Dutcher v. Nebraska Dept. of Corr. Servs. , 312 Neb. 405 ( 2022 )


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    12/02/2022 01:04 AM CST
    - 405 -
    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    312 Nebraska Reports
    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 405
    Suzette D. Dutcher, appellant,
    v. Nebraska Department of
    Correctional Services, appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed September 9, 2022.   No. S-21-740.
    1. Summary Judgment: Appeal and Error. An appellate court affirms a
    lower court’s grant of summary judgment if the pleadings and admitted
    evidence show that there is no genuine issue as to any material facts or
    as to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from the facts and that
    the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    2. ____: ____. In reviewing a summary judgment, an appellate court views
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the party against whom the
    judgment was granted, and gives that party the benefit of all reasonable
    inferences deducible from the evidence.
    3. Judgments: Appeal and Error. Statutory interpretation is a question of
    law. When reviewing questions of law, an appellate court has an obliga-
    tion to resolve the questions independently of the conclusion reached by
    the trial court.
    4. Workers’ Compensation: Jurisdiction: Legislature. As a statutorily
    created court, it is the role of the Legislature to determine what acts fall
    within the Workers’ Compensation Court’s exclusive jurisdiction.
    5. Workers’ Compensation: Legislature. The Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act creates rights which did not exist at common law,
    and the Legislature may place such restrictions thereon as it sees fit.
    6. Statutes. Statutes relating to the same subject matter are to be construed
    together so as to maintain a consistent and sensible scheme.
    7. ____. Statutory interpretation begins with the text, and the text is to be
    given its plain and ordinary meaning.
    8. Statutes: Legislature. It is a fundamental canon of statutory construc-
    tion that words generally should be interpreted as taking their ordinary
    meaning at the time the Legislature enacted the statute.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    312 Nebraska Reports
    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 405
    9. ____: ____. When the Legislature uses legal terms of art in statutes,
    such terms should be construed and understood according to their
    accepted legal meaning.
    10. Statutes: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will not resort to inter-
    pretation of statutory language to ascertain the meaning of words which
    are plain, direct, and unambiguous.
    11. ____: ____. An appellate court is not at liberty to add language to the
    plain terms of a statute to restrict its meaning.
    12. Statutes: Courts: Appeal and Error. An appellate court does not sit as
    a superlegislature to review the wisdom of legislative acts.
    13. Fair Employment Practices: Discrimination: Intent. Employment dis-
    crimination laws such as those found in the Nebraska Fair Employment
    Practice Act have not vested in the Nebraska courts the authority to sit
    as super personnel departments reviewing the wisdom or fairness of the
    business judgments made by employers, except to the extent that those
    judgments involve intentional discrimination.
    14. Workers’ Compensation. The Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act
    covers personal injury or death caused to an employee by accident
    or occupational disease, arising out of and in the course of his or her
    employment, without regard to the negligence of the employer.
    15. Workers’ Compensation: Torts: Intent. There is no intentional tort
    exception to the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act.
    16. Workers’ Compensation: Torts. Under the workers’ compensation
    statutes, employees give up the complete compensation that they might
    recover under tort law in exchange for no-fault benefits that they quickly
    receive for most economic losses from work-related injuries and the
    employer receives immunity from common-law suit.
    17. Workers’ Compensation: Immunity. The reason for an employer’s
    immunity is the quid pro quo by which the employer gives up his or her
    normal defenses and assumes automatic liability, while the employee
    gives up his or her right to common-law verdicts.
    18. Workers’ Compensation. When an employee sustains an injury that
    arises out of and in the course of his or her employment and such
    injury is covered by the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act, then
    the employee surrenders his or her right to any other method, form, or
    amount of compensation or determination thereof for that injury against
    his or her employer or the workers’ compensation insurer.
    Appeal from the District Court for Red Willow County:
    David W. Urbom, Judge. Affirmed.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    312 Nebraska Reports
    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 405
    Tanya J. Hansen, of Smith, Johnson, Allen, Connick &
    Hansen, for appellant.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, James A. Campbell,
    Solicitor General, and Phoebe L. Gydesen for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke,
    Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.
    Freudenberg, J.
    INTRODUCTION
    An employee of the Nebraska Department of Correctional
    Services (Department) was injured while participating in man-
    dated self-defense training. The employee sought and received
    workers’ compensation benefits from the time she was injured,
    including vocational rehabilitation. The employee was ulti-
    mately unable to find a position with the Department that
    would accommodate her physical restrictions, and her employ-
    ment was terminated. She brought suit against the Department
    for wrongful termination on the basis of her disability, in viola-
    tion of the Nebraska Fair Employment Practice Act (NFEPA). 1
    The district court found that the exclusivity provisions of
    the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act 2 provide the sole
    remedy for the employee against the Department in this situ-
    ation, barring the employee’s claim. The employee appeals.
    We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Suzette D. Dutcher began working for the Department in
    February 2002 as a corporal. In 2009, she changed jobs within
    the Department, becoming a chemical dependency counselor.
