Webber v. Webber , 28 Neb. Ct. App. 287 ( 2020 )


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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    28 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    WEBBER v. WEBBER
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 287
    Gregory J. Webber, appellant, v. Gregory J.
    Webber, employer, and Vanliner Insurance
    Company, its workers’ compensation
    insurer, appellees.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed May 5, 2020.     No. A-18-993.
    1. Appeal and Error. An alleged error must be both specifically assigned
    and specifically argued in the brief of the party asserting the error to be
    considered by an appellate court.
    2. Workers’ Compensation: Appeal and Error. Pursuant to Neb. Rev.
    Stat. § 48-185 (Cum. Supp. 2018), an appellate court may modify,
    reverse, or set aside a Workers’ Compensation Court decision only when
    (1) the compensation court acted without or in excess of its powers; (2)
    the judgment, order, or award was procured by fraud; (3) there is not
    sufficient competent evidence in the record to warrant the making of the
    order, judgment, or award; or (4) the findings of fact by the compensa-
    tion court do not support the order or award.
    3. ____: ____. On appellate review, the factual findings made by the trial
    judge of the Workers’ Compensation Court have the effect of a jury ver-
    dict and will not be disturbed unless clearly wrong.
    4. Workers’ Compensation: Evidence: Appeal and Error. When testing
    the sufficiency of the evidence to support findings of fact made by the
    Workers’ Compensation Court trial judge, the evidence must be consid-
    ered in the light most favorable to the successful party and the success-
    ful party will have the benefit of every inference reasonably deducible
    from the evidence.
    5. Workers’ Compensation: Appeal and Error. In workers’ compensa-
    tion cases, an appellate court is obligated to make its own determina-
    tions regarding questions of law.
    6. Workers’ Compensation. Whether an injury arose out of and in the
    course of employment must be determined from the facts of each
    case.
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    WEBBER v. WEBBER
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    7. Workers’ Compensation: Proof. The two phrases “arising out of” and
    “in the course of” in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-101 (Reissue 2010) are con-
    junctive; in order to recover, a claimant must establish by a preponder-
    ance of the evidence that both conditions exist.
    8. ____: ____. The “in the course of” requirement tests the work con-
    nection as to the time, place, and activity; that is, it demands that the
    injury be shown to have arisen within the time and space boundaries of
    employment and in the course of an activity whose purpose is related
    to employment.
    9. Workers’ Compensation: Words and Phrases. The phrase “arising
    out of,” as used in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-101 (Reissue 2010), describes
    the accident and its origin, cause, and character, i.e., whether it resulted
    from the risks arising within the scope of the employee’s job.
    10. Workers’ Compensation. All risks causing injury to an employee can
    be placed within three categories: (1) employment related—risks dis-
    tinctly associated with the employment; (2) personal—risks personal
    to the claimant, e.g., idiopathic causes; and (3) neutral—a risk that
    is neither distinctly associated with the employment nor personal to
    the claimant.
    11. ____. Generally, harm that can be attributed solely to personal or idio-
    pathic causes is universally noncompensable.
    12. ____. The test to determine whether an act or conduct of an employee
    which is not a direct performance of the employee’s work “arises out of”
    his or her employment is whether the act is reasonably incident thereto,
    or is so substantial a deviation as to constitute a break in the employ-
    ment which creates a formidable independent hazard.
    13. ____. The “arising out of” employment requirement is primarily con-
    cerned with causation of an injury.
    14. ____. All acts reasonably necessary or incident to the performance of
    the work, including such matters of personal convenience and comfort,
    not in conflict with specific instructions, as an employee may normally
    be expected to indulge in, under the conditions of his or her work, are
    regarded as being within the scope or sphere of the employment.
    15. ____. Injuries resulting from horseplay may be within the scope of
    employment; such injuries are within the scope of employment and
    compensable if (1) the deviation is insubstantial and (2) the deviation
    does not measurably detract from the work.
    16. Appeal and Error. An appellate court is not obligated to engage in an
    analysis that is not necessary to adjudicate the case and controversy
    before it.
    Appeal from the Workers’ Compensation Court: James R.
    Coe, Judge. Affirmed.
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
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    WEBBER v. WEBBER
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 287
    Travis Allan Spier, of Atwood, Holsten, Brown, Deaver &
    Spier Law Firm, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
    Jennifer S. Caswell and Jenna M. Christensen, of Baylor
    Evnen, L.L.P., for appellees.
