beyond what the legislature intended.4
    ¶ 90       In addition, the majority’s analysis cannot be reconciled with several decisions of this court
    that were decided prior to Adcock. See, e.g., Kemp v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    264 Ill. App. 3d 1108
    (1994); Nabisco Brands, Inc. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    266 Ill. App. 3d 1103
     (1994); Komatsu
    Dresser Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    235 Ill. App. 3d 779
     (1992). In each of these cases, we
    applied a neutral risk analysis where the claimant was injured while performing an activity of
    daily living, even though the claimant was performing his work duties or some act incidental
    thereto at the time. For example, in Kemp, 264 Ill. App. 3d at 1109, the claimant injured his
    back while squatting down to read an air meter, which was one of his work duties. We affirmed
    the circuit court’s decision awarding benefits because we held that the claimant’s job required
    him to bend and stoop in a manner that “differ[ed] in both the type and frequency from the type
    of bending and stooping in which the average member of the general public could be expected
    to ordinarily engage.” Id. at 1111. In other words, we analyzed the claimant’s claim according
    to neutral risk principles, notwithstanding the fact that the claimant was injured while
    performing an act that was necessary to the fulfillment of his work duties.
    ¶ 91       Similarly, in Komatsu Dresser Co., 235 Ill. App. 3d at 780-81, the claimant injured his
    back as he bent over to pick up a machine part while performing his work duties. (The claimant
    also sneezed as he bent over. Id. at 781.) However, we did not stop our analysis there and find
    the claimant’s injury was compensable merely because he was injured while performing an act
    incident to his employment. Instead, we applied a neutral risk analysis and affirmed the
    4
    The excerpt from Sisbro that the majority quotes (supra ¶ 43) neither supports the majority’s
    expansive interpretation of the Act’s “arising out of” requirement nor undermines my analysis. Sisbro’s
    holding addressed a causation issue; it did not address whether the claimant’s accidental injury “arose
    out of” his employment. In Sisbro, our supreme court held that the evidence presented in that case
    supported the Commission’s finding that the claimant’s work-related accident aggravated or
    accelerated his preexisting diabetic leg condition such that the claimant’s current condition of ill-being
    was causally related to the work accident. Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 215
    . The employer in Sisbro “[did] not
    seriously dispute” the Commission’s finding that the claimant had sustained an accidental injury arising
    out of and in the course of his employment. 
    Id. at 204
    . Thus, our supreme court had no occasion to
    address that issue in Sisbro. In the language quoted by the majority, the Sisbro court merely held that,
    where the evidence supports a finding of an actual causal connection between the claimant’s condition
    of ill-being and a work accident, causation will not be denied merely because the activity that triggered
    the injury presented no risks greater than those faced by the general public or because the claimant’s
    preexisting condition was so severe that the disabling injury could have been caused by any activity of
    daily living. 
    Id. at 211-12
    . Our supreme court took care to stress that the latter factors “are matters to be
    considered when deciding whether a sufficient causal connection between the injury and the
    employment has been established in the first instance.” 
    Id. at 212
    . Thus, the court made clear that these
    factors could, in principal, preclude a finding of causal connection between the work injury and the
    claimant’s condition of ill-being. Sisbro’s holding merely establishes that, when such a causal
    connection has been established (e.g., through competent medical testimony, as in Sisbro), the
    employer may not negate that causal connection merely by showing that the injury might also have
    occurred as a result of some normal daily activity. 
    Id. at 211
    . Contrary to the majority’s suggestion,
    Sisbro does not hold that an injury arises out of the employment if the claimant sustained the injury
    while performing tasks incidental to his employment, even where those tasks posed no risks beyond the
    risks faced by members of the general public on a daily basis.
    - 24 -
    Commission’s award of benefits only after we concluded that the evidence supported a
    “reasonable inference that the claimant’s acts of bending required by his work exposed [him]
    to a greater degree of risk than that of the general public.” Id. at 788. Specifically, we held that
    the claimant’s job required him to lift 15- to 40-pound parts out of a box on a regular basis
    without bending his knees. Because this “increased the claimant’s exposure to risk of injury
    from *** bending” beyond the risk faced by members of the general public (both
    quantitatively and qualitatively), we held that “the fact that bending is a normal activity did not
    preclude a finding that the claimant’s injury arose out of his employment.” Id.; see also
    Nabisco Brands, Inc., 266 Ill. App. 3d at 1107 (affirming Commission’s decision that
    claimant’s injury arose out of his employment where the claimant slipped and fell while
    walking down stairs carrying three long, heavy bakery knives, an act he was required to do in
    fulfilling his work duties because the need to carry the knives was “unique” to the claimant’s
    employment and it increased the impact and the dangerous effects of his fall on the stairs).5
    ¶ 92       In each of these cases, we held that it was the origin of the risk that produced the injury, not
    the fact that the claimant was performing some work-related act at the time of injury, that
    determined whether the claimant’s injury arose out of his employment. The majority’s
    approach contradicts this principle and cannot be reconciled with Kemp, Nabisco Brands, or
    Komatsu Dresser. If the majority’s approach were correct, there would have been no need to
    conduct a neutral risk analysis in those cases because, in each case, the claimant was injured
    while performing acts that were required by or incidental to his work duties. In the majority’s
    view, that fact alone would have established that the claimant’s injury arose out of his
    employment.
    ¶ 93       The majority tries to circumvent this problem by simply asserting that a risk has its origin
    in the employment whenever the injury resulted from the performance of an act necessary to
    the fulfillment of the claimant’s job duties. See supra ¶ 42 (asserting that “[r]isks attendant to”