    In 2010, Dutcher became a supervisor of the chemical depen-
    dency counselors.
    1
    See 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 48-1101
     to 48-1125 (Reissue 2021).
    2
    
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 48-101
     to 48-1,117 (Reissue 2021).
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    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 405
    Being a supervisor meant that Dutcher’s job became more
    administrative, but she still had contact with inmates when
    she mediated disagreements between counselors and inmates,
    taught classes, and conducted facility walk-throughs as part
    of her “officer of the day” duties. Dutcher testified in her
    deposition that she was required to maintain certification in
    “level 3” pressure point control tactics (PPCT) training. This
    training included self-defense techniques such as takedowns,
    ground fighting, and kicking. PPCT training was required
    yearly, and Dutcher was required to demonstrate different
    PPCT techniques that included kicking and kneeling in order
    to maintain her certification. PPCT training and certification
    was not explicitly listed in the supervisor job description or
    in an operational memorandum describing “officer of the
    day” duties.
    In April 2015, Dutcher suffered an injury to her right knee
    while completing PPCT training. Dutcher timely notified the
    Department of her injury. Her medical expenses associated
    with the injury were covered through the State of Nebraska’s
    third-party administrator for workers’ compensation claims.
    Dutcher initially engaged in physical therapy, which was
    unsuccessful. Dutcher had her first surgery in July 2015.
    In September 2015, Dutcher was able to return to her job
    with physical restrictions. The physical limitations included
    no stooping, twisting, or bending her right knee; no squat-
    ting, crawling, or kneeling; no kicking or hitting; and no
    running. Because of her physical restrictions, the Department
    required Dutcher to have a level 3 PPCT-certified employee
    with her when she conducted rounds or any time she interacted
    with inmates.
    After returning to work, Dutcher had more surgeries in
    September 2015, June 2018, and August 2018. Dutcher
    received regular payments for temporary total disability start-
    ing in August 2015.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
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    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 405
    In September 2016, Dutcher received a letter from the
    Department advising her that 1 year had elapsed since work
    restrictions had been imposed and that since work restric-
    tions remained, pursuant to Department policy, she had 90
    days to find a new position or be terminated from her cur-
    rent position. After failing to find another position within the
    Department that could accommodate her physical restrictions,
    Dutcher’s employment was terminated in December 2016. The
    Department explained that Dutcher was unable to fulfill the
    regular duties of her position. Dutcher admitted in her deposi-
    tion that she was not physically capable of performing level 3
    PPCT tactics or takedown techniques.
    In March 2017, Dutcher was declared by her doctor to be at
    maximum medical improvement, with a permanent impairment
    rating and permanent work restrictions. Dutcher’s permanent
    work restrictions included no lifting over 20 pounds; no stoop-
    ing, twisting, bending, squatting, crawling, or kneeling; limits
    on the amount of walking, standing, and climbing; and no
    physical contact with inmates.
    Rather than accepting the workers’ compensation carrier’s
    payment to close the claim based on Dutcher’s reaching her
    maximum medical improvement, Dutcher elected to exercise
    her right to appointment of a vocational rehabilitation coun-
    selor. The Workers’ Compensation Court approved Dutcher’s
    election to participate in a vocational rehabilitation plan.
    Dutcher’s appointed vocational rehabilitation counselor
    indicated in her initial report that Dutcher may qualify for
    some social services jobs based on Dutcher’s transferable
    skills, but that she would not likely earn wages comparable
    to what she was making at the time of her injury. After con-
    ducting market research regarding Dutcher’s current educa-
    tional level and qualifications, the counselor determined that
    Dutcher would need to secure additional education within her
    field or look at a new field to gain skills for future employ-
    ment. Dutcher and her counselor decided the best plan was
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    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 405
    to pursue an associate degree in business administration.
    The counselor developed a vocational rehabilitation plan for
    Dutcher to obtain such a degree with the expected comple-
    tion in May 2021. After approving the plan, the Workers’
    Compensation Court ordered the payment of Dutcher’s tuition,
    books, and incidentals.
    Dutcher completed her vocational rehabilitation in May
    2021 by obtaining her degree. However, rather than engage
    in the job placement process with her counselor, Dutcher
    decided to join a family agricultural business she owns with
    her husband.
    As of July 2, 2021, Dutcher had received more than $199,000
    in workers’ compensation indemnity payments, which included
    $1,140 every 2 weeks in temporary total disability, permanent
    partial disability benefits, and a $61,275 lump sum payment in
    August 2019.
    While Dutcher was receiving workers’ compensation dis-
    ability payments and engaging in her vocational rehabilitation
    plan, she filed a complaint on September 12, 2018, against the
    Department, alleging the Department violated the Americans
    with Disabilities Act of 1990 and the NFEPA. The Department
    removed the case to federal court, where the Americans with
    Disabilities Act of 1990 claim was dismissed. The remaining
    NFEPA claim was remanded to state court.
