DocketNumber: 20026
Judges: Durham, Hall, Stewart, Howe, Zimmerman
Filed Date: 11/14/1986
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Claimant Robert A. Allen seeks a review from the Industrial Commission’s denial of his motion for review of an administrative law judge order denying him compensation for a back injury sustained at work. For the reasons stated below, we reverse and remand.
On November 23, 1982, the claimant, aged 36, was employed as night manager of Kent’s Foods. The claimant testified to the following version of events at a hearing before an administrative law judge. The claimant was working in a confined cooler in the store stacking crates, containing four to six gallons
The claimant also testified he had a history of prior back injuries, including a fall from a telephone pole at age fourteen which required him to wear a back brace for several months, a back injury in 1977 while lifting sand bags for the Logan School District, and another fall while working for that employer when he slipped on a slick concrete ramp and broke his coccyx. None of the prior injuries resulted in prolonged absences from work.
The testimony from other sources varied slightly from the report given by the claimant. The employer’s report of injury describes the accident as “picking up freight and stocking it on shelves, lifting boxes and stacking them from truck.” No specific event was mentioned in the employer’s report. The medical records of treating physicians described the claimant’s previous injuries, but omitted any reference to a specific incident in the cooler. Dr. Hannan, who examined the claimant on December 31, 1982, wrote, “He does not remember any distinct episode as having precipitated his current problem, however.” And in a letter from Dr. Bryner to Dr. Wright dated January 13, 1983, the claimant’s history was related as follows: “About six weeks ago, however, he was lifting material at work, and recalls no specific injury or stress but developed discomfort in his left groin area which ultimately extended into his big toe.”
The administrative law judge found that the claimant’s injury to his back on November 23, 1982, was not “an injury by accident arising out of or in the course of employment.” It is apparent that the administrative law judge, using a specific episode analysis, concluded there was no “accident” because there was no identifiable
The sole issue on appeal is whether the claimant, who had suffered preexisting back problems and was injured as the result of an exertion usual and typical for his job, was injured “by accident arising out of or in the course of employment” as required by the Workers’ Compensation Act, U.C.A., 1953, § 35-1-45 (Supp.1986). That Act, in pertinent part, provides:
Every employee ... who is injured ... by accident arising out of or in the course of his employment ... shall be paid compensation for loss sustained on account of the injury....
Id. This statute creates two prerequisites for a finding of a compensable injury. First, the injury must be “by accident.” Second, the language “arising out of or in the course of employment” requires that there be a causal connection between the injury and the employment. See Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory v. Keller, 657 P.2d 1367, 1370 (Utah 1983). Prior decisions by this Court have often failed to distinguish the analysis of the accident question from the discussion of causation elements.
I.
The term “by accident” is not defined in the workers’ compensation statutes. The most frequently referenced authority for the definition of “by accident” is the case of Carling v. Industrial Commission, 16 Utah 2d 260, 399 P.2d 202 (1965), where the term was defined as follows:
[An accident] connotes an unanticipated, unintended occurrence different from what would normally be expected to occur in the usual course of events.... [T]his is not necessarily restricted to some single incident which happened suddenly at one particular time and does not preclude the possibility that due to exertion, stress or other repetitive cause, a climax might be reached in such manner as to properly fall within the definition of an accident as just stated above. However, such an occurrence must be distinguished from gradually developing conditions which are classified as occupational diseases....
Id. at 261-62, 399 P.2d at 203 (citing Jones v. California Packing Corp., 121 Utah 612, 616, 244 P.2d 640, 642 (1952), and Purity Biscuit Co. v. Industrial Commission, 115 Utah 1, 201 P.2d 961 (1949)). Some confusion has developed as to whether “by accident” requires proof of an unusual event. This issue frequently arises when the employee suffers an internal failure
This Court first discussed the term “by accident” in Tintic Milling Co. v. Industrial Commission, 60 Utah 14, '206 P. 278 (1922), where an accident was said to be “something out of the ordinary, unexpected, and definitely located as to time and place.” 60 Utah at 22, 206 P. at 281. This definition was used to distinguish injuries which occurred gradually and were covered under statutory provisions for occupational disease. Id. The Court in Tin-tic Milling also acknowledged that where the claimant suffers an internal failure the “unexpected result” rule of the seminal English case of Fenton v. Thorley, [1903] A.C. 443, 72 L.J.K. 789, 5 W.C.C. 1, is appropriate. The Court in Tintic Milling observed:
“Since the case of Fenton ¶. Thorley, nothing more is required than that the harm that the plaintiff has sustained shall be unexpected.... It is enough that the causes, themselves known and usual, should produce a result which on a particular occasion is neither designed nor expected. The test as to whether an injury is unexpected, and so, if received on a single occasion, occurs ‘by accident,’ is that the sufferer did not intend or expect that injury would on that particular occasion result from what he was doing.”