    acts that the employer instructs the claimant to perform, acts that the claimant had a common
    law or statutory duty to perform, or acts incidental to the claimant’s assigned duties “have their
    origin in the claimant’s employment,” and “[w]hen an employee is injured while performing
    such acts it cannot be said that he is subject to a neutral risk, i.e., a risk that has no particular
    employment characteristics and is common to the general public”); supra ¶ 48 (“Activities
    necessary to the fulfillment of a claimant’s job duties present risks that are distinct or peculiar
    to the employment and, as a result, are not common to the general public.”); supra ¶ 69
    (“Ultimately, what makes a risk distinct or peculiar to the employment is its origin in, or
    relationship to, the specific duties of the claimant’s employment. A risk that is required by the
    5
    Significantly, each of these cases was decided after our supreme court issued its decision in
    Caterpillar Tractor Co., which includes a statement that is substantively identical to the Sisbro
    statement upon which the majority relies. See Caterpillar Tractor Co., 
    129 Ill. 2d at 58
     (ruling that
    “[t]ypically, an injury arises out of one’s employment if, at the time of the occurrence, the employee
    was performing acts he was instructed to perform by his employer, acts which he had a common law or
    statutory duty to perform, or acts which the employee might reasonably be expected to perform incident
    to his assigned duties”). (When making the same statement, the Sisbro court cited Caterpillar Tractor
    Co. as precedent. Sisbro, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 204
    .) In Komatsu Dresser, we cited this statement from
    Caterpillar Tractor Co. but nevertheless applied a neutral risk analysis to the claimant’s claim. This
    demonstrates that we have already rejected the majority’s unduly expansive interpretation of the
    supreme court’s statement in Sisbro.
    - 25 -
    claimant’s employment and necessary to the fulfillment of the claimant’s job duties removes it
    from the realm of what is common to the general public (a neutral risk) even if the activities
    attendant to the risk have neutral characteristics, i.e., involve common bodily movements.”);
    see also supra ¶ 45. That defies common sense. The risks associated with any particular
    activity arise from the activity itself, not from the activity’s relationship to the claimant’s work
    duties. For example, the risk of injury posed by a single act of standing up from a kneeling
    position remains the same regardless of whether the act is performed at work or at home, and
    regardless of whether the act is necessary to the fulfillment of the claimant’s job duties. The
    fact that a particular activity is necessary or essential to the performance of a claimant’s job
    duties, without more, has no bearing on the origin or nature of the risk presented by the
    activity. The risk stems from the nature of the activity itself, not from its connection to an
    employment-related purpose.
    ¶ 94       Accordingly, we may reasonably say that the risk of a particular activity “has its origin in
    the employment” only if (1) the activity is unique to a particular line of work (e.g., welding or
    operating dangerous machinery), such that members of the general public do not perform the
    activity, or (2) the employment requires the claimant to perform a common activity more
    frequently than members of the general public or in a manner that otherwise increases the risk
    of the activity. Under those circumstances (and only under those circumstances), the risk of
    injury associated with the activity is directly affected by the employment. Although the risks
    associated with an activity are always created by the activities themselves (and not by their
    association with an employment-related purpose), it makes sense to say that such risks “have
    their origin” in the employment in the two circumstances outlined above because, in those
    instances, the particular risks at issue would not be encountered but for the employment.
    ¶ 95       By contrast, according to the majority’s view, the risk of an activity of daily living is
    somehow deemed to originate with the employment merely because the activity is required by
    the employment, even though nothing about the employment creates or enhances the risk of
    injury associated with the activity. In my view, that position defies logic and common sense.
    Moreover, as I noted above, it contravenes the basic and well-established principle that a
    claimant may not recover benefits under the Act unless his employment subjected him to some
    risk or hazard beyond that which is regularly faced by members of the general public. (See,
    e.g., supra ¶ 80.) The majority attempts to sidestep this principle by fiat, i.e, by simply
    asserting that the risks associated with any act necessary to the employment have their origin in
    the employment and are not common to the general public. That assertion cannot be reconciled
    with several of our prior decisions (see, e.g., Kemp, 
    264 Ill. App. 3d 1108
    ; Komatsu Dresser
    Co., 
    235 Ill. App. 3d 779
    ), and it flouts common sense by suggesting that the risk associated
    with an activity is somehow dependent upon whether the activity has an employment-related
    purpose.
    ¶ 96       The majority’s approach is also in tension with some of the supreme court and appellate
    court decisions wherein compensation has been denied to claimants who were injured while
    performing their work duties because their health had so deteriorated that the performance of
    any normal daily activity could have caused the claimant’s injuries. See, e.g., Greater Peoria
    Mass Transit District v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    81 Ill. 2d 38
     (1980); County of Cook v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    68 Ill. 2d 24
     (1977); Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    44 Ill. 2d 207
     (1969); Hansel & Gretel Day Care Center, 
    215 Ill. App. 3d at 294
    ;
    Hopkins v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    196 Ill. App. 3d 347
     (1990). Recovery is denied under such
    - 26 -
    circumstances because “the injury result[s] from a hazard personal to the claimant and,
    therefore, [does] not arise out of [the] claimant’s employment.” Hopkins, 
    196 Ill. App. 3d at 352
    . Once again, the dispositive factor is whether the risk has its origin in the employment. If it
    does not, the fact that the claimant was injured while performing an act related to his work
    duties is immaterial and does not justify recovery under the Act. Id.; see also County of Cook,
    