    Moore, Chief Judge, and Pirtle and Bishop, Judges.
    Bishop, Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    While inside a warehouse to perform duties related to relo-
    cation services, Gregory J. Webber sustained injuries when he
    lit a firework that exploded in his hands. He sued his employer
    (his sole proprietorship) and its workers’ compensation insurer,
    Vanliner Insurance Company (collectively Employer), for
    workers’ compensation benefits. Webber appeals from the deci-
    sion of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court which
    dismissed Webber’s case, finding that his injuries did not arise
    out of his employment and that his actions constituted willful
    negligence. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    In July 2016, Webber filed a petition in the Workers’
    Compensation Court against his Employer. He stated that he
    was a “self-employed sole proprietor” working on a full-time
    basis as an “over-the-road truck driver.” He alleged that on or
    about June 27, in Omaha, Nebraska, while in the course and
    scope of his employment, he sustained injuries to his “bilateral
    hands and body as a whole, and hearing loss” after “a firework
    exploded in [his] hands.” Webber sought indemnification and
    payment of medical and mileage expenses.
    The matter came on for hearing before the Workers’
    Compensation Court on July 6, 2018. The parties stipulated
    that at all times relevant, Webber was a “self-employed
    sole proprietor working on a full-time basis as a relocation
    ­specialist/over-the-road truck driver.” The parties also stipu-
    lated that Webber’s “employer was organized as an unincor-
    porated sole proprietorship based out of Lincoln, Lancaster
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    County, Nebraska.” Webber testified that his job generally
    entailed doing “everything there is in the capacity of moving
    somebody from one location to another location, no matter
    what it may be,” including taking “everything apart,” packing
    all of a customer’s “stuff up,” loading furniture (into a semi-
    truck), and then putting “everything back together.” Because
    some loads must be stored, Webber occasionally unloaded a
    customer’s items at a Select Van & Storage Co. (Select Van &
    Storage) warehouse.
    Based on an “Independent Contractor Operating Agreement,”
    Webber was a contractor of Select Van & Storage, which
    company was defined as an “authorized motor carrier that
    transports and stores household goods and general commodi-
    ties” under either its own operating authority or the authority
    of United Van Lines, LLC, and/or Mayflower Transit, LLC.
    According to Webber, he drove exclusively for Mayflower
    Transit, and he received work through Select Van & Storage.
    Webber indicated that Select Van & Storage had offices in
    Lincoln and other states; we refer to its warehouse located at
    “80th and J” in Omaha, where the incident at issue took place,
    as the “warehouse” in this opinion.
    On June 27, 2016, Webber drove his semi-truck from his
    residence in Lincoln to the warehouse to check on a trailerload
    that he was to deliver. He had left his trailer backed into the
    warehouse. Webber remembered the “first thing” he wanted
    to do was make sure he “got everything off the [warehouse]
    floor,” referring to customer items for the shipment, and then
    he was “going to hook up to [his] trailer and continue on with
    [his] route.” However, when he arrived at the warehouse he
    saw David Tilley, who worked as a warehouse manager there,
    near the front of the warehouse. Webber agreed Tilley was a
    fellow fireworks enthusiast based on conversations they had
    in the past about fireworks. In his semi-truck, Webber had an
    artillery shell that was “about the size of a golf ball.” Webber
    parked, placed that firework in his pocket, exited his semi-
    truck, and entered the warehouse.
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    WEBBER v. WEBBER
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    Once inside the warehouse, Tilley walked with Webber
    toward Webber’s trailer; Tilley testified that he (Tilley) was
    headed to go prepare semi-trucks for his own “home deliver-
    ies.” During the hearing, Webber drew a continuous, straight
    line on an exhibit of an overhead map of the warehouse to
    indicate the complete path he would have taken to reach his
    trailer. Webber said that he showed Tilley the firework as they
    were headed “that way.” At some point while walking in that
    direction, Webber said he asked Tilley to light off the fire-
    work but Tilley declined the offer, telling Webber that he did
    not want to light it because the “wick was too small”; some-
    thing Tilley confirmed. Tilley testified that he did not want
    the firework “going off in [his] hands,” out of concern for
    the wick’s short length. Tilley estimated the wick was about a
    “quarter of an inch” long, while Webber said it was “about an
    inch” long. Tilley recalled that he told Webber “if you want
    to light it, go right ahead.” Webber indicated that he stopped
    in essentially the midpoint of his intended path to reach his
    trailer and moved about 6 feet away from that path to near an
    open exit door but remained inside the warehouse. Webber
    then lit the firework. Webber estimated that about 10 sec-
    onds of time passed from the moment he moved to the door
    to when the firework went off. Tilley was standing behind
    Webber at that time and recalled that “as soon as it lit, it went
    off.” Webber sustained “[b]last / powder burn injur[ies]” to
    his stomach and lower legs and to both of his hands, resulting
    in partial amputations of several fingers.