    Dutcher alleged in relation to her claim under the NFEPA
    that because she had fulfilled all material terms and conditions
    of employment at all relevant times, the Department’s prof-
    fered reason for terminating her employment was pretextual.
    She alleged that the real reason the Department terminated
    her employment was on the basis of her disability. Dutcher
    pointed out that the Department had originally accommodated
    her medical restrictions, and she asserted that “[p]erforming
    Level 3 PPCT take down techniques and restraints on inmates
    was not part of [her] regular job duties.”
    The Department’s answer asserted that Dutcher’s fail-
    ure to “meet the occupational qualifications required by the
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    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
    Cite as 
    312 Neb. 405
    [Department] would have caused a direct threat which involved
    significant risks to the health and/or safety of [Dutcher] and
    others in the work place which could not be eliminated by
    a reasonable accommodation” and that as such, the termi-
    nation of Dutcher’s employment was “consistent with busi-
    ness necessity.” Further, the Department asserted that to the
    extent Dutcher was denied an accommodation, such denial was
    because the accommodation would impose an undue burden
    or would have posed a direct threat to the health or safety of
    Dutcher or other individuals.
    The Department moved for summary judgment on the
    basis of the exclusivity provisions of the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act. After an evidentiary hearing, the district
    court entered an order granting the Department’s motion for
    summary judgment. The district court concluded that the exclu-
    sivity provisions of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act,
    §§ 48-111 and 48-148, barred Dutcher’s NFEPA claim as a
    matter of law. Dutcher appeals.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Dutcher assigns that the district court erred in determin-
    ing her claim was barred by the exclusivity provisions of the
    Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act and, as such, erred in
    granting the Department’s motion for summary judgment.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] An appellate court affirms a lower court’s grant of sum-
    mary judgment if the pleadings and admitted evidence show
    that there is no genuine issue as to any material facts or as
    to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from the facts
    and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law. 3
    [2] In reviewing a summary judgment, an appellate court
    views the evidence in the light most favorable to the party
    3
    Sundermann v. Hy-Vee, 
    306 Neb. 749
    , 
    947 N.W.2d 492
     (2020).
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    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
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    312 Neb. 405
    against whom the judgment was granted, and gives that party
    the benefit of all reasonable inferences deducible from the
    evidence. 4
    [3] Statutory interpretation is a question of law. When
    reviewing questions of law, an appellate court has an obliga-
    tion to resolve the questions independently of the conclusion
    reached by the trial court. 5
    ANALYSIS
    [4,5] The Workers’ Compensation Court is a statutorily cre-
    ated court designed to have jurisdiction over all injuries fall-
    ing within the scope of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation
    Act. 6 As a statutorily created court, it is the role of the
    Legislature to determine what acts fall within the Workers’
    Compensation Court’s exclusive jurisdiction. 7 The Nebraska
    Workers’ Compensation Act creates rights which did not exist
    at common law, and the Legislature may place such restrictions
    thereon as it sees fit. 8
    Whether the exclusivity provisions of the Nebraska
    Workers’ Compensation Act applied to the facts of this case,
    thereby depriving the district court of jurisdiction to hear
    Dutcher’s NFEPA action, is a question of law as to the mean-
    ing of the relevant provisions of those two legislative acts.
    Thus, we begin by setting forth our principles of statutory
    construction.
    [6-9] Statutes relating to the same subject matter are to be
    construed together so as to maintain a consistent and sensible
    scheme. 9 However, statutory interpretation begins with the
    4
    
    Id.
    5
    
    Id.
    6
    Estate of Teague v. Crossroads Co-op Assn., 
    286 Neb. 1
    , 
    834 N.W.2d 236
    (2013).
    7
    
    Id.
    8
    
    Id.
    9
    See Grothen v. Grothen, 
    308 Neb. 28
    , 
    952 N.W.2d 650
     (2020).
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    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
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    312 Neb. 405
    text, and the text is to be given its plain and ordinary mean-
    ing. 10 It is a fundamental canon of statutory construction that
    words generally should be interpreted as taking their ordinary
    meaning at the time the Legislature enacted the statute. 11 When
    the Legislature uses legal terms of art in statutes, such terms
    should be construed and understood according to their accepted
    legal meaning. 12
    [10-12] An appellate court will not resort to interpretation
    of statutory language to ascertain the meaning of words which
    are plain, direct, and unambiguous. 13 Also, an appellate court
    is not at liberty to add language to the plain terms of a statute
    to restrict its meaning. 14 An appellate court does not sit as a
    superlegislature to review the wisdom of legislative acts. 15
    NFEPA
    [13] Employment discrimination laws such as those found
    in the NFEPA have not vested in the Nebraska courts the
    authority to sit as super personnel departments reviewing
    the wisdom or fairness of the business judgments made by
    employers, except to the extent that those judgments involve
    intentional discrimination. 16 The NFEPA states at § 48-1101
    that it “is the policy of [Nebraska] to foster the employ-
    ment of all employable persons in the state on the basis of
    merit . . . and to safeguard their right to obtain and hold
    employment without discrimination.” The NFEPA provides at
    § 48-1104(1), in relevant part, that “[i]t shall be an unlawful
    10
    Nebraska Republican Party v. Shively, 
    311 Neb. 160
    , 
    971 N.W.2d 128
    (2022).
