Valencia v. Labor Commission , 781 Utah Adv. Rep. 31 ( 2015 )


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    2015 UT App 50
    _________________________________________________________
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    FLORENCIA VALENCIA,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    LABOR COMMISSION, GRAPHIC PACKAGING, AND LIBERTY
    INSURANCE CORPORATION,
    Respondents.
    Opinion
    No. 20130976-CA
    Filed February 26, 2015
    Original Proceeding in this Court
    Loren M. Lambert, Attorney for Petitioner
    Jaceson R. Maughan, Attorney for Respondent
    Labor Commission
    Lori L. Hansen and Cody G. Kesler, Attorneys for
    Respondents Graphic Packaging and Liberty
    Insurance Corporation
    JUDGE KATE A. TOOMEY authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. and STEPHEN L. ROTH concurred.
    TOOMEY, Judge:
    ¶1     Florencia Valencia challenges a Utah Labor Commission
    (Commission) decision denying disability benefits for hearing
    loss she claims to have sustained while working for Graphic
    Packaging (Employer). We decline to disturb the Commission’s
    decision.
    Valencia v. Labor Commission
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     Employer is a manufacturer of paperboard, recycled
    board, and folding carton packaging. According to her job
    description, Valencia inspected finished items as they came off
    the machines requiring her to work in a noisy environment. A
    number of professional workplace sound tests were conducted
    between 1988 and 2009, which showed sound emanating from
    the equipment and machines that ranged from 87 to 101 decibels.
    Valencia consistently wore hearing protection while she worked,
    which reduced the noise reaching her ears by at least 27 decibels.
    ¶3     Valencia did not have hearing problems when she began
    working for Employer in 1997, but in 2009 she had a lesion
    removed from her left ear and subsequent hearing tests showed
    she had hearing loss in both ears. Eventually, Valencia was
    diagnosed with ‚chronic tinnitus of the left ear‛ by Dr. Brian
    Peterson, who also opined that the noise levels at Valencia’s
    workplace could have contributed to her condition. Another
    doctor, Dr. Carla H. Olsen, found no causal connection between
    the noise levels and the hearing loss.
    ¶4     Valencia filed an Application for Hearing on May 29,
    2012, in which she requested workers’ compensation benefits in
    the form of recommended medical care and permanent partial
    disability compensation for her hearing loss and chronic
    tinnitus.1 In its answer, Employer claimed that Valencia could
    not demonstrate that her employment legally or medically
    caused her hearing loss.
    ¶5   In a pre-hearing memorandum, Valencia argued that
    Employer’s professional sound surveys were unreliable because
    1. She also requested travel expenses but eventually withdrew
    this claim.
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    many of the machines were idle when the surveys were
    conducted. Accordingly, she asked the Administrative Law
    Judge (ALJ) to order independent sound tests to be conducted
    when all machines were running normally. The ALJ denied this
    request because not only was it ‚undisputed that a
    professionally controlled sound test has [already] been
    conducted,‛ but also ‚the machinery in which *Valencia+ was
    stationed during her employment with [Employer] no longer
    exists at the plant.‛ The ALJ concluded that ‚the professionally
    controlled sound tests that have been produced are the most
    probative.‛
    ¶6     After a hearing on Valencia’s Application, the ALJ denied
    her request for benefits on the ground that she failed to establish
    legal causation for her hearing loss. Specifically, the ALJ
    concluded that, although the workplace machinery emitted
    ‚‘harmful noise,’‛ Valencia’s ‚consistent use of hearing
    protection ensured that she . . . was not exposed to harmful noise
    at *Employer’s workplace+ and she cannot show that her hearing
    loss was legally caused by her employment. Consequently, [her]
    claim cannot be deemed compensable.‛2
    ¶7     Valencia asked the Commission to review the ALJ’s
    decision denying her benefits. The Commission affirmed,
    reasoning that ‚the concept of exposure, as it relates to hearing
    loss in [Utah Code section 34A-2-503], requires consideration of
    the noise Ms. Valencia actually heard during her employment.