    68 Ill. 2d at 33
     (holding that, because “[t]he work-connected activity (getting up from [a] chair)
    which *** precipitated claimant’s injury subjected her to no greater risk than did *** normal
    daily activities,” “[t]he mere fact that she was at work or even engaged in some job-related
    activity when the episode occurred is not sufficient to support an award” (emphasis added));
    Greater Peoria Mass Transit District, 
    81 Ill. 2d at 43
     (reversing Commission’s award of
    benefits to claimant injured while performing a work-related task “because neither qualitative
    nor quantitative risks to the claimant were shown to be greater as a result of her employment”).
    ¶ 97        None of these decisions makes sense according to the majority’s analysis. If, as the
    majority maintains, an injury arises out of the claimant’s employment whenever the act the
    claimant was performing at the time of injury was incidental to his employment, then the
    courts in County of Cook, Greater Peoria Mass Transit, and Hopkins would each have found
    an injury arising out of the claimant’s employment without any need to perform a neutral risk
    analysis. But that is not the case. In each case, the dispositive factor was not whether the act the
    claimant was performing was necessary to the fulfillment of his job duties, but whether the risk
    that led to the injury was created (or, at least, enhanced in some way) by the employment.
    Where the employment subjected the claimant to no risks beyond those encountered by the
    general public (i.e., where the claimant’s claim failed under a neutral risk analysis), recovery
    was denied. We should deny the claimant’s claim in this case for the same reason.
    ¶ 98        The majority contends that the analysis we employed in Adcock is “at odds” with certain
    decisions of our supreme court and of this court. Supra ¶¶ 38, 63-64. The supreme court cases
    cited by the majority are distinguishable. In County of Peoria v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    31 Ill. 2d 562
     (1964), our supreme court held that an off-duty sheriff’s deputy who was struck by a
    vehicle and killed while attempting to push a motorist’s car from a ditch was entitled to
    benefits. The majority suggests that the fact that the supreme court did not explicitly perform a
    neutral risk analysis in County of Peoria somehow supports its argument in this case and
    undermines our analysis in Adcock. Supra ¶¶ 44-45, 63. I disagree. In County of Peoria, the
    supreme court found that, by virtue of his employment as a sheriff’s deputy, the decedent had a
    duty to help motorists in distress at all times, even when he was off duty. County of Peoria, 
    31 Ill. 2d at 563-64
    . Members of the general public have no such duty. Id. at 564. Based on this
    fact, the supreme court held that the claimant’s employment-related duty “exposed him to a
    risk greater than that faced by the public generally.” Id. at 565. Accordingly, the risk that
    caused the fatal injury was peculiar to the decedent’s employment, and there was no need to
    perform a neutral risk analysis.6 Here, by contrast, the risk that led to the claimant’s injury
    6
    As noted above, a neutral risk analysis is required only where the risk at issue is one “to which the
    general public is equally exposed.” First Cash Financial Services, 367 Ill. App. 3d at 105. If the risk is
    unique to the employment and is not shared by the general public, there is no need for a neutral risk
    analysis. It should be noted, however, that the decedent in County of Peoria would have recovered
    benefits even under a neutral risk analysis. If the risk of assisting a stranded motorist were deemed a
    risk common to the general public, the decedent in County of Peoria was subjected to that risk more
    frequently than the general public by virtue of his employment. The supreme court may have actually
    - 27 -
    arose from an activity of daily living (standing up from a kneeling position). Such risks are
    common to the general public and are not peculiar to the claimant’s employment. County of
    Peoria is therefore inapposite.
    ¶ 99         The majority also relies upon Memorial Medical Center v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    72 Ill. 2d 275
     (1978). Supra ¶ 64. In that case, the claimant worked as a housekeeper in a hospital. Her
    job duties including cleaning. She was injured at work when she bent over from a standing
    position in order to clean a spot off a kickplate on a door. Memorial Medical Center, 72 Ill. 2d
    at 278. The employer argued that “the act of bending over [was] a routine motion not peculiar
    to [the claimant’s] work, that the true cause of [the claimant’s] disability was her obesity[,] and
    that the evidence show[ed] that she was not, as a result of her employment, subjected to any
    greater risk than the public at large.” Id. at 279. Our supreme court’s cursory analysis in
    Memorial Medical Center appears to be focused entirely on the issue of causation, not the
    question whether the claimant’s injury arose out of her employment. It is not clear whether, or
    to what extent, our supreme court actually considered the employer’s argument that the risk
    leading to the claimant’s injury did not arise out of the employment because it was a risk
    common to members of the general public. In any event, our supreme court cited County of
    Cook for the proposition that “where it is shown that the activity engaged in presented risks no
    greater than those to which the general public is exposed, compensation will be denied.” Id. at
    281 (citing County of Cook, 
    68 Ill. 2d at 32-33
    ). As noted above, the majority’s analysis in this
    case cannot be reconciled with that principle. Accordingly, Memorial Medical Center
    reaffirms a basic principle that the majority’s analysis contravenes, and it does not support the
    majority’s expansive interpretation of the Act’s “arising out of” requirement.
    ¶ 100        The decisions of this court upon which the majority relies are, in my view, either
    distinguishable or wrongly decided. The majority claims that the analysis we employed in
    Adcock is “at odds with” our decisions in O’Fallon, 
    313 Ill. App. 3d 413
    , Autumn Accolade v.
    Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2013 IL App (3d) 120588WC
    , Young v. Illinois
    Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2014 IL App (4th) 130392WC
    , Noonan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    , Mytnik v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152116WC
    , and Steak ’n Shake v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n, 
    2016 IL App (3d) 150500WC
    . Supra ¶ 38. O’Fallon is distinguishable. The claimant in that case was a sixth
    grade teacher who was ordered to ensure the safety of children moving through the school’s
    hallways. O’Fallon, 
    313 Ill. App. 3d at 414-15
    . Her duties included preventing children from
    running in the halls, and she “was ordered specifically to undertake the risk of pursuing a
    running student.” Id. at 417. She injured her back when she turned, twisted, and began to
    pursue a child running in the hall. Id. We affirmed the Commission’s award of benefits because
    we held that the risk that gave rise to the claimant’s injury (i.e., the risk of twisting, turning,
    and pursuing a running child) arose out of her employment, would not have existed if not for
    her employment duties, and exposed her to a risk greater than that faced by the general public.