60 Utah at 26, 206 P. at 282 (quoting Bohlen, A Problem in The Drafting of Workmen’s Compensation Acts, 25 Harv.L.Rev. 328, 340 (1912) (emphasis added)). Accordingly, the Court in Tintic affirmed a finding that the employee, whose previous respiratory problems were aggravated by entering a roasting flue, had suffered a com-pensable accident.
After Tintic Milling, the Court temporarily rejected the “unexpected result” definition of Fenton v. Thorley in internal failure cases on the ground that the definition of “by accident” required an unusual occurrence or exertion. In Bamberger v. Industrial Commission, 66 Utah 203, 240 P. 1103 (1925), the Court denied compensation to a worker who unexpectedly suffered a heart attack while manually unloading a railroad car of coal on the ground that no overexertion occurred during the work. 66 Utah at 208, 240 P. at 1104. That decision was apparently overruled, however, when the Court embraced the “unexpected result” rule and awarded compensation to an employee who suffered a heart attack after overexertions while routinely cleaning the weirs to a city reservoir. Hammond v. Industrial Commission, 84 Utah 67, 87, 34 P.2d 687, 695 (1934) (Mof-fat, J., concurring). Hammond was followed in Columbia Steel Co. v. Industrial Commission, 92 Utah 72, 66 P.2d 124 (1937), where a unanimous Court held that the employee, who had suffered a ruptured aorta from riding a caterpillar tractor over rough ground, suffered an injury “by accident” since the result was “an unusual, unforeseen, and unexpected event or occurrence” and definite as to time and place. Id. at 92, 66 P.2d at 134. And, in Thomas D. Dee Memorial Hospital Ass’n. v. Industrial Commission, 104 Utah 61, 138 P.2d 233 (1943), the Court sustained an award of benefits to a claimant who had suffered from heart disease and experienced a heart attack shortly after moving 52 boxes weighing 50 to 100 pounds and 28 sacks of fire clay — work that was unusually heavy and greatly in excess of his ordinary duties. The Court pointed out, in dicta, that the English common law would have awarded compensation even if the exertions were ordinary and usually required as part of the job. 104 Utah at 67-71, 138 P.2d at 235-39. Quoting from the Bohlen article, supra, the Court observed:
*20 “[NJothing more is required than that the harm that the plaintiff has sustained shall be unexpected.... The element of unexpectedness inherent in the word ‘accident’ is sufficiently supplied ... if, though the act is usual and the conditions normal, it causes a harm unforeseen by him who suffers it.”
104 Utah at 70, 138 P.2d at 237.
Six years later in Purity Biscuit Co. v. Industrial Commission, 115 Utah 1, 201 P.2d 961 (1949), this Court explicitly adopted the English rule for the definition of an accident and awarded benefits to a claimant who unexpectedly injured his back while stepping on the brake pedal of a delivery truck — a usual and ordinary activity. See 115 Utah 14-20, 201 P.2d 967-70. After summarizing early Utah cases interpreting “by accident” the Court concluded that “since 1922 this court has uniformly held that an unexpected internal failure meets the requirements of [“by accident”] and the legislature by failing to amend has acquiesced in that construction.” 115 Utah at 15, 201 P.2d at 968.
The holding of Purity Biscuit also squarely embraced the concept that an ordinary or usual exertion that results in an unexpected injury is compensable. See 115 Utah at 18-19, 201 P. at 969-70. After carefully considering the legislative purpose of the workers’ compensation statute, prior precedent, and public policy, the Court rejected the requirement that proof of an unusual activity or exertion be a required element of the “by accident” definition. 115 Utah at 14-20, 201 P.2d at 967-70. The Court concluded that “there is nothing in the statute which would justify a holding that an injury is compensable where overexertion is shown but is not compensable where only ordinary exertion is shown, provided that in both cases it is shown that the exertion causes the injury.”