    Whether Ms. Valencia wore hearing protection, then, is an
    implicit factor in determining what noise she had to hear.‛
    Valencia now seeks our review of the Commission’s decision.
    2. Having determined Valencia did not establish legal causation,
    the ALJ and the Commission did not address medical causation.
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    Valencia v. Labor Commission
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶8     Valencia argues that the Commission and the ALJ
    misinterpreted Utah Code section 34A-2-503 by treating hearing
    protection as a relevant factor in determining whether she was
    exposed to harmful industrial noise, as defined in section 34A-2-
    501. ‚We review statutory interpretations by agencies for
    correctness,    giving      no    deference    to   the  agency’s
    interpretation . . . .‛ Harrington v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    942 P.2d 961
    , 963 (Utah Ct. App. 1997) (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted); see also Hughes Gen. Contractors, Inc. v. Labor
    Comm’n, 
    2014 UT 3
    , ¶ 25, 
    322 P.3d 712
    .
    ANALYSIS
    ¶9      Valencia argues that the Commission and the ALJ
    misinterpreted Utah Code section 34A-2-503 by treating hearing
    protection as a relevant factor in determining whether she had
    been ‚exposed‛ to ‚harmful industrial noise, as defined in
    Section 34A-2-501.‛ According to Valencia, such an
    interpretation ‚violates the plain language of the statute‛ and
    adds language the legislature did not intend. Instead, she
    contends, the statutory prerequisite is shown merely by
    demonstrating that ‚her person‛ was ‚exposed to noise
    levels . . . defined [by the statute+ as ‘harmful industrial noise.’‛
    Under Valencia’s interpretation, the effectiveness of her hearing
    protection would be relevant only during the analysis of medical
    causation: whether her exposure to the noise in fact caused her
    hearing loss. Employer responds that the concept of ‚exposure‛
    necessarily includes taking into account hearing protection.
    ¶10 ‚When interpreting a statute, our goal is to give effect to
    the legislature’s intent and purpose.‛ Francis v. State, 
    2013 UT 65
    ,
    ¶ 41, 
    321 P.3d 1089
     (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). ‚To determine that intent, we look to the plain
    language of the statute, reading it as a whole and interpreting its
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    Valencia v. Labor Commission
    provisions to ensure harmony with other provisions in the same
    chapter and related chapters.‛ R.P. v. K.S.W., 
    2014 UT App 38
    ,
    ¶ 15, 
    320 P.3d 1084
    . We presume the legislature used each term
    in the statute advisedly and according to its ordinary meaning.
    State v. Maestas, 
    2002 UT 123
    , ¶ 52, 
    63 P.3d 621
    . Additionally, our
    supreme court has noted that discerning the ordinary meaning
    of a term may start with the dictionary since it catalogues ‚a
    range of possible meanings that a statutory term may bear.‛ Hi-
    Country Prop. Rights Group v. Emmer, 
    2013 UT 33
    , ¶ 19, 
    304 P.3d 851
    .
    ¶11 Utah Code section 34A-2-503(1) provides, ‚Permanent
    hearing loss caused by exposure to harmful industrial noise . . .
    shall be compensated according to the terms and conditions of
    this chapter or Chapter 3, Utah Occupational Disease Act.‛
    Elsewhere, the statute defines ‚harmful industrial noise‛ as ‚the
    sound emanating from equipment and machines during
    employment exceeding‛ specified decibels over identified
    durations from fifteen minutes to eight hours. Utah Code
    Ann. § 34A-2-501(1)(b) (LexisNexis 2011). The statute also
    provides how a claimant must demonstrate that the sound
    emanating from the machines exceeded prescribed limits: ‚by a
    professionally controlled sound test.‛ Id. § 34A-2-503(2).
    ¶12 The word ‚emanate‛ means ‚to come out from a source,‛
    Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 738 (1993), and its use in the
    context of this statute refers to the level of the noise as measured
    at the machines. Therefore, noise is harmful if it comes out of the
    machine above certain decibel levels beyond specified periods.