    A fundraiser webpage “by Greg Webber,” said, in part,
    “while inspecting fireworks and timing of certain fireworks,
    one exploded way before I ever thought it would.” Webber tes-
    tified that this was not an accurate statement and that his sister
    wrote it, not him. The webpage also stated, “I feel like a dumb
    ass to even ask for help, when what I did was all my own fault
    and just a bad decision, but unfortunately I still need help.”
    When asked why he had a firework in his pocket while in the
    warehouse on June 27, 2016, Webber answered that he “like[d]
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    lighting fireworks just as much as the next guy” and that he
    had learned that Tilley and Tilley’s son (who also worked for
    the warehouse at some point) liked fireworks. Webber said he
    and Tilley “both liked to light [fireworks] off and blow stuff up
    and have fun with them on [Independence Day].” Webber was
    aware that Tilley had previously lit off a loud firework at the
    warehouse. Webber brought out the firework on June 27 “just
    to say, you guys thought you had some loud ones; well, I have
    an even louder one.” He stated that on June 27, he only had
    “the one” (firework) in his semi-truck because he was “hoping
    to run into them eventually” (Tilley or Tilley’s son). He con-
    sidered it important to develop rapport with employees of the
    warehouse and said that lighting the firework played a role in
    that, stating, “you want people to like you and get along with
    you, and you find a common ground with another individual
    and boys being boys [sic].”
    Webber said a lot of job assignments he received through
    Select Van & Storage were based on ratings on metrics such
    as customer feedback: “[T]he higher rating you have, the bet-
    ter job you get.” He talked about how he had lit off fireworks
    for customers he had relocated in the past, usually for a “pretty
    good-sized job and around the 4th of July.” Feedback from
    those shows affected his “bottom line.” He thought that, as
    his own employer, it was appropriate to be using fireworks for
    what was referred to as client promotion. He also had invited
    employees who he had employed throughout the year to his
    home (he hired laborers employed by the warehouse some-
    times to move items off or onto his semi-truck) and put on a
    “little firework show” for them. Webber had “lit off hundreds
    and thousands of fireworks” in his life and did not think he
    was going to get hurt on June 27, 2016. He had “lit off many
    fireworks for customers,” so it was “just another day.”
    Upon a joint stipulation of the parties, at a hearing in August
    2018, the court accepted into evidence written closing argu-
    ments of each of the parties. In September, the compensation
    court entered an “Order of Dismissal.” The court concluded
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    that Webber’s actions did not arise out of Webber’s employ-
    ment and that they constituted willful negligence. It dismissed
    Webber’s petition. We will discuss the court’s specific findings
    from its order as relevant below.
    Webber appeals.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Webber claims, consolidated and restated, that the Workers’
    Compensation Court erred by (1) concluding his injuries did
    not arise out of and in the course of his employment; (2) failing
    to follow “binding precedent” from Varela v. Fisher Roofing
    Co., 
    253 Neb. 667
    , 
    572 N.W.2d 780
    (1998), and failing to
    apply its horseplay analysis to this case to find his injuries
    arose out of and in the course of his employment; (3) reaching
    the willful negligence issue because it was inappropriate and
    unnecessary dicta, and even if appropriate to address it, finding
    there was sufficient, competent evidence in the record to sup-
    port its findings concerning willful negligence; and (4) failing
    to construe provisions of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation
    Act liberally to carry out the act’s purpose.
    [1] We note that there is no separate heading and argument
    in Webber’s brief specifically related to the last assigned error,
    and we therefore do not address it. An alleged error must be
    both specifically assigned and specifically argued in the brief
    of the party asserting the error to be considered by an appel-
    late court. State v. Sundquist, 
    301 Neb. 1006
    , 
    921 N.W.2d 131
    (2019).