Despite the strong precedential support for applying the “unexpected result” rule of Purity Biscuit to internal failure cases, a separate line of opposing authority has developed which requires overexertion or an unusual event to prove an injury occurred “by accident.” Typically, these cases denied compensation because the claimants’ ordinary work duties precipitated the injury. Consequently, there were no events or exertions that were unusual or extraordinary to qualify as “by accident.” See, e.g., Billings Computer Corp. v. Tarango, 674 P.2d 104 (Utah 1983) (compensation for knee injury denied where circumstances precipitating the injury were commonplace and usual); Sabo’s Electronic Service v. Sabo, 642 P.2d 722 (Utah 1982) (back injury from loading box of twelve radios into van not compensable); Farmer’s Grain Cooperative v. Mason, 606 P.2d 237 (Utah 1980) (back injury to claimant with preexisting condition resulting from delivery of 100-pound sacks not compensa-ble since the activity was not unusual or unexpected); Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Industrial Commission, 590 P.2d 328 (Utah 1979) (back injury suffered by janitor upon standing up not compensable without evidence that activities were unusual); Redman Warehousing Corp. v. Industrial Commission, 22 Utah 2d 398, 454 P.2d 283 (1969) (back injury precipitated by sitting and driving a moving van not compensable without proof of an unusual event). These cases will not be collectively referred to as the Redman line of cases.
We are now convinced that the Red-man line of cases has misconstrued the historical and logical definition of “by accident.” The Redman line of cases relied on the following abridged version of the definition of an accident found in Carling v. Industrial Commission: “[Accident] connotes an unanticipated, unintended occurrence different from what would normally be expected to occur in the usual course of events.” 16 Utah at 261, 399 P.2d at 203 (emphasis added; footnotes omitted). In Redman, the highlighted phrase was interpreted to require an unusual event before there can be an accident. This interpretation misconstrues the Carling decision itself and is inconsistent with the English definition of “by accident” used by this Court since 1922. The key requirement of an accident under the Car-
Policy considerations also militate in favor of rejecting the notion that the phrase “by accident” requires an unusual event. There is nothing in the term “accident” that suggests that only that which is unusual is accidental. See Robertson v. Industrial Commission, 109 Utah at 33, 40, 163 P.2d at 335, 338 (Wade, J., concurring; Wolfe, J., dissenting). An accident does not occur simply because a worker is injured during an unusual activity. This argument is illustrated by Professor Larson in his treatise on workmen’s compensation with the following example:
If an employee intentionally and knowingly undertakes to lift an unusual load, the cause (i.e., the lifting) is no more accidental than if he deliberately lifted a normal load. Or if a gardener deliberately continues to mow the lawn in the rain, a passerby observing him would not say that he was undergoing an accident merely because it is unusual to mow lawns in the rain.
Larson, Workmen’s Compensation § 38.-62, at 7-162 (1986) (footnotes omitted).
Larson also criticizes the usual-unusual distinction as being unworkable in practice. Realistically, it is impossible to determine what are the usual and normal requirements of a job. People work in good weather and bad, lift heavy items as well as light ones, and work for long hours as well as short ones. None of these activities may be unusual or unexpected. Id. § 38.63 at 7-164 to -168.
The unworkability of the usual-unusual event requirement is further evidenced by comparing seemingly irreconcilable decisions by this Court. Compare Kaiser Steel v. Monfredi, 631 P.2d 888 (back injury to miner with previous back problems held to be a compensable accident despite being caused by shoveling coal in the usual course of employment), with Farmer’s Grain Cooperative v. Mason, 606 P.2d 237 (no accident where worker with previous back problems sustained back injury while delivering 100-pound bags of whey); compare Baker v. Industrial Commission, 17 Utah 2d 141, 405 P.2d 613 (compensable accident for back injury resulting from filing paper in lower drawer) with Billings Computer Corp. v. Tarango, 674 P.2d 104 (no accident where worker sustained kn'ee injury resulting from bending to pick up small parts).