    Id. at 417-18. Accordingly, the risk at issue in O’Fallon was distinctly associated with (i.e.,
    “peculiar to”) the claimant’s employment, rendering a neutral risk analysis unnecessary and
    decided the case on that basis, implicitly applying a neutral risk analysis. In either event, County of
    Peoria is distinguishable from this case.
    - 28 -
    inappropriate.7 In this case, by contrast, the risk at issue did not originate with the employment
    but with an activity of daily living to which members of the general public were equally
    exposed. Thus, as noted, a neutral risk analysis is required in this case.
    ¶ 101       The remaining decisions of this court cited by the majority apply the same analysis the
    majority applies in this case. For the reasons I have articulated in this special concurrence and
    in other cases, I believe that each of those decisions was wrongly decided, and I would not
    follow them.8
    ¶ 102       The majority also argues that Adcock is contrary to the requirement that the Act must be
    liberally construed to effectuate its remedial purpose of providing financial protections for
    injured workers. Supra ¶¶ 39-40. The majority maintains that “the manner in which Adcock
    addresses the ‘arising out of’ element gives the Act a narrow construction” by “broadening the
    7
    The majority maintains that O’Fallon is inconsistent with Adcock. Supra ¶ 53; see also supra
    ¶¶ 51-52. I disagree. In O’Fallon, the claimant’s employment subjected her to risks peculiar to her
    employment that exceeded the risks faced by members of the general public. The claimant was required
    to pursue running students, which required her to turn and twist quickly and then immediately run after
    young students. Pursuing running students in this manner is not an activity of daily living. Thus, the
    claimant’s employment posed risks not generally faced by members of the general public. The
    majority’s conclusion that O’Fallon cannot be reconciled with Adcock appears to be based on an overly
    broad reading of Adcock. The majority interprets Adcock (and my position in this special concurrence)
    as standing for the proposition that injuries “involving common bodily movements” can “never” be
    found to have resulted from a risk that is peculiar or distinct to a particular line of employment. Supra
    ¶ 51. Adcock’s holding is not so broad. Almost every work task involves some common bodily
    movements. However, some work tasks expose an employee to risks peculiar to the employment. For
    example, welders risk suffering burns while welding. Adcock acknowledges that injuries caused by
    such risks are “peculiar to” the employment. That is true regardless of whether the claimant was also
    performing common bodily movements (such as standing, bending, or turning) while he was injured.
    However, Adcock also holds that injuries caused entirely by activities of daily living (and not by any
    risks peculiar to the employment) should be analyzed under neutral risk principals. Thus, if the claimant
    in Adcock (a welder) had burned himself while welding, the Commission could have properly found
    that his work injury arose out of his employment without conducting a neutral risk analysis, even if he
    was performing certain “common bodily movements” at the time. However, because the Adcock
    claimant was injured while turning in his chair, an activity performed by members of the general public
    on a daily basis that involved no risks peculiar to welding, a neutral risk analysis was required. In other
    words, because the Adcock claimant alleged an injury that was caused entirely by a common bodily
    movement (and not by any risky activity distinctly associated with welding), we correctly analyzed his
    claim under neutral risk principles.
    8
    In my special concurrence in Steak ’n Shake, I applied a neutral risk analysis (following Adcock)
    and disagreed with the majority’s contrary analysis. Steak ’n Shake, 
    2016 IL App (3d) 150500WC
    ,
    ¶¶ 57-63 (Holdridge, P.J., specially concurring, joined by Hudson, J.). In my special concurrence in
    Noonan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    , ¶ 41 (Holdridge, P.J., specially concurring), I noted that I
    would decline to follow our prior decisions in Young and Autumn Accolade because each of those cases
    erroneously failed to apply a neutral risk analysis. However, I joined the majority’s analysis in Noonan
    in all other respects. I also joined the majority’s analysis in Mytnik. Upon further reflection, I now
    believe that both Noonan and Mytnik applied an incorrect analysis, and I disavow my concurrences in
    those cases. If I were to revisit Noonan and Mytnik, I would specially concur in the judgment in each of
    those cases, but I would apply a neutral risk analysis.
    - 29 -
    definition of neutral risk.” Supra ¶ 40. The majority contends that Adcock places an added
    burden on claimants seeking to recover benefits under the Act. Supra ¶ 40.
    ¶ 103        Contrary to the majority’s suggestion, Adcock does not construe the Act in an unduly
    narrow manner or make it more difficult for claimants to obtain benefits. The neutral risk
    analysis we employed in Adcock would have allowed the claimant to recover benefits in every
    case that the majority’s approach has done so. For example, in Steak ’n Shake, the evidence
    established that the claimant’s job required her to wipe down multiple tables in a hurry in order
    to keep the flow of customers moving. Steak ’n Shake, 
    2016 IL App (3d) 150500WC
    , ¶ 62
    (Holdridge, P.J., specially concurring, joined by Hudson, J.). As the Commission in that case
    correctly found, this exposed the claimant to a risk greater than that encountered by the general
    public, both quantitatively and qualitatively. 
    Id.
     Accordingly, the claimant in Steak ’n Shake
    was entitled to compensation under a neutral risk analysis. 
    Id.
    ¶ 104        In Mytnik, the claimant worked on an assembly line, and his job required him to quickly
    retrieve any bolts that fell on the assembly line to prevent the line from jamming. Mytnik, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152116WC
    , ¶¶ 5-6. The claimant was injured as he was reaching down to grab a
    bolt that had fallen on the assembly line. Because the claimant’s job required him to reach
    down to retrieve fallen bolts repeatedly and in a hurried manner (and to perform other
    repetitive movements which, according to one of his doctors, subjected his lower back to
    “ ‘repetitive mechanical stresses’ ” (id. ¶ 17)), the claimant’s employment arguably exposed
    him to risks that were quantitatively and qualitatively greater than those faced by the general
    public. Thus, he would have recovered benefits under a neutral risk analysis.
    ¶ 105        Similarly, the facts presented in Young and Autumn Accolade would arguably have
    supported recovery under a neutral risk analysis because the claimant in each case was injured
    while performing a common bodily movement (reaching) in an unusual manner that increased
    the risk of injury beyond that posed by ordinary acts of reaching. In Young, the claimant was
    injured while reaching and stretching his arm into a deep, narrow box to retrieve a part for
    inspection. Young, 
    2014 IL App (4th) 130392WC
    , ¶ 5. In Autumn Accolade, the claimant was
    injured while helping a resident of an assisted care facility take a shower. Autumn Accolade,
    