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [2] Pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-185 (Cum. Supp. 2018),
    an appellate court may modify, reverse, or set aside a Workers’
    Compensation Court decision only when (1) the compensation
    court acted without or in excess of its powers; (2) the judg-
    ment, order, or award was procured by fraud; (3) there is not
    sufficient competent evidence in the record to warrant the mak-
    ing of the order, judgment, or award; or (4) the findings of fact
    by the compensation court do not support the order or award.
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    St. John v. Gering Public Schools, 
    302 Neb. 269
    , 
    923 N.W.2d 68
    (2019).
    [3,4] On appellate review, the factual findings made by the
    trial judge of the Workers’ Compensation Court have the effect
    of a jury verdict and will not be disturbed unless clearly wrong.
    Krause v. Five Star Quality Care, 
    301 Neb. 612
    , 
    919 N.W.2d 514
    (2018). When testing the sufficiency of the evidence to
    support findings of fact made by the Workers’ Compensation
    Court trial judge, the evidence must be considered in the light
    most favorable to the successful party and the successful party
    will have the benefit of every inference reasonably deducible
    from the evidence.
    Id. [5] In
    workers’ compensation cases, an appellate court is
    obligated to make its own determinations regarding questions
    of law.
    Id. ANALYSIS Applicable
    Legal Principles
    [6] The Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act provides that
    when an employee suffers personal injury caused by accident
    or occupational disease, arising out of and in the course of his
    or her employment, such employee shall receive compensation
    from his or her employer if the employee was not willfully
    negligent at the time of receiving such injury. Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 48-101 (Reissue 2010). Whether an injury arose out of and
    in the course of employment must be determined from the facts
    of each case. Murphy v. City of Grand Island, 
    274 Neb. 670
    ,
    
    742 N.W.2d 506
    (2007).
    [7,8] The two phrases “arising out of” and “in the course
    of” in § 48-101 are conjunctive; in order to recover, a claimant
    must establish by a preponderance of the evidence that both
    conditions exist. Zoucha v. Touch of Class Lounge, 
    269 Neb. 89
    , 
    690 N.W.2d 610
    (2005). The “in the course of” require-
    ment tests the work connection as to the time, place, and
    activity; that is, it demands that the injury be shown to have
    arisen within the time and space boundaries of employment
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    and in the course of an activity whose purpose is related to
    employment. Cox v. Fagen, Inc., 
    249 Neb. 677
    , 
    545 N.W.2d 80
    (1996).
    [9-11] The phrase “arising out of,” as used in § 48-101,
    describes the accident and its origin, cause, and character,
    i.e., whether it resulted from the risks arising within the
    scope of the employee’s job. 
    Zoucha, supra
    . All risks causing
    injury to an employee can be placed within three categories:
    (1) employment related—risks distinctly associated with the
    employment; (2) personal—risks personal to the claimant,
    e.g., idiopathic causes; and (3) neutral—a risk that is neither
    distinctly associated with the employment nor personal to
    the claimant. Maroulakos v. Walmart Associates, 
    300 Neb. 589
    , 
    915 N.W.2d 432
    (2018). Harm that arises from risks
    distinctly associated with the employment is universally com-
    pensable.
    Id. Generally, harm
    that can be attributed solely to
    personal or idiopathic causes is universally noncompensable.
    Id. Harm that
    arises from neutral risks is generally compen-
    sable.
    Id. Generally, a
    risk may be classified as neutral for either of
    two reasons: (1) the nature of the risk may be known, but may
    be associated neither with the employment nor the employee
    personally, or (2) the nature of the cause of harm may be sim-
    ply unknown.
    Id. Examples of
    neutral risks of the first type are
    stray bullets, lightning, or hurricanes, while the most common
    example of a neutral risk of the second type is a purely unex-
    plained fall.
    Id. [12,13] The
    test to determine whether an act or conduct of
    an employee which is not a direct performance of the employ-
    ee’s work “arises out of” his or her employment is whether the
    act is reasonably incident thereto, or is so substantial a devia-
    tion as to constitute a break in the employment which creates
    a formidable independent hazard. Misek v. CNG Financial,
    
    265 Neb. 837
    , 
    660 N.W.2d 495
    (2003). The “arising out of”
    employment requirement is primarily concerned with causation
    of an injury.