We believe that the Court’s real concern in the Redman line of cases was the presence or absence of proof of causation to support an award of compensation. See generally Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, 590 P.2d at 332 (Wilkins, J., dissenting). As will be discussed in the next section, the Court has developed two parallel lines of authority on the causation issue, one of which requires an unusual event in order to meet the statutory causation requirement. Although proof of an unusual event may be helpful in determining causation, it is not required as an element of “by accident” in section 35-1-45. “[T]he basic and indispensable ingredient of ‘accident’ is unexpectedness.” Schmidt, 617 P.2d at 696 (Wilkins, J., concurring) (quoting IB Larson, Workmen’s Compensation, at 7-5 (1980). We therefore reaffirm those cases which hold that an accident is an unexpected or unintended occurrence that may be either the cause or the result of an injury. We thus necessarily abandon the analysis of “by accident” in the Redman line of cases which predicates the “accident” determination upon the occurrence of an unusual event.
II.
The second element of a compensable accident requires proof of a causal connection between the injury and the worker’s employment duties. Pittsburg Testing Laboratory v. Keller, 657 P.2d 1367, 1370 (Utah 1983). In workers’ compensation
This Court initially responded to the problem of causation in internal failure cases by suggesting that the Commission use a clear and convincing evidence standard when an internal failure was caused by an exertion in the workplace.
The second method that has been used to ensure causal connection in internal failure cases is to require proof that an unusual event or activity precipitated the injury. Presumably, this requirement was used to prevent compensating a person predisposed to internal failure where the preexisting condition contributed more to the injury than his usual work activity. The following internal failure cases illustrate that evidence of an unusual event or activity is necessary to prove causation. Billings Computer Corp. v. Tarango, 674 P.2d 104, 106-07 (Utah 1983); Sabo’s Electronic Service v. Sabo, 642 P.2d 722, 726 n. 12 (Utah 1982); Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Industrial Commission, 590 P.2d 328, 329 (Utah 1979); IGA Food Fair v. Martin, 584 P.2d 828, 829 (Utah 1978); Nuzum v. Roosendahl Construction & Mining Corp., 565 P.2d 1144, 1146 (Utah 1977); Jones v. California Packing Corp., 121 Utah 612, 244 P.2d 640 (1952); Robertson v. Industrial Commission, 109 Utah 25, 163 P.2d 331 (1945); Thomas D. Dee Memorial Hospital Ass’n v. Industrial Commission, 104 Utah 61, 138 P.2d at 233; see Schmidt, 617 P.2d at 697-99 (Crockett, J., dissenting); Farmer’s Grain Cooperative v. Mason, 606 P.2d 237, 238-39 (Utah 1980); Mellen v. Industrial Commission, 19 Utah 2d 373, 374, 431 P.2d 798, 799 (1967); Purity Biscuit, 115 Utah at 30, 201 P.2d at 975 (Latimer, J., dissenting). Defendants argue that any rule that awards compensation based on usual exertion will open the floodgates for payment of benefits for all internal injuries that coincidentally occur at work. They claim that the unusual exertion requirement is necessary to prevent the employer from becoming a general insurer. They argue that without the unusual exertion rule, employment opportunities for persons with a history or indication of physical disability or handicap will be reduced.
Despite precedent supporting the “unusual exertion” rule, the claimant urges us to follow a separate line of authority that awards compensation for injuries that occur during usual and ordinary workplace activity. These cases typically award compensation where the claimant was engaged in a workplace activity and where there is adequate evidence of medical causation. See, e.g., Kaiser Steel Corp. v. Monfredi, 631 P.2d 888 (Utah 1981) (award for compensation affirmed for a coal miner’s back injury despite absence of unusual incident); Schmidt v. Industrial Commission, 617 P.2d at 695 (compensation awarded for
When read in chronological sequence, our opinions demonstrate an inconsistent and confused approach to determining when an accident arose out of or in the course of employment. Much of this confusion can be traced to fundamental problems stemming from the use of the usual-unusual distinction as a means of proving causation. Larson criticizes the unusual exertion requirement by itself as a “clumsy and ill-fitting device with which to ensure causal connection.” Larson, supra, § 38.-81, at 7-270. The problems in determining what activities were usual or unusual were recognized as long ago as 1949 when Justice Wolfe wrote that a “Pandora’s box of difficulties ... may be opened by the refinements between usual and unusual, exertion and overexertion, ordinary and extraordinary exertion measured by the individual involved or by the industrial function performed by him or both.” Purity Biscuit, 115 Utah at 23, 201 P.2d at 972 (Wolfe, J., concurring specially). The contents of the Pandora’s box feared by Justice Wolfe are now evident in the plethora of our cases struggling with a definition of a compensable accident based upon the usualness or ordinariness of an activity.