    2013 IL App (3d) 120588WC
    , ¶ 4. As she held the resident with one hand to keep her from
    falling, the claimant turned to the left, bent forward, and reached toward a soap dish with her
    other hand, injuring her neck in the process. 
    Id.
     In each case, the claimant was injured while
    performing everyday activities in an unusual manner that arguably exposed the claimant to a
    risk not faced by members of the general public by virtue of his or her employment.
    Accordingly, in each case, a neutral risk analysis would have supported an award of benefits.
    ¶ 106        The majority further maintains that “[a]n Adcock analysis will, in effect, place an extra
    evidentiary burden on many employees who are injured while performing their job duties or
    activities closely connected with the fulfillment of their assigned duties by requiring those
    employees to present evidence comparing their activities with those of the general public.”
    Supra ¶ 40. This begs the question by assuming that an injury arises out of the employment
    whenever it occurs while the claimant is performing some act incidental to his work duties. As
    noted above, that is not the case. In order to prove that his injury arose out of his employment
    under the Act, a claimant must show that the risk giving rise to the injury had its origin in his
    employment, i.e., that the risk was not faced by members of the general public. A claimant may
    make that showing either by demonstrating either that (1) the risk was peculiar to the
    employment, i.e., not common to the public, or (2) although it was common to the general
    - 30 -
    public, the risk was increased or enhanced in some way by virtue of the employment.
    Accordingly, under existing law, a claimant may not prove that his injury arose out of his
    employment without comparing the risks posed by his work duties with the risks faced by
    members of the general public. Adcock merely applies this existing law as it is; it does not add
    any new burden of proof for claimants or impose any new restrictions under the Act. By
    contrast, the majority’s approach would change existing law by eliminating the claimant’s
    burden to prove that the risk had its origin in his employment (i.e., by declaring that all injuries
    sustained while a claimant is performing an act incidental to his work duties arise out of the
    employment).
    ¶ 107       In addition to its fidelity to the law, Adcock applies a simple, analytically clear, and
    workable rule that that provides clear guidance to the Commission, lower courts, and members
    of the bar. The majority’s approach, by contrast, sows confusion among the Commission and
    the lower courts and encourages ad hoc decisions based upon conjecture as to which actions
    are “incidental to” the claimant’s employment (often without the benefit of any evidence on
    the subject). Our decision in Noonan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 152300WC
    , provides a good example
    of this, in my view. In Noonan, we upheld the Commission’s denial of benefits to a claimant
    who injured his wrist at work when he fell from a rolling chair as he reached to retrieve a pen
    he had dropped on the floor. The claimant’s job required him to fill out forms by hand.
    Nevertheless, applying the same analysis it applies in this case, a majority of our court held that
    the claimant’s act of bending over to pick up a dropped pen was not “distinctly associated”
    with his employment because it was not an act that the employer “might reasonably have
    expected [the claimant] to perform incident to” his job duties. 
    Id. ¶¶ 26-27
    . That conclusion
    strikes me as highly implausible and counterintuitive, and it does not appear to be based on any
    evidence in the record. In my view, it is certainly foreseeable that an employee who spends a
    good portion of his workday filling out forms by hand would drop his pen periodically and
    would have to pick it up in order to continue performing his assigned duties. As Justice Stewart
    noted in his dissent in Noonan, the majority’s contrary finding in that case “defies common
    sense.” 
    Id. ¶ 44
     (Stewart, J., dissenting). Under the analytical framework that the majority has
    applied in this case, in Noonan, and other cases, there was no basis to deny the claimant
    benefits in Noonan. Because the claimant was injured while performing an act that was
    incidental to his job duties, he should have recovered benefits pursuant to the majority’s
    approach.9
    9
    The majority argues that the claimant in Noonan was not entitled to benefits because he dropped
    the pen “as a result of his own clumsiness” and because the evidence did not establish that his attempt to
    pick up the pen was “ ‘incidental to’ *** what he had to do in[ ] the fulfillment of his specific job
    duties.” Supra ¶ 50. However, as noted above, the act of picking up a dropped pen was clearly
    necessary to the fulfillment of the claimant’s specific job duties because his job required him to fill out
    forms by hand. Thus, by the majority’s own definition, the claimant’s act of picking up a pen was
    “incidental to” his job duties. Further, even assuming arguendo that the claimant dropped the pen “as a
    result of his own clumsiness” (which was not a finding reached by the Commission or an issue
    addressed by our court on appeal), that fact would not preclude recovery so long as the clamant was
    required to use a pen in performing his work duties. See Gerald D. Hines Interests v. Industrial
    Comm’n, 
    191 Ill. App. 3d 913
    , 917 (1989) (“It matters not how negligently the employee acted, if at the
    time he was injured he was still within the sphere of his employment and if the accident arose out of
    it.”).
    - 31 -
    ¶ 108       According to the neutral risk analysis we applied in Adcock, however, the claimant in
    Noonan was clearly not entitled to benefits. The risk of falling while bending over in a rolling
    chair to pick up a pen was not peculiar to Noonan’s employment, and there was no evidence