    11
    
    Id.
    12
    Clark v. Sargent Irr. Dist., 
    311 Neb. 123
    , 
    971 N.W.2d 298
     (2022).
    13
    Nebraska Republican Party v. Shively, supra note 10.
    14
    Spratt v. Crete Carrier Corp., 
    311 Neb. 262
    , 
    971 N.W.2d 335
     (2022).
    15
    Gourley v. Nebraska Methodist Health Sys., 
    265 Neb. 918
    , 
    663 N.W.2d 43
    (2003).
    16
    Baker-Heser v. State, 
    309 Neb. 979
    , 
    963 N.W.2d 59
     (2021).
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    312 Neb. 405
    employment practice for an employer . . . to discriminate
    against any individual with respect to compensation, terms,
    conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such indi-
    vidual’s race, color, religion, sex, disability, marital status, or
    national origin[.]”
    Under § 48-1107.01(1), it is unlawful for a covered entity to
    “[d]iscriminate against a qualified individual with a disability
    because of the disability of such individual in regard to job
    application procedures, the hiring, advancement, or discharge
    of employees, employee compensation, job training, and other
    terms, conditions, and privileges of employment[.]” Section
    48-1102(10)(a) defines “[q]ualified individual with a disabil-
    ity” as “an individual with a disability who, with or without
    reasonable accommodation, can perform the essential func-
    tions of the employment position that such individual holds or
    desires” and states that “[c]onsideration shall be given to the
    employer’s judgment as to what functions of a job are essen-
    tial . . . .” Under § 48-1102(11), “[r]easonable accommodation
    shall not include accommodations which the covered entity can
    demonstrate require significant difficulty or expense thereby
    posing an undue hardship upon the covered entity.”
    While the NFEPA establishes an Equal Opportunity
    Commission to, among other things, receive, investigate, and
    pass upon charges of unlawful employment practices, 17 the
    NFEPA provides in § 48-1119(4) that “[a] complainant who
    has suffered physical, emotional, or financial harm as a result
    of a violation of section 48-1104 or 48-1114 may, at any stage
    of the proceedings prior to dismissal, file an action directly in
    the district court of the county where such alleged violation
    occurred” and that “[t]he district court shall file and try such
    case as any other civil action, and any successful complainant
    shall be entitled to appropriate relief, including temporary or
    permanent injunctive relief, general and special damages, rea-
    sonable attorney’s fees, and costs.”
    17
    See §§ 48-1116 and 48-1117(1).
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    DUTCHER V. NEBRASKA DEPT. OF CORR. SERVS.
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    312 Neb. 405
    The NFEPA does not refer to the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act, and it does not contain any provision relat-
    ing to exclusivity. The only provision relating to construction
    of the act states, “Nothing contained in the [NFEPA] shall be
    deemed to repeal any of the provisions of the civil rights law,
    any other law of this state, or any municipal ordinance relating
    to discrimination because of race, creed, color, religion, sex,
    disability, or national origin.” 18
    Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act
    [14,15] The Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act covers
    personal injury or death caused to an employee by accident
    or occupational disease, arising out of and in the course of his
    or her employment, 19 without regard to the negligence of the
    employer. 20 Injury and personal injuries “mean only violence to
    the physical structure of the body and such disease or infection
    as naturally results therefrom.” 21 An accident “means an unex-
    pected or unforeseen injury happening suddenly and violently,
    with or without human fault, and producing at the time objec-
    tive symptoms of an injury.” 22 This court has long held that
    there is no intentional tort exception to the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act. 23
    Section 48-110 states that when an employer and employee
    accept the provisions of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation
    Act, by express or implied agreement or as provided in
    § 48-112, the employee shall be compensated according to the
    schedule of the act. Section 48-111 provides in relevant part
    that “[s]uch agreement or the election provided for in section
    18
    § 48-1124.
    19
    § 48-101.
    20
    § 48-110.
    21
    § 48-151(4).
    22
    § 48-151(2).
    23
    Estate of Teague v. Crossroads Co-op Assn., 
    supra note 6
    .
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    48-112 shall be a surrender by the parties thereto of their
    rights to any other method, form, or amount of compensation
    or determination thereof than as provided in the Nebraska
    Workers’ Compensation Act . . . .” Section 48-148 provides
    in relevant part that if an employee, or the employee’s depen-
    dents, files a claim for a personal injury from an employer sub-
    ject to the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act, that action
    “shall constitute a release to such employer of all claims or
    demands at law, if any, arising from such injury.”