Professor Larson has also criticized the usual-unusual distinction because the ordinariness of the activity fails to consider that some occupations routinely require a usual exertion capable of causing injury. Likewise, other occupations, such as desk-work, require so little physical effort that an “unusual exertion” may be insufficient to prove that the resulting accident arose out of the employment. Larson, supra, § 38.81, at 7-270.
Because we find the present use of the usual-unusual distinction unhelpful and our prior precedent inconsistent, we take this opportunity to examine an alternative causation analysis that may better meet the objectives of the workers’ compensation laws. We are mindful that the key question in determining causation is whether, given this body and this exertion, the exertion in fact contributed to the injury. Id. § 38.82, at 7-271; Purity Biscuit, 115 Utah at 23, 201 P.2d at 972 (Wolfe, J., concurring specially).
The language “arising out of or in the course of his employment” found in U.C.A., 1953, § 35-1-45 (Supp.1986), was apparently intended to ensure that compensation is only awarded where there is a
Professor Larson has suggested a two-part causation test which is consistent with the purpose of our workers’ compensation laws and helpful in determining causation. We therefore adopt that test. Larson suggests that compensable injuries can best be identified by first considering the legal cause of the injury and then its medical cause. Larson, supra, § 38.83(a), at 7-273. “Under the legal test, the law must define what kind of exertion satisfies the test of ‘arising out of the employment’ ... [then] the doctors must say whether the exertion (having been held legally sufficient to support compensation) in fact caused this [injury].”
1. Legal Cause — Whether an injury arose out of or in the course of employment is difficult to determine where the employee brings to the workplace a personal element of risk such as a preexisting condition. Just because a person suffers a preexisting condition, he or she is not disqualified from obtaining compensation. Our cases make clear that “the aggravation or lighting up of a pre-existing disease by an industrial accident is compensa-ble— ” Powers v. Industrial Commission, 19 Utah 2d 140, 143-44, 427 P.2d 740, 743 (1967) (footnote omitted). To meet the legal causation requirement, a claimant with a preexisting condition must show that the employment contributed something substantial to increase the risk he already faced in everyday life because of his condition. This additional element of risk in the workplace is usually supplied by an exertion greater than that undertaken in normal, everyday life. This extra exertion serves to offset the preexisting condition of the employee as a likely cause of the injury, thereby eliminating claims for impairments resulting from a personal risk rather than exertions at work. Larson, supra, § 38.83(b), at 7-278. Larson summarized how the legal cause rule would work in practice as follows:
*26 If there is some personal causal contribution in the form of a [preexisting condition], the employment contribution must take the form of an exertion greater than that of nonemployment life....
If there is no personal causal contribution, that is, if there is no prior weakness or disease, any exertion connected with the employment and causally connected with the [injury] as a matter of medical fact is adequate to satisfy the legal test of causation.
Id. Thus, where the claimant suffers from a preexisting condition which contributes to the injury, an unusual or extraordinary exertion is required to prove legal causation. Where there is no preexisting condition, a usual or ordinary exertion is sufficient.
We also accept Larson’s suggestion that the comparison between the usual and unusual exertion be defined according to an objective standard. “Note that the comparison is not with this employee’s usual exertion in his employment but with the exertions of normal nonemployment life of this or any other person.” Larson, supra, § 38.83(b), at 7-279 (emphasis in original). See also Johns-Manville Products v. Industrial Commission, 78 Ill.2d 171, 178, 35 Ill.Dec. 540, 544, 399 N.E.2d 606, 610 (1979) (compensation denied where the risk of the employment activity “is no greater than that to which he would have been exposed had he not been so employed”); Strickland v. National Gypsum Co., 348 So.2d 497, 499 (Ala.Civ.App.1977) (employment risk must be “ ‘a danger or risk materially in excess of that to which people not so employed are exposed....’” Quoting from City of Tuscaloosa v. Howard, 55 Ala.App. 701, 705-06, 318 So.2d 729, 732 (1975)). But see Market Foods Distributors, Inc. v. Levenson, 383 So.2d 726, 727 (Fla.Dist.Ct. App.1980) (subjective test: “the employment must involve an exertion greater than that normally performed by the employee during his non-employment life”). Thus, the precipitating exertion must be compared with the usual wear and tear and exertions of nonemployment life, not the nonemployment life of the particular worker.