    that Noonan’s employment increased the risk of injury in any way. Accordingly, in my view, it
    would have been analytically clearer, more legally sound, and more persuasive to uphold the
    Commission’s rejection of benefits in Noonan based entirely upon a neutral risk analysis. If we
    had applied Adcock in that case rather than Young and its progeny, we would have reached the
    same correct result ultimately reached by the majority without having to apply tortured logic in
    order to conclude that reaching for a dropped pen was not incidental to the claimant’s job
    duties.
    ¶ 109       In my view, the majority’s analysis in this case suffers from the same flaws as the Noonan
    decision. Before correctly applying a neutral risk analysis, the majority first concludes that the
    act the claimant was performing at the time of his injury (looking for carrots) was “too remote
    from the specific requirements of his employment to be considered incidental to his assigned
    duties.” Supra ¶ 73; see also supra ¶ 31. That conclusion strikes me as dubious. The claimant’s
    job duties as a sous chef included preparing food and arranging the walk-in cooler. Looking for
    carrots under the walk-in cooler in order to assist another chef in preparing food seems to me to
    be undoubtedly “incident to” his duties as a sous chef, regardless of whether he was
    specifically ordered to look for the carrots by a supervisor. Thus, if the majority’s analysis
    were correct (i.e., if all injures sustained during the performance of acts incidental to one’s job
    duties arise out of one’s employment), I believe we would have no choice but to reverse the
    Commission’s decision and award benefits to the claimant. However, because I believe that
    Adcock’s neutral risk analysis should govern the claimant’s claim, I would skip the first step of
    the majority’s analysis (which I find to be both erroneous and unnecessary), and I would affirm
    the Commission’s denial of benefits solely under neutral risk principles for the reasons set
    forth above.
    ¶ 110       The majority contends that “an Adcock-type analysis” (i.e., a neutral risk analysis) “invites
    decisions by the Commission based on speculation,” conjecture, or “gut level assumptions” as
    to how often and in what manner members of the general public perform various activities of
    daily living. Supra ¶ 47. The majority queries whether expert testimony will always be
    required to establish these facts. Supra ¶ 47. I have no doubt that, in certain instances, the
    Commission may legitimately infer whether the employment increased the risk of a particular
    activity of daily living beyond that faced by members of the general public based entirely upon
    common sense and the Commissioners’ life experience, without the need of expert testimony.
    For example, if an employee’s job requires him to walk up 10 steps once or twice per shift, the
    Commission may reasonably infer that the employment did not increase the risk beyond that
    faced by members of the general public. Conversely, if the job requires the employee to climb
    10 steps 50 times per shift, the Commission may reasonably draw the contrary inference. (The
    Commission has drawn such inferences in prior cases, and we have upheld such inferences.) In
    closer cases, expert testimony may well be required. If members of the bar knew that Adcock
    provided the governing analysis in such cases, the parties in such cases would be on notice to
    present expert testimony supporting their respective arguments under a neutral risk analysis,
    where appropriate. In my view, this will place no greater burden on litigants than the majority’s
    approach, which will require the parties to present evidence and arguments regarding which
    tasks are “necessary to the fulfillment of” a claimant’s job duties.
    - 32 -
    ¶ 111       I will close by attempting to correct some misapprehensions that the majority appears to
    have regarding Adcock. The majority suggests that Adcock “automatically exclude[s] from the
    definition of an employment-related risk activities that might involve common bodily
    movements or which Adcock terms ‘everyday activities.’ ” Supra ¶ 38. I disagree. Adcock and
    the cases upon which it relies establish that a risk associated with an activity of daily living has
    its origin in the employment (i.e., is an “employment-related risk”) if the employment
    increases or enhances the risk in some way, either quantitatively or qualitatively. Adcock, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 130884WC
    , ¶ 32. In other words, a risk of everyday living may be found to be an
    employment-related risk under a neutral risk analysis. See 
    id. ¶¶ 32-34
    . My disagreement with
    the majority on this issue appears to be based upon our differing definitions of
    “employment-related” risks. In my view, a risk is “employment-related” if it is peculiar to the
    employment or if it is a common risk that is enhanced by the employment beyond that which
    the general public faces. Put another way, in my view, a risk is “employment-related”
    whenever it “arises out of the employment,” regardless of whether the risk is “peculiar to” the
    employment or merely enhanced by the employment. In the majority’s view, by contrast, an
    injury is the result of an “employment-related” risk (i.e., is “distinctly associated with” the
    employment) if the act the claimant is performing at the time of the injury is incidental to his
    work duties. For the reasons set forth above, I believe that my view is more consistent with the
    Act and with prior precedent.
    ¶ 112       One further clarification seems appropriate. I agree with the majority that, once we have
    determined that a risk is “peculiar to” the employment, the injury is thereby deemed to have
    arisen out of the employment, and we do not need to apply a neutral risk analysis to the claim.
    A risk that is “peculiar to” the employment is, by definition, one to which the general public is