    [16,17] Workers’ compensation laws reflect a compromise
    between employers and employees. 24 Under these statutes,
    employees give up the complete compensation that they might
    recover under tort law in exchange for no-fault benefits that
    they quickly receive for most economic losses from work-
    related injuries and the employer receives immunity from com-
    mon-law suit. 25 The reason for the employer’s immunity is the
    quid pro quo by which the employer gives up his or her normal
    defenses and assumes automatic liability, while the employee
    gives up his or her right to common-law verdicts. 26
    [18] We have said the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation
    Act “‘provides the exclusive remedy by the employee against
    the employer for any injury arising out of and in the course
    of the employment.’” 27 We have explained that § 48-148 of
    the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act provides that if an
    employee’s injury arises out of and in the course of employ-
    ment, the employee’s exclusive remedy is against the employer
    for workers’ compensation. 28 Thus, we have held:
    24
    Pittman v. Western Engineering Co., 
    283 Neb. 913
    , 
    813 N.W.2d 487
    (2012).
    25
    See Estate of Teague v. Crossroads Co-op Assn., 
    supra note 6
    .
    26
    Pittman v. Western Engineering Co., supra note 24.
    27
    Bennett v. Saint Elizabeth Health Sys., 
    273 Neb. 300
    , 305, 
    729 N.W.2d 80
    ,
    84 (2007).
    28
    Jacobs Engr. Group v. ConAgra Foods, 
    301 Neb. 38
    , 
    917 N.W.2d 435
    (2018).
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    [W]hen an employee sustains an injury that arises out
    of and in the course of his or her employment and such
    injury is covered by the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation
    Act, then the employee surrenders his or her right to
    any other method, form, or amount of compensation or
    determination thereof for that injury against his or her
    employer or the workers’ compensation insurer. 29
    We have elaborated that while an individual can be an employee
    of an entity and nevertheless sue that entity in district court
    where the particular facts show that the suit in district court
    is not covered under or barred by the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act, 30 the employee must allege sufficient
    facts that, if true, would demonstrate the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act does not apply. 31
    We have never specifically addressed the exclusivity provi-
    sions of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act in the con-
    text of a civil claim brought in district court under the NFEPA.
    We have, however, found that the exclusivity provisions of the
    Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act applied to various other
    civil actions brought in district court, despite plaintiffs’ argu-
    ments that the actions were sufficiently distinct from their
    workers’ compensation claim to not “aris[e] from such injury.”
    These have included actions brought in district court for wrong-
    ful death, 32 assault and battery, 33 bystander negligent infliction
    of emotional distress, 34 medical malpractice, 35 bad faith relat-
    ing to administration of a workers’ compensation claim, 36
    29
    Ihm v. Crawford & Co., 
    254 Neb. 818
    , 821, 
    580 N.W.2d 115
    , 118 (1998).
    30
    Pittman v. Western Engineering Co., supra note 24.
    31
    Estate of Teague v. Crossroads Co-op Assn., 
    supra note 6
    .
    32
    
    Id.
    33
    
    Id.
    34
    Pittman v. Western Engineering Co., supra note 24.
    35
    Bennett v. Saint Elizabeth Health Sys., supra note 27.
    36
    Ihm v. Crawford & Co., supra note 29.
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    and violations of “‘the Factory Act[,]’ [Neb. Rev. Stat.]
    §§ 48-409 and 48-422, R. R. S. 1943.” 37
    For instance, in Pittman v. Western Engineering Co., 38 we
    rejected the plaintiff’s argument that his claim for bystander
    negligent infliction of emotional distress after witnessing his
    wife’s work-related death did not “aris[e] from such injury”
    for purposes of § 48-148. The plaintiff argued that his action
    did not arise from the personal injury for which he received
    workers’ compensation benefits, because, with the exception
    of first responders, purely psychological damages are not
    recoverable under the definition of “injury” in the Nebraska
    Workers’ Compensation Act. Further, the plaintiff argued his
    injuries arose separately from the injuries suffered by his wife,
    because they resulted solely from his shock of encountering
    the scene of her death.
    We held that upon accepting payment as a dependent, by
    operation of § 48-148, the husband released his wife’s employer
    from further claims arising from her injury, and that his action
    in district court was barred by the employer immunity found
    in § 48-148. We explained that the husband’s claim was barred
    by the plain language of “arising from such injury.” We uti-
    lized a “rational nexus” test and reasoned that the husband’s
    claim “logically ar[ose]” from his wife’s death, because, had
    her injury and resultant death not occurred, the husband’s emo-
    tional distress claims would not have arisen. 39
    37
    Edelman v. Ralph Printing & Lithographing, Inc., 
    189 Neb. 763
    , 764,
    
    205 N.W.2d 340
    , 340 (1973). But see, Riesen v. Irwin Indus. Tool Co.,
    
    272 Neb. 41
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 907
     (2006) (without discussion of exclusivity
    remanding for further proceeding tort claim in district court for retaliatory
    discharge for filing workers’ compensation claim); Muller v. Tri-State
    Ins. Co., 
    252 Neb. 1
    , 
    560 N.W.2d 130
     (1997) (exclusivity did not
    apply to claim under employer’s underinsured motorist coverage even
    though plaintiff widow received compensation from employer’s workers’
    compensation carrier for death from automobile accident).