We believe an objective standard of comparison will provide a more consistent and predictable standard for the Commission and this Court to follow. In evaluating typical nonemployment activity, the focus is on what typical nonemployment activities are generally expected of people in today’s society, not what this particular claimant is accustomed to doing. Typical activities and exertions expected of men and women in the latter part of the 20th century, for example, include taking full garbage cans to the street, lifting and carrying baggage for travel, changing a flat tire on an automobile, lifting a small child to chest height, and climbing the stairs in buildings. By
2. Medical Cause — The second part of Larson’s dual-causation test requires that the claimant prove the disability is medically the result of an exertion or injury that occurred during a work-related activity. The purpose of the medical cause test is to ensure that there is a medically demonstrable causal link between the work-related exertions and the unexpected injuries that resulted from those strains. The medical causal requirement will prevent an employer from becoming a general insurer of his employees and discourage fraudulent claims.
With the issue being one primarily of causation, the importance of the ... medical panel becomes manifest. It is through the expertise of the medical panel that the Commission should be able to make the determination of whether the injury sustained by a claimant is causally connected or contributed to by the claimant’s employment.
Schmidt, 617 P.2d at 697 (Wilkins, J., concurring). Under the medical cause test, the claimant must show by evidence, opinion, or otherwise that the stress, strain, or exertion required by his or her occupation led to the resulting injury or disability. In the event the claimant cannot show a medical causal connection, compensation should be denied.
III.
We now undertake to apply the foregoing analysis to the case before us. In reviewing findings of fact of the Industrial Commission, we determine whether there is substantial evidence to support the Commission’s findings. Champion Home Builders v. Industrial Commission, 703 P.2d 306, 307 (Utah 1985).
We have previously stated that the key element of whether an injury occurred “by accident” is whether the injury was unexpected. After reviewing the record, we find no substantial evidence that the injury was not unexpected. It is clear from the uncontradicted testimony of the claimant that he experienced an unexpected and unanticipated injury to his back as he lifted a crate of milk in the cramped area of the cooler. Although the claimant had injured his back on prior jobs, he had not complained of pain or limitations at his job with Kent’s Foods. There is no evidence which indicates that this injury was predictable or that it developed gradually as with an occupational disease or progressive back disorder. While the employer’s report of injury and the medical records do not corroborate that a sudden and identifiable injury occurred in the cooler, the reports are unhelpful in determining whether the injury was unexpected.
It appears that the administrative law judge applied the “unusual event or trauma” rule in defining an accident. We have rejected that test in lieu of a test based on unexpectedness. Moreover, the administrative law judge’s emphasis on prior injuries is not determinative of whether an accident occurred. We have previously held that the aggravation or “lighting up” of a preexisting condition by an internal failure is a compensable accident. Powers v. Industrial Commission, 19 Utah 2d 140, 143, 427 P.2d 740, 743 (1967). We conclude therefore that the decision of the Commission that the claimant’s injury was not “by accident” was not based on the evidence, and that decision is, therefore, erroneous.
The key issue in this case, like most internal failure cases, is whether the injury “arose out of or in the course of
Moreover, the record is insufficient to show medical causation. It is unclear from the medical reports whether the doctors were aware of the specific incident in the cooler. Further, the case was not submitted to a medical panel for its evaluation. Without sufficient evidence of medical causation, we are unable to determine whether there is a medically demonstrable causal link between the lift in the cooler and the injury to the claimant’s back. We therefore remand to the Industrial Commission for additional evidence and findings on the question of medical causation.
The decision of the Commission is vacated and remanded.
. We take judicial notice that liquid milk weighs about the same as liquid water or approximately S'A pounds p'er gallon. Thus, four gallons of milk weigh about 33 pounds without the con-tamers and crate. Six gallons of milk weigh approximately 50 pounds without the containers and crate.