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    [14] All acts reasonably necessary or incident to the per-
    formance of the work, including such matters of personal
    convenience and comfort, not in conflict with specific instruc-
    tions, as an employee may normally be expected to indulge
    in, under the conditions of his or her work, are regarded
    as being within the scope or sphere of the employment.
    Id. (employee’s journey
    to store to obtain soft drinks for herself,
    supervisor, and coworker was matter of personal convenience
    and comfort which employees may normally be expected to
    indulge in; injury arose out of employment). See, also, Cords
    v. City of Lincoln, 
    249 Neb. 748
    , 
    545 N.W.2d 112
    (1996)
    (city employee’s meeting with mayor to discuss his retention
    as employee after 26 years of exemplary service in respon-
    sible managerial position, while not direct performance of
    employee’s work, was subject of beneficial interest to city and
    was not forbidden by employee’s direct superior; injury arose
    out of employment); Cannia v. Douglas Cty., 
    240 Neb. 382
    ,
    
    481 N.W.2d 917
    (1992) (correction officer’s jogging while
    attending jail management course at training center was rea-
    sonably incidental to his employment where attendance and
    successful completion of course was mandatory and evidence
    showed trainees were encouraged to jog or walk while attend-
    ing the course; injury arose out of employment); Parks v.
    Marsden Bldg. Maintenance, 
    19 Neb. Ct. App. 762
    , 
    811 N.W.2d 306
    (2012) (employee thought traveling to his home to retrieve
    building access card was necessity arising from his employ-
    ment; that deviation from employment regarding handbook
    policy of clocking out and getting permission when leaving
    building was not substantial and was reasonably incident to
    his employment).
    Lighting Firework Did Not Arise
    Out of Employment
    The Workers’ Compensation Court found that the prepon-
    derance of the evidence showed that Webber’s lighting of
    the firework inside the warehouse did not arise out of his
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    employment as it “had nothing to do” with his work as a relo-
    cation specialist to help customers move. The compensation
    court noted the following: The purpose of Webber’s visit to the
    warehouse was to check on the trailer he was to drive to relo-
    cate a customer; Webber showed Tilley “the firework to show
    him that he had a bigger firework than Tilley was used to,”
    and Webber thought he “had a louder firework” and wanted to
    show it to Tilley; Webber thought it was important to develop
    rapport with the Select Van & Storage people, which “is
    why [Webber] brought the firework as ‘boys will be boys’”;
    Webber intended to throw the firework through an open door
    after it was lit; and Webber did not intend for the firework to
    go off in the warehouse. The compensation court concluded
    that Webber’s actions were “solely personally related and non-
    business oriented” and that the lighting of the artillery shell in
    the warehouse “had nothing to do” with inspecting a trailer to
    be delivered.
    Webber argues that the compensation court erred as a matter
    of fact and law in concluding his injuries did not arise out of
    his employment. Webber asserts that as “his own employer,”
    he “defines the activities which arise out of his employment,
    including incorporating fireworks use as a regular part of his
    job as a relocation specialist.” Brief for appellant at 23. He
    claims the compensation court did not acknowledge he was
    his own employer, as the parties had stipulated, for purposes
    of identifying the customs of his workplace. He argues that his
    use of fireworks was an employment risk because he allegedly
    used fireworks to build rapport with peers and improve client
    satisfaction ratings.
    However, even if Webber put on firework shows for cus-
    tomers as some kind of appreciation or marketing event, those
    are not the circumstances present here. Lighting a firework at
    a warehouse where he was scheduled to pick up a trailerload
    for delivery was not within the scope of Webber’s job, and
    thus, the accident leading to his injury did not arise out of his
    employment. See Zoucha v. Touch of Class Lounge, 269 Neb.
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    89, 
    690 N.W.2d 610
    (2005) (phrase “arising out of” as used
    in § 48-101 considers whether the accident resulted from risks
    arising within the scope of the employee’s job). There is no
    question that Webber’s action in lighting the firework at the
    warehouse was not in direct performance of his work. And as
    set forth previously, the test to determine whether an act or
    conduct of an employee which is not a direct performance of
    the employee’s work “arises out of” his or her employment is
    whether the act is reasonably incident thereto, or is so sub-
    stantial a deviation as to constitute a break in the employment
    which creates a formidable independent hazard. Misek v. CNG
    Financial, 
    265 Neb. 837
    , 
    660 N.W.2d 495
    (2003).