    38
    Pittman v. Western Engineering Co., supra note 24.
    39
    Id. at 928, 813 N.W.2d at 498.
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    In Bennett v. Saint Elizabeth Health Sys., 40 we held that the
    plaintiff’s medical malpractice action was barred by the exclu-
    sivity provisions of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act
    when she sought to recover for aggravation of an injury that
    arose out of and in the course of her employment at a hospital,
    which aggravation was allegedly caused by the same hospital
    when it negligently performed physical therapy treatment of
    the original injury. There was no dispute that the plaintiff was
    entitled to workers’ compensation benefits for both the original
    injury and the injury sustained during physical therapy, and we
    observed there was no inference in the record that the plain-
    tiff’s physical therapy was an unnecessary or unreasonable
    treatment for her initial injury. We reasoned that because the
    plaintiff would not have undertaken the physical therapy “but
    for” the original compensable injury to that shoulder, the con-
    sequential injury to the left shoulder was related to her employ-
    ment, and therefore, it was a covered injury under the Nebraska
    Workers’ Compensation Act. 41
    We similarly held in Ihm v. Crawford & Co. 42 that an action
    in district court to recover for additional injuries caused by a
    bad faith delay in providing authorization for treatment was
    barred by the exclusivity provisions of the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act, disagreeing with the plaintiff’s argument
    that the injuries caused by the subsequent intentional tort did
    not arise out of his work-related injury. We explained that the
    alleged tortious acts were “completely intertwined with the
    original injury”:
    While the alleged tortious conduct of the appellees, in
    refusing to timely authorize needed medical treatment,
    may have come after the original injury, the conduct was
    not independent of the injury. Rather, the alleged tortious
    acts of the appellees were completely intertwined with
    40
    Bennett v. Saint Elizabeth Health Sys., supra note 27.
    41
    Id. at 307, 
    729 N.W.2d at 85
    .
    42
    Ihm v. Crawford & Co., supra note 29.
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    the original injury, as their acts related directly to an
    alleged bad faith delay in authorization of further treat-
    ment for the original injury. 43
    We observed that the penalties under the act for such bad
    faith were limited to attorney fees and thus provided little
    deterrence to the bad faith handling of claims; still, it was the
    province of the Legislature, not this court, to strengthen the
    deterrent effect of administrative penalties within the act as
    public policy may dictate. 44
    Arising From Such Injury
    The statutory scheme dictates that Dutcher and the
    Department agreed to be subject to the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act. The Department is “such employer” for
    purposes of the release provision in § 48-148. There is no
    dispute that Dutcher’s knee injury and associated restrictions
    for which Dutcher received workers’ compensation benefits—
    and which restrictions were the stated reasons the Department
    concluded she was unable to fulfill the regular duties of her
    position—were the result of an accident arising out of and in
    the course of her employment. Dutcher was given vocational
    rehabilitation for that injury, which she was eligible for under
    § 48-162.01(3), by being “unable to perform suitable work
    for which he or she has previous training or experience,”
    as a result of the injury. The question is whether, under the
    facts of this case, Dutcher’s discrimination action in district
    court under the NFEPA was a claim for compensation “aris-
    ing from such injury,” 45 which would constitute “any other
    method, form, or amount of compensation or determination [of
    compensation].” 46
    Dutcher points out there is case law in other jurisdic-
    tions holding that the exclusivity provisions of the governing
    43
    Id. at 826, 
    580 N.W.2d at 120
    .
    44
    Ihm v. Crawford & Co., supra note 29.
    45
    § 48-148.
    46
    § 48-111.
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    workers’ compensation laws do not bar discrimination actions
    based on a disability stemming from the personal injury for
    which workers’ compensation benefits were obtained. 47 Those
    courts reason that statutes barring discrimination provide a
    remedy for “intangible injuries which rob a person of dignity
    and self-esteem and with eliminating a discriminatory environ-
    ment in the workplace that affects not only the victim of dis-
    crimination but the entire workforce and the public welfare.” 48
    47
    See, Mangin v. Westco Security Systems, Inc., 
    922 F. Supp. 563
     (M.D. Fla.
    1996); Davis v. Dillmeier Enterprises, Inc., 
    330 Ark. 545
    , 
    956 S.W.2d 155
     (1997) (remedies granted to employee on account of injury); City
    of Moorpark v. Superior Court, 
    18 Cal. 4th 1143
    , 
    959 P.2d 752
    , 
    77 Cal. Rptr. 2d 445
     (1998) (plain language of exclusive remedy provisions of
    workers’ compensation law apparently limits those provisions to division
    of labor code remedies); Hardaway Management Co. v. Southerland,
    
    977 S.W.2d 910
     (Ky. 1998); Daniel v. City of Minneapolis, 
    923 N.W.2d 637
     (Minn. 2019) (on account of such injury); Folan v. State/DCYF, 
    723 A.2d 287
     (R.I. 1999) (right to compensation for injury under chapters
    of compensation act, and remedy for injury granted by those chapters,
    shall be in lieu of all rights and remedies as to that injury); Gallipo v.
