Avila v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board

14 Cal. App. 3d 33, 91 Cal. Rptr. 853, 35 Cal. Comp. Cases 637, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1200
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 1970
DocketCiv. 12646
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 Cal. App. 3d 33 (Avila v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avila v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board, 14 Cal. App. 3d 33, 91 Cal. Rptr. 853, 35 Cal. Comp. Cases 637, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1200 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, J.

After the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board denied reconsideration, we granted the injured employee’s petition to review a permanent disability award.

The referee’s formal findings declared that the. occupational accident “caused IAV2 % permanent disability after apportionment.” The findings did not specify the existence, kind or extent of disability attributable to a preexisting physical condition; did not fix the extent of combined disability after the accident; left these matters to inference drawn from the phrase “after apportionment” From the referee’s opinion and from his report to the appeals board it is plain that he found a combined permanent disability, of which he ascribed 80 percent to a preexisting, disabling, nonindustrial condition and 20 percent to the compensable injury. We draw the inference that the applicant’s combined, permanent disability rating is 100/20ths of the IAV2 percent compensable disability, i.e., HV2 percent. We have confirmed this inference by studying the report and transcribed testimony of the rating specialist. 1

Before the accident Mr. Avila, the applicant, had a permanent deformity of the right hip and leg as the result of an inflammatory disease during childhood. His right leg was underdeveloped, somewhat shorter than the left, and he walked with a limp. Nevertheless, he made a living as a farm laborer, picking and thinning fruit and ground crops and pruning trees. Witnesses described him as a “medium” or “average” agricultural worker, who carried and climbed ladders without particular difficulty. His hip and leg condition appears to have been stationary; at least, there is no evidence that it was progressive. In June 1967 he was thinning peaches and fell from a ladder, fracturing his right hip. Eventually he returned to his farm work but with marked impairment of his ability to perform tasks with his former agility, speed or sustained time span.

Mr. Avila claims that his condition before the accident did not disable him from pursuing his occupation; thus, that this is a “lighting up” *37 case, chargeable entirely to the job in which the accident occurred. An employer takes the employee as he finds him and must compensate him not only for the disability caused by the industrial injury, but also for that resulting from the aggravation or “lighting up” of a preexisting, non-disabling disease; the ultimate disability may be apportioned only when some part of it would have resulted—absent the industrial injury—from the normal progress of the preexisting disease. (Zemke v. Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd., 68 Cal.2d 794, 796 [69 Cal.Rptr. 88, 441 P.2d 928]; 2 Hanna, Cal. Law of Employee Injuries and Workmen’s Compensation (2d ed.) § 14.03[3][b].)

Necessarily implied among the referee’s findings is the existence of a permanent disability or physical impairment antedating Mr. Avila’s accident. Such a finding must stand if supported by substantial evidence. (Argonaut Ins. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., 57 Cal.2d 589, 593 [21 Cal. Rptr. 545, 371 P.2d 281].) A permanent disability is one “. . . which causes impairment of earning capacity, impairment of the normal use of a member, or a competitive handicap in the open labor market.” (2 Hanna, op. cit., § 14.01 [2]; see Lab. Code, § 4660, subd. (a); State Compensation Ins. Fund v. Industrial Acc. Com. (Hutchinson), 59 Cal.2d 45, 52 [27 Cal.Rptr. 702, 377 P.2d 902].) Although Mr. Avila’s prior condition did not prevent him from performing “medium” or “average” agricultural labor, it was an impairment in a bodily function and a possible handicap in the open labor market, hence occupationally disabling. (State Compensation Ins. Fund v. Industrial Acc. Com. (Hutchinson), supra.) Four doctors (Leavenworth, Lawrie, Bovill and King) agreed that the applicant had a previously deformed right hip and a measurable shortening of the right leg. The medical evidence as well as the occupational history fully supported the referee’s finding of a preexisting permanent disability.

The prior, permanent disability evokes Labor Code section 4750, which makes the employer hable only for that portion of the combined disability reasonably attributable to the last injury. In resolving the apportionment issue, the referee and the board must rely upon expert medical advice; in order to constitute substantial evidence, the expert’s opinion must rest upon relevant facts and must consist of something more than a legal conclusion. (Zemke v. Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd., supra, 68 Cal.2d at p. 798.)

Of the four doctors who reported, only Dr. Bovill attempted a segregation. His report declares: “Bearing in mind the obvious rather severe disability which existed in this hip, I would be inclined to estimate that perhaps 75% of his existing disability is referable to the previous *38 abnormality, and 25% to the injury in question. This certainly would be true, I feel as one measures the shortening and atrophy, and probably the limitation of motion, since I feel reasonably certain that these were quite marked even before the injury. The principal unknown is how much better of a position of function this leg might have been in before the injury, since the history would seem to confirm that it must have been in a less severely deformed position. It would, I believe, be impossible for him to climb a ladder, or do any sustained manual labor with the hip in the position that it is in now.”

In his report to the appeals board, the referee stated that Mr. Avila had improved somewhat since Dr. Bovill’s report, hence that he had reduced the doctor’s estimate of injury-incurred disability to 20 percent. Earlier, in requesting a permanent disability rating from the Rating Bureau, the referee had premised his request upon his own apportionment of 20 percent to the industrial injury.

In his report Dr. Bovill stated only that he was “inclined to estimate” the apportionment. Although the report mentioned the relatively great occupational handicap after the injury, it omitted mention of the relatively minor handicap preceding it. Having failed to consider the character and extent of occupational handicap preceding the injury, it divided the ultimate disability to reach a result quite at odds with the comparative handicap before and after. 2 Apparently designed as nothing more than a factitiously mathematical division among diverse etiological factors, Dr. Bovill’s report was accepted as the principal guide to an adjudication of apportionment. Although synthetic and judgmental, the apportionment process demands that occupational factors be weighed along with medical ones. Thus the report was only a partial response to the adjudicatory problem.

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Related

Wilkinson v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
564 P.2d 848 (California Supreme Court, 1977)
Fuentes v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
547 P.2d 449 (California Supreme Court, 1976)
Amico v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board
43 Cal. App. 3d 592 (California Court of Appeal, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Cal. App. 3d 33, 91 Cal. Rptr. 853, 35 Cal. Comp. Cases 637, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avila-v-workmens-compensation-appeals-board-calctapp-1970.