    The evidence supports the compensation court’s conclusion
    that the lighting of the firework by Webber was solely per-
    sonal and had nothing to do with his work. Given Webber’s
    own description of his duties involved in his work as a relo-
    cation specialist and an over-the-road truckdriver and his
    specific work-related purpose for being at the warehouse on
    June 27, 2016 (i.e., checking that trailer was fully loaded
    and connecting trailer to semi-truck for delivery), the evi-
    dence supported the compensation court’s conclusion that
    lighting a firework in a warehouse was entirely a personal
    endeavor and was not reasonably incidental to his work.
    Further, Webber’s act of lighting a firework, under the facts
    of this case, simply cannot be categorized as a matter of
    personal convenience and comfort, a matter of necessity, or
    a beneficial interest to the employer, as indicated in the
    case examples cited previously. Rather, the evidence showed
    Webber lit the firework in an effort to impress Tilley with a
    loud firework.
    While Tilley was seemingly indifferent about whether
    Webber lit the firework in the warehouse, there was no dispute
    among the parties at the hearing that neither Tilley nor Select
    Van & Storage was Webber’s employer. Webber was self-
    employed, and the compensation court noted the same. Thus,
    Webber’s arguments in his brief based on evidence regarding
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    past behavior of Select Van & Storage employees and policies
    of that company are not relevant.
    To support that lighting the firework was incidental to his
    work, Webber claims that he “wanted to develop rapport with
    Select Van & Storage employees, because that [was] where the
    majority of his business was generated.” Brief for appellant
    at 23. But there was no evidence that Webber’s assigned jobs
    through Select Van & Storage depended on successful rapport-
    development with warehouse employees. By Webber’s own
    account, he received a lot of his jobs based on his “rating,”
    and higher ratings meant “better” jobs and “[m]ore money.”
    Ratings depended on “how well you do your job,” “the feed-
    back you get from the customer,” and “whether you’re show-
    ing up in uniform on time,” but “[t]he rapport you develop
    with the customer [was] probably the most important thing.”
    Webber also claims his firework use was an employment risk
    because of its alleged purpose in positively impacting his
    customer ratings, having arranged firework shows for some
    customers in the past. However, such arguments related to
    developing customer relationships are not persuasive, because
    the evidence does not show any customer was present when
    Webber lit the firework in the warehouse. Webber testified
    that, besides Tilley, “[n]obody else was around” when he lit
    the firework on June 27, 2016. There was no beneficial inter-
    est to Webber’s sole proprietorship from his action that led to
    his injuries.
    We find no error in the compensation court’s conclusion
    that Webber’s actions were personal and had nothing to do
    with his job, and thus, Webber’s injuries did not arise out of
    his employment.
    Horseplay
    Webber contends that this case is “clearly a horseplay case”
    pursuant to Varela v. Fisher Roofing Co., 
    253 Neb. 667
    , 
    572 N.W.2d 780
    (1998), such that his injuries arose out of and
    in the course of his employment. Brief for appellant at 15.
    He claims that the compensation court’s “failure to apply the
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    horseplay analysis from Varela constitutes legal error justify-
    ing reversal.”
    Id. at 16.
    However, the Employer contends it
    was unnecessary for the compensation court to apply 
    Varela, supra
    , “because Varela requires a scintilla of evidence that the
    alleged horseplay is somehow related to work and the [com-
    pensation] court found absolutely no employment purpose to
    lighting the firework.” Brief for appellee at 10. Further, even
    applying Varela, Webber’s “injury did not arise out of or occur
    in the scope of his employment.”
    Id. at 11.
    We agree with the
    Employer that it was unnecessary for the compensation court
    to apply Varela to the facts here, given the court’s conclusion
    that the “lighting of the firework in the warehouse had noth-
    ing to do with [Webber’s] job,” and was “solely personally
    related.” As we explain next, the horseplay at issue in Varela
    stemmed from interactions between employees related to their
    work, which was not the case here.