    not exposed. See Orsini, 
    117 Ill. 2d at 45
    ; Karastamatis, 306 Ill. App. 3d at 209.10 Because
    such risks are not faced by members of the general public, we do not need to conduct a neutral
    risk analysis in such cases. However, I do not agree with the majority’s suggestion that a risk
    may deemed “peculiar to” the employment (and therefore one that “arises out of the
    employment” under the Act) merely because the activity that caused the injury was essential to
    the claimant’s work duties, even if that activity did not subject the employee to hazards beyond
    those faced by the general public. Any such suggestion flatly contradicts numerous decisions
    of our supreme court and of our court. See supra ¶ 80.
    ¶ 113       In sum, I believe the analysis applied in Adcock is sound and is preferable to the analysis
    applied by the majority in this case, among other reasons, because (1) it upholds the
    well-established principle that a claimant may not recover under the Act for risks faced by
    members of the general public unless those risks are somehow increased or enhanced by the
    employment; (2) it applies an analytically clear and workable rule that will provide clear
    guidance to the Commission, lower courts, and members of the bar, whereas the majority’s
    analysis will sow confusion and encourage ad hoc decision-making; and (3) it would not
    unduly restrict eligibility for compensation under the Act, whereas the majority’s analysis
    would expand eligibility for benefits well beyond what the legislature intended by rendering
    10
    The majority appears to treat the phrase “peculiar to the employment” as synonymous with
    “employment-related” and “distinctly associated with the employment.” The majority interprets all
    three of these phrases to mean acts that are incidental to the employment. By contrast, following Orsini
    and Karastamatis, Adcock defines a risk “peculiar to the employment” as a risk that is unique to the
    employment, i.e., a risk not faced by the general public.
    - 33 -
    any injury directly connected to the performance of an employee’s essential job duties
    potentially compensable, even if the employment did not increase or enhance the risk of injury
    in any way. Under the majority’s approach, any injuries that occur while an employee is
    performing an act that is necessary to the fulfillment of the employee’s work duties (even an
    activity of daily living such as walking to one’s workstation at the employer’s premises) “arise
    out of” the employment and are therefore compensable if the Act’s other requirements are met.
    That would collapse the distinction between “arising out of” the employment and “in the
    course of” the employment and would arguably authorize compensation for positional risks.
    ¶ 114        The majority maintains that its analytical approach will not render positional risks
    compensable or otherwise unduly expand the definition of “employment-related” work
    injuries because (1) only injuries incurred while performing acts “incidental to” the
    employment are compensable and (2) an activity (and its associated risk) is “incidental to” the
    employment only if it “belongs to or is connected with what the employee has to do in
    fulfilling his duties” (emphasis in original and internal quotation marks omitted) (supra ¶ 71),
    i.e., only if the act the claimant was performing at the time of his injury was “necessary to the
    fulfillment of his specific job duties” (supra ¶ 46). However, contrary to the majority’s
    suggestion, the majority’s definition of “incidental to” the employment is broad enough to
    authorize compensation for a wide variety of everyday activities that have not previously been
    deemed compensable. For example, under the majority’s approach, if an employee has to walk
    across a normal surface or up and down stairs in order to perform his work duties, any injury he
    sustains while walking across the floor or navigating the stairs would be deemed to arise out of
    his employment, even if his employment did not increase the risk of these everyday activities
    beyond that faced by the general public on a daily basis. Employees regularly have to perform
    a host of everyday actions in order to fulfill their work duties. Such actions present neutral
    risks that are ordinarily not compensable unless the employment somehow increased the risk
    quantitatively or qualitatively.11
    ¶ 115        In my view, the Commission applied the proper analysis (i.e., a neutral risk analysis, as
    prescribed by Adcock) and reached the proper conclusion. The Commission’s findings were
    not against the manifest weight of the evidence. I would therefore affirm the Commission’s
    decision in all respects.
    ¶ 116        JUSTICE HOFFMAN joins in this special concurrence.
    11
    Contrary to the majority’s suggestion, I do not define an act “incidental to” the employment as
    being equivalent to a “positional risk.” See supra ¶ 70. I define that phrase the same way the majority
    and our supreme court define it, i.e., as a risk that is connected to what an employee has to do in
    fulfilling his job duties. Unlike the majority, however, I recognize that this definition will include
    various activities of daily living regularly performed by members of the public (such as walking across
    a normal surface or up and down stairs), because such activities are often necessary to the performance
    of an employee’s job duties. If all such activities are deemed to “arise out of the employment,” as the
    majority maintains, then such common daily activities could be compensable even if the employment
    does not increase the risk beyond that faced by the general public. It is that result (and not our shared
    definition of acts “incidental to” the employment) that threatens to collapse the distinction between
    “arising out of” the employment and “in the course of” the employment, and that would arguably
    authorize compensation for positional risks.
    - 34 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-16-2747WC