    City of Rutland, 
    173 Vt. 223
    , 
    789 A.2d 942
     (2001); Messer v. Huntington
    Anesthesia Group, Inc., 
    218 W. Va. 4
    , 
    620 S.E.2d 144
     (2005) (not
    liable to respond in damages at common law or by statute for injury
    or death of any employee, however occurring, but injuries caused by
    employer’s deliberate intention exempted from workers’ compensation
    act); Byers v. Labor and Industry Review Com’n, 
    208 Wis. 2d 388
    , 
    561 N.W.2d 678
     (1997) (where such conditions for employer’s liability under
    workers’ compensation act exist, right to recovery of compensation shall
    be exclusive remedy against employer). See, also, Whitson v. City of
    Hoover, 
    14 So. 3d 98
     (Ala. 2009) (age discrimination claim); Claxton
    v. Waters, 
    34 Cal. 4th 367
    , 
    96 P.3d 496
    , 
    18 Cal. Rptr. 3d 246
     (2004)
    (sexual harassment); Byrd v. Richardson-Greenshields-Securities, 
    552 So. 2d 1099
     (Fla. 1989) (sexual harassment); Meyers v. Chapman Printing
    Co., Inc., 
    840 S.W.2d 814
     (Ky. 1992) (sex discrimination); Cox v.
    Glazer Steel Corp., 
    606 So. 2d 518
     (La. 1992) (workers’ compensation
    act specifically provides that it does not bar other statutory causes of
    action); King v. Bangor Federal Credit Union, 
    568 A.2d 507
     (Me. 1989);
    Gunn v. Consolidated Rural Water & Sewer, 
    839 P.2d 1345
     (Okla. 1992)
    (retaliatory discharge).
    48
    Byers v. Labor and Industry Review Com’n, supra note 47, 
    208 Wis. 2d at 397
    , 
    561 N.W.2d at 681-82
    .
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    The court in Daniel v. City of Minneapolis 49 reasoned that
    those intangible harms are not “such injury” referred to in
    the workers’ compensation laws, which is limited to personal
    injury within the coverage of the workers’ compensation acts.
    Further, nothing in the civil rights laws of that state indicate
    “the Legislature intended an employee’s civil right to be free
    from discrimination to hinge on where, when, or how the dis-
    ability arose.” 50
    But the workers’ compensation statutes relevant to cases
    from other jurisdictions rejecting workers’ compensation
    exclusivity, vis-a-vis civil rights actions, generally lack the
    same “arising from” language found in the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act. Nor do the workers’ compensation statutes
    in those jurisdictions always include injuries stemming from
    an employer’s intentional wrongdoing, 51 as does the Nebraska
    Workers’ Compensation Act.
    Further, dissenting opinions in those cases point out that
    the workers’ compensation laws already provide a remedy for
    the refusal to return an injured employee to suitable work and
    that even if civil rights laws were meant to remedy different
    injuries, the workers’ compensation laws plainly and explicitly
    provide that such remedy is exclusive. 52 They also point out
    that the quid pro quo balance to be struck is a matter of public
    policy; the remedy for any harshness resultant from the rule of
    exclusiveness is wholly legislative. 53 Finally, it has been said
    that allowing both civil rights actions and workers’ com-
    pensation actions to coexist implicates double recovery and
    “likely will result in a proliferation of failure-to-accommodate
    49
    See, e.g., Daniel v. City of Minneapolis, supra note 47.
    50
    Id. at 650.
    51
    See Messer v. Huntington Anesthesia Group, Inc., supra note 47.
    52
    Davis v. Dillmeier Enterprises, Inc., supra note 47 (Newbern, J., dissent­
    ing). See, also, Daniel v. City of Minneapolis, supra note 47 (Anderson, J.,
    dissenting).
    53
    Daniel v. City of Minneapolis, supra note 47 (Anderson, J., dissenting).
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    litigation over workplace injuries” 54—matters that, again, are
    best left with the Legislature.
    As discussed, we have consistently rejected arguments that
    a civil claim in district court did not arise from the workplace
    injury, because it stemmed from intentional conduct or because
    the nature of the damages incurred were mental rather than
    physical. Under the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act, the
    employee gives up the right to complete compensation.