    In 
    Varela, supra
    , the Nebraska Supreme Court considered
    whether an arm-wrestling incident on the roof of a school
    between two employees constituted horseplay and whether
    certain incidents of horseplay, resulting in injury to a worker,
    might be within the scope of employment and thus arise out of
    it. It noted that the case involved “some good-natured teasing
    about whether [the employee] was carrying his share of the
    workload,” which “in turn led to the arm-wrestling challenge
    as a test of strength and manhood,” 
    Varela, 253 Neb. at 672
    ,
    572 N.W.2d at 783. The court stated that the “arm-wrestling
    match arose spontaneously out of work-related banter” and that
    the “accidental slip during the course of this momentary horse-
    play” caused the employee’s injury.
    Id. The employee’s
    “foot
    slipped off the skylight, causing him to fall and injure his right
    foot.”
    Id. at 668,
    572 N.W.2d at 781.
    [15] In considering this court’s opinion on further review,
    the Nebraska Supreme Court noted this court’s adoption of
    “Professors Larson and Larson’s theory that ‘“horseplay par-
    ticipation . . . should have the benefit of the general rule that
    trifling and insubstantial deviations, which do not measurably
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    detract from the work, should not be treated as departures
    from the scope of employment.” . . .’”
    Id. at 671,
    572 N.W.2d
    at 782-83. The Supreme Court cited the following portion of
    this court’s analysis of the case:
    “We believe that Larson and Larson’s proposed test for
    compensability is appropriate and that certain incidents
    of horseplay, resulting in injury, may be within the scope
    of employment and arise out of it. We look to whether
    the deviation was substantial because, obviously, [the
    employee] and [the coworker] were not directly working
    when the injury occurred. We find that the work stoppage
    was of momentary duration, the injury happened at the
    very outset of the horseplay, this was not the sort of inci-
    dent which carried a significant risk of serious injury, and
    the incident was a trifling matter, at least in its intention
    by the two employees. These factors lead to the conclu-
    sion that the arm-wrestling was an insubstantial deviation
    and did not measurably detract from the work (but for
    the injury).”
    Varela v. Fisher Roofing Co., 
    253 Neb. 667
    , 671, 
    572 N.W.2d 780
    , 783 (1998). The Supreme Court agreed with this court’s
    test for compensability of an injury resulting from horseplay,
    namely, that such injuries are within the scope of employment
    and are compensable if “(1) the deviation is insubstantial and
    (2) the deviation does not measurably detract from the work.”
    Id. The Supreme
    Court also agreed with this court that the
    arm-wrestling incident at issue “was an insubstantial deviation
    and did not measurably detract from the work.” Id. at 
    672, 572 N.W.2d at 783
    .
    In the present case, Webber’s action in lighting a fire-
    work in the warehouse did not arise spontaneously out of
    work-related banter, nor was it the type of trifling matter or
    insubstantial deviation characterized as horseplay in 
    Varela, supra
    . Rather, it was a personal pursuit intended to impress
    another fireworks enthusiast, Tilley. Webber intentionally put
    the firework in his pocket before entering the warehouse. As
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    explained by Webber himself, his purpose was “just to say,
    you guys thought you had some loud ones; well, I have an
    even louder one.” This was not an action that spontaneously
    arose out of workplace activities; rather, it was a substantial
    deviation from work which would have measurably detracted
    from work, even had Webber not been injured. We find no
    error by the compensation court in finding it unnecessary to
    address horseplay in its order.
    Finding of Willful Negligence
    [16] Webber contends that the compensation court “erred as
    a matter of law in reaching the willful negligence issue after it
    had already concluded there was not a work injury arising out
    of employment” and that thus, the “willful negligence determi-
    nation” should be reversed. Brief for appellant at 29. Webber
    provides no authority to support reversing the compensation
    court’s order, which reached the issue of willful negligence.
    It is not unusual for a trial court to provide an alternative
    basis for reaching a decision. However, we find it unneces-
    sary to address this portion of the compensation court’s order,
    because we have already found no error in the dismissal of
    Webber’s action based upon the compensation court’s finding
    that the accident did not arise out of Webber’s employment.
    See Greenwood v. J.J. Hooligan’s, 
    297 Neb. 435
    , 
    899 N.W.2d 905
    (2017) (appellate court is not obligated to engage in analy-
    sis that is not necessary to adjudicate case and controversy
    before it).
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the judgment of the Workers’ Compensation
    Court dismissing Webber’s petition.
    Affirmed.