    ¶13 Because the statute defines harmful industrial noise but
    not ‚exposure,‛ our focus is upon what it means to be exposed
    to that noise. To ‚expose‛ means: ‚to lay open (as to . . .
    danger . . .)‛; ‚make accessible to something that may prove
    detrimental‛; and ‚deprive of shelter, protection, or care.‛
    Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 802 (1993). Using the plain
    meaning of the word within the context of the phrase ‚exposure
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    Valencia v. Labor Commission
    to harmful industrial noise,‛ ‚exposure‛ means being placed at
    risk from the harmful sound.
    ¶14 This interpretation finds support in State v. Gallegos, a
    child endangerment case in which the Utah Supreme Court
    explained that the Black’s Law Dictionary definition of ‚expose‛
    ‚suggests that there must be a showing of a real, physical risk of
    harm, not simply exposure to the image of a controlled
    substance, chemical substance, or drug paraphernalia.‛ 
    2007 UT 81
    , ¶ 13, 
    171 P.3d 426
    . The court construed the word ‚exposed‛
    in the context of the child endangerment statute:
    [T]here must be an actual risk of harm to a child in
    order for conduct to constitute ‚exposure‛ under
    the statute. Because an actual risk of harm is
    required, exposure must go beyond mere visual or
    auditory exposure . . . . The child must have a
    reasonable capacity to access the substance in order
    for a real risk of harm to exist.
    
    Id.
     ¶¶ 14–15.
    ¶15 Based on the concept of placing someone at risk,
    determining whether the harmful industrial sound exposes a
    worker to risk must take into account anything that would
    interfere with the sound reaching the worker’s ear. So, for
    example, if the sound emanating from the machines constitutes
    harmful industrial noise as defined by the statute, but the
    worker is not near the machines and instead is separated from
    them by distance and a wall, the decibels reaching the worker’s
    ears might fall below what is defined as harmful. Under this
    scenario, the worker is not exposed to the harmful industrial
    noise.
    ¶16 We conclude that the ALJ and the Commission correctly
    reasoned that hearing protection must be considered when
    determining whether an employee has been exposed to harmful
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    industrial noise. Hearing protection diminishes the sound
    reaching the human ear, and because of this, the harmful noise is
    reduced. Accordingly, consideration of Valencia’s use of hearing
    protection is relevant and necessary to determining whether she
    was exposed to harmful industrial noise.
    ¶17 The question, then, is whether Valencia met the statutory
    prerequisite of showing she was exposed to harmful industrial
    noise. The professional sound tests established the emanation of
    harmful industrial noise from the machinery.3 But by
    consistently using ear protection, Valencia reduced the gross
    decibel levels in the environment to a net level reaching her ear
    below what the statute specifies as harmful. She, therefore, has
    not established the statutory requirement for showing that she
    was exposed to the harmful industrial noise. Accordingly, her
    claim was properly denied.
    3. Valencia also argues that additional sound testing was
    required because the prior tests were unreliable. Nevertheless,
    Valencia failed to challenge the ALJ’s decision not to order
    additional sound tests to the Commission. In moving for review,
    Valencia had ‚the obligation to raise all the issues that could
    have been presented at that time, and those issues not raised
    were waived.‛ See Pease v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    694 P.2d 613
    , 616
    (Utah 1984). Had she raised the issue, the Commission could
    have adjudicated whether the ALJ abused its discretion in not
    ordering additional tests. See 
    id.
     Thus, Valencia has waived this
    issue. See Ashcroft v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    855 P.2d 267
    , 268–69
    (Utah Ct. App. 1993) (holding that a challenge to the sufficiency
    of evidence was waived when the petitioner failed to raise it on
    review to the Commission).
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    CONCLUSION
    ¶18 In sum, a person’s exposure to harmful industrial noise
    necessarily takes into account the use of hearing protection. In
    this case, although harmful industrial noise emanated from the
    machinery, Valencia’s hearing protection reduced her exposure
    to a noise level below that which the statute defines as harmful.
    Consequently, Valencia has not met the statutory prerequisite
    for establishing her claim, and therefore we decline to disturb
    the Commission’s decision.
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