. We note that many of our prior opinions so intermingled the causation and accident analy-ses that it is impossible to segregate them and determine the basis for the Court’s decision. For example, the opinion in Sabo’s Elec. Serv. v. Sabo, 642 P.2d 722 (Utah 1982), mixes the accident and causation elements in the following language: "It appears to be mere coincidence that defendant's injury ... occurred at work. Defendant bears the burden of showing otherwise. Proof of the causal relationship of duties of employment to unexpected injury is simply lacking.... [T]he Commission’s conclusion that an accident occurred is without any substantive support in the record.” Id. at 726 (footnotes omitted). See also Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Industrial Comm’n, 590 P.2d 328, 329-30 (Utah 1979); Pintar v. Industrial Comm’n, 14 Utah 2d 276, 382 P.2d 414 (1963). For an example of an opinion which does separate the accident and causation analysis, see Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Industrial Comm’n, 590 P.2d 328, 330-31 (Utah 1979) (Wilkins, J., dissenting).
. An "internal failure” refers to a category of injuries that arise from general organ or structural failure brought about by an exertion in the
. The holding of Purity Biscuit was questioned in Mellen v. Industrial Comm'n, 19 Utah 2d 373, 431 P.2d 798 (1967), where the opinion erroneously stated that Purity Biscuit “has never been cited by this or any other court to support the law of that case." 19 Utah 2d at 375, 431 P.2d at 799. In fact, by 1967 Purity Biscuit had been relied upon in decisions from the courts of nine other states. Alabama Textiles Prods. Corp. v. Grantham, 263 Ala. 179, 183-84, 82 So.2d 204, 208 (1955) (finding of unusual strain or exertion unnecessary to support conclusion that claimant suffered injury by accident); Bryant Stave & Heading Co. v. White, 227 Ark. 147, 151-52, 296 S.W.2d 436, 439-40 (1956) (Purity Biscuit cited as stating majority position that usual exertion causing an internal failure may be by accident); Argonaut Ins. Co. v. Industrial Accident Comm'n, 231 Cal.App.2d 111, 41 Cal.Rptr. 628, 635 (1964) (relying upon causation rule of Purity Biscuit); Spivey v. Battaglia Fruit Co., 138 So.2d 308, 314 (Fla. 1962) (back herniation from rupture of in-tervertebral disc satisfies statutory requirement of suddenness); Roman v. Minneapolis St. Ry., 268 Minn. 367, 380, 129 N.W.2d 550, 559 (1964) (calls Purity Biscuit "a well-considered workmen’s compensation case” that supported an award where many factors led to the disability); Murphy v. Anaconda Co., 133 Mont. 198, 208, 321 P.2d 1094, 1100 (1958) (quoting favorably the reliance on Purity Biscuit in Bryant Stave, 227 Ark. at 151-52, 296 S.W.2d at 439-40, and holding that a usual exertion may lead to a compensable injury where the causal relationship is established); Neylon v. Ford Motor Co., 10 N.J. 325, 327-28, 91 A.2d 569, 570 (1952) (Purity Biscuit cited in support of rule that internal failure from ordinary or usual exertion is an “injury by accident”); Olson v. State Indust. Accident Comm’n, 222 Or. 407, 416-17, 352 P.2d 1096, 1101 (I960) (O’Connell, J., specially concurring) (dissent to Purity Biscuit quoted); Cooper v. Vinatieri, 73 S.D. 418, 424, 43 N.W.2d 747, 750-51 (1950) (Purity Biscuit cited as an example of the divergent viewpoints for defining a compensable accident).
In addition, the decision in Purity Biscuit was relied upon by the majority in three Utah cases. See Jones v. California Packing Co., 121 Utah 612, 244 P.2d 640, 642; Carling v. Industrial Commission, 16 Utah 2d 260, 399 P.2d 202; Powers v. Industrial Commission, 19 Utah 2d 140, 427 P.2d 740. Despite this support for the decision in Purity Biscuit, the Court in Mellen concluded without further discussion that ”[t]he Purity Biscuit decision certainly needs a healthy reappraisement.” 19 Utah 2d at 376, 431 P.2d at 800. Two years later in Redman Warehousing Corp. v. Industrial Comm'n, 22 Utah 2d 398, 454 P.2d 283 (1969), the Court again questioned the Purity Biscuit decision in a superficial analysis that concluded: “Purity enjoys the unique and doubtful distinction of being a living corpse.” 22 Utah 2d at 403, 454 P.2d at 286. After considering those cases from Utah and other jurisdictions that have relied on Purity Biscuit, we now cannot agree that it was a “living corpse.” Moreover, even if Purity Biscuit lay dormant, it was resurrected by Schmidt v. Industrial Commission, 617 P.2d 693, 695 (Utah 1980).