Citation Numbers: 2019 IL App (1st) 162747WC

Filed Date: 6/28/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021

Authorities (32)

Hansel & Gretel Day Care Center v. Industrial Commission , 215 Ill. App. 3d 284 ( 1991 )

Potenzo v. Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission , 378 Ill. App. 3d 113 ( 2007 )

Jones v. Industrial Commission , 78 Ill. 2d 284 ( 1980 )

Cassens Transport Co. v. Industrial Commission , 262 Ill. App. 3d 324 ( 1994 )

Caterpillar Tractor Co. v. Industrial Commission , 129 Ill. 2d 52 ( 1989 )

Hopkins v. Industrial Commission , 196 Ill. App. 3d 347 ( 1990 )

First Cash Financial Services v. Industrial Commission , 367 Ill. App. 3d 102 ( 2006 )

Board of Trustees v. Industrial Commission , 44 Ill. 2d 207 ( 1969 )

Chmelik v. Vana , 31 Ill. 2d 272 ( 1964 )

Prince v. Industrial Commission , 15 Ill. 2d 607 ( 1959 )

Rysdon Products Co. v. Industrial Commission , 34 Ill. 2d 326 ( 1966 )

Orsini v. Industrial Commission , 117 Ill. 2d 38 ( 1987 )

INST. OF TECH. RES. v. Industrial Com'n , 314 Ill. App. 3d 149 ( 2000 )

Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v. Industrial Commission , 131 Ill. 2d 478 ( 1989 )

Caterpillar, Inc. v. Industrial Commission , 228 Ill. App. 3d 288 ( 1992 )

O'Fallon School District No. 90 v. Industrial Commission , 313 Ill. App. 3d 413 ( 2000 )

Fisher Body Division v. Industrial Commission , 40 Ill. 2d 514 ( 1968 )

Permanent Construction Co. v. Industrial Commission , 380 Ill. 47 ( 1942 )

Borgeson v. Industrial Commission , 368 Ill. 188 ( 1938 )

Venture-Newberg Perini, Stone & Webster v. Illinois Workers'... , 2013 IL 115728 ( 2014 )

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