    We have described “arising from” under § 48-148 as “but
    for” causation. We said in Pittman v. Western Engineering Co. 55
    that “arising from” refers to a “rational nexus.” In other con-
    texts, we have understood phrases with “arising” or similar as
    referring to “but for” causation, with some caveats. With respect
    to “arising out of” employment under § 48-101, we have held
    that the test is whether the act is “reasonably incident thereto,
    or is so substantial a deviation as to constitute a break in the
    employment which creates a formidable independent hazard.” 56
    In the context of liability policies, we have interpreted the term
    “arising out of” as “ordinarily understood to mean originating
    from, growing out of, or flowing from; and requiring only a
    ‘but for’ causal connection.” 57 In the context of an exemp-
    tion to the waiver of sovereign immunity for claims “arising
    out of” certain listed intentional torts, we have described the
    exemption as applicable under “but for” causation, whenever
    the claim stems from, arises out of, is inextricably linked to, is
    essential to, and would not exist without one of the underlying
    intentional torts—though we have acknowledged there could
    be circumstances “‘so attenuated’” from the listed intentional
    tort that the claim would not fairly be characterized as arising
    54
    Id. at 658.
    55
    Pittman v. Western Engineering Co., supra note 24.
    56
    Misek v. CNG Financial, 
    265 Neb. 837
    , 842, 
    660 N.W.2d 495
    , 500 (2003)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    57
    See Federated Serv. Ins. Co. v. Alliance Constr., 
    282 Neb. 638
    , 649-50,
    
    805 N.W.2d 468
    , 478 (2011).
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    out of it. 58 The Court of Appeals in Hammond v. Nemaha Cty. 59
    utilized, in the context of 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-8
    ,219 (Reissue
    1996), Black’s Law Dictionary’s definition of “arise” as “[t]o
    spring up, originate, to come into being,” as well as another
    court’s explanation that “arising out of” means “causally con-
    nected with, not proximately caused by, and that a but for
    causation, that is, a cause and result relationship, is enough.” 60
    The exclusivity provisions of the Nebraska Workers’
    Compensation Act are broadly worded. At the same time,
    the NFEPA is silent on its application respecting disabilities
    stemming from workplace injuries covered by the Nebraska
    Workers’ Compensation Act. Especially in light of our articula-
    tion of the broad meaning of similar language, the Legislature
    had the ability to clearly exclude from the exclusivity provi-
    sions of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act claims like
    the case at bar. Yet, it did not do so.
    We hold that for purposes of § 48-148, Dutcher’s claimed
    discrimination under the NFEPA was a claim “arising from”
    the knee injury that was caused by an accident arising out of
    and in the course of her employment and, thus, “such injury.”
    Therefore, she cannot obtain additional remedies through a
    civil action in district court under the NFEPA.
    Nothing in this opinion should be interpreted as restrict-
    ing an employee’s ability to file a charge with the Equal
    Opportunity Commission. And we do not suggest that dis-
    crimination is a rational or a logical result of having a per-
    sonal injury. However, in this case, there is a sufficient nexus
    between the injury Dutcher was given workers’ compensation
    for and her civil action under the NFEPA such that the NFEPA
    action arose from her workplace injury.
    58
    See Dion v. City of Omaha, 
    311 Neb. 522
    , 541, 
    973 N.W.2d 666
    , 682
    (2022). Accord Edwards v. Douglas County, 
    308 Neb. 259
    , 
    953 N.W.2d 744
     (2021).
    59
    Hammond v. Nemaha Cty., 
    7 Neb. App. 124
    , 
    581 N.W.2d 82
     (1998).
    60
    
    Id. at 129
    , 
    581 N.W.2d at 87
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
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    Whether there hypothetically may be circumstances so atten-
    uated from the work-related injury that a NFEPA claim against
    that same employer would not fairly be characterized as aris-
    ing from the work-related injury need not be determined here.
    Dutcher, through disability payments and vocational rehabilita-
    tion, was compensated under the quid quo pro system estab-
    lished by the Legislature for the very inability to work that the
    Department stated was the reason for firing her.
    Regardless of whether that reason was pretextual as Dutcher
    claims, the NFEPA claim arises from the personal injury
    incurred within the course and scope of her employment with
    the Department. To allow Dutcher additional relief in a civil
    action in district court under the NFEPA would be to judicially
    interfere with the quid pro quo determined by the Legislature
    through the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act.
    Changes in the workers’ compensation laws, and in the pub-
    lic policies recognized in those laws, must emanate from the
    lawmaking power of the Legislature and not from the courts. 61
    If the Legislature determines victims of employer discrimina-
    tion on the basis of disabilities caused by injuries covered by
    workers’ compensation with that same employer should have
    the additional remedies of a civil action under the NFEPA, it
    can pass an amendment plainly so providing.
    CONCLUSION
    Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to Dutcher
    and giving her the benefit of all reasonable inferences deduc-
    ible from the evidence presented at the summary judgment
    hearing, because of the exclusivity provisions of the Nebraska
    Workers’ Compensation Act, we determine the district court
    lacked jurisdiction over Dutcher’s NFEPA action. We affirm
    the judgment of the district court granting summary judgment
    in favor of the Department.
    Affirmed.
    61
    Estate of Teague v. Crossroads Co-op Assn., 
    supra note 6
    .