. In Nebraska, an enhanced standard of proof is still used where the employee suffers from a preexisting condition. See Mann v. City of Omaha, 211 Neb. 583, 592, 319 N.W.2d 454, 458 (1982).
. Larson’s observation is consistent with this Court’s rationale for rejecting the unusual exertion requirement in Purity Biscuit, 115 Utah at 16, 201 P.2d at 968:
[I]f [overexertion] is the test no one will ever know what this court will consider sufficient overexertion. Also under that test if the work usually required by the job is so great that it would break the strongest man even he will not be able to recover. But if it is more than usual exertion which causes the injury the employee can recover no matter how light the work is which causes the injury.
Id.
. Cases from other jurisdictions which have accepted the dual-causation standard suggested by Larson include: Market Foods Distribs., Inc. v. Levenson, 383 So.2d 726 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1980) (claimant with preexisting spinal disease denied compensation where injury could have been triggered at any time during normal movement and exertion at work not greater than typical nonemployment exertion); Guidry v. Sline Indus. Painters, Inc., 418 So.2d 626 (La.1982) (claimant granted compensation where injury resulted from stress, exertion, and strain greater than that in everyday nonemployment life); Bryant v. Masters Mach. Co., 444 A.2d 329 (Me. 1982) (claimant with preexisting condition awarded compensation for back injury resulting from fall from his stool at work because of increased risk of falling where employees moved around him at work); Barrett v. Herbert Eng’g, Inc., 371 A.2d 633 (Me.1977) (claimant with preexisting back condition denied compensation for injury resulting from working at normal gait since there was no work-related enhancement of personal risk); Mann v. City of Omaha, 211 Neb. 583, 319 N.W.2d 454 (1982) (policeman with history of heart disease awarded compensation for heart attack at home where claimant’s physician testified that attack was caused by stress of police work rather than, personal risk factors); Sellens v. Allen Prods. Co., 206 Neb. 506, 293 N.W.2d 415 (1980) (claimant with preexisting heart problems denied compensation for heart attack suffered while unloading 28-pound cases from truck trailer despite sedentary nonworking lifestyle using objective standard of average worker in nonemployment life); Couture v. Mammoth Groceries, Inc., 116 N.H. 181, 355 A.2d 421 (1976) (claimant with no preexisting heart problems awarded benefits upon proof that lifting beef medically caused the fatal heart attack).
. Larson highlights the difference between the unusual-usual exertion test with the rule we today adopt with the following examples of extreme cases in the heart attack area:
Suppose X’s job involves frequent lifting of 200-pound bags, and one such 200-pound lift medically produces a heart attack. Under the old unusual-exertion rule there would be no compensation, regardless of previous heart condition. Under the suggested rule there would be compensation, even in the presence of a history of heart disease, because people generally do not lift 200-pound weights as a part of nonemployment life, and therefore this episode cannot be ascribed to the ordinary wear and tear of life.
Suppose Y’s job involves no lifting. Suppose he lifts a 20-pound weight on the job, and suppose there is medical testimony that this lift caused his heart attack. Under the old test, exclusively concerned with the comparison between this employee’s usual exertions and the precipitating exertion, there would be compensation. Under the suggested rule the result would depend on whether there was a personal causal element in the form of a previously weakened heart. If there was not, compensation would be awarded, since the employment contributed something and the employee's personal life nothing to the cause of the collapse. If there was [a previously weakened heart], compensation would be denied in spite of the medical causal contribution, because legally the personal causal contribution was substantial, while the employment added nothing to the usual wear and tear of life — which certainly includes lifting objects weighing 20 pounds such as bags of golf clubs, minnow pails, and step ladders.
Larson, supra, § 38.83, at 7-280-81 (footnote omitted).
. Evidence of the ordinariness or usualness of the employee’s exertions may be relevant to the medical conclusion of causal connection. Where the injury results from latent symptoms with an illness such as heart disease, proof of medical causation may be especially difficult. Larson's treatise cites many examples of cases where compensation claims were defeated because of inadequate proof of medical causation. See Larson, supra, § 38.83(i), at 7-319 to -321. Compare Guidry v. Sline Indus. Painters, Inc., 418 So.2d 626 (La.1982) (heart attack triggered by stress, exertion, and strain greater than sedentary life of average worker compensable).