Backowski v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board

503 A.2d 58, 93 Pa. Commw. 339, 1985 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1429
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 6, 1985
DocketAppeal, No. 1597 C.D. 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 503 A.2d 58 (Backowski v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Backowski v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board, 503 A.2d 58, 93 Pa. Commw. 339, 1985 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1429 (Pa. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinions

Opinion by

Senior Judge Barbieri,

Dominie C. Backowski, Claimant, appeals here the order of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board [341]*341(Board), which sustained a decision of a referee in dismissing a claim petition for compensation filed by Claimant.

The referee’s findings are conflicting. Compensable disability is established by the following:

2. On October 13 and October 16, 1979, claimant sustained a lumbar sprain which aggravated his preexisting developmental flaw in the fifth lumbar vertebra while performing his duties as a warehouse manager for employer on employer’s premises.
3. Timely and proper notice of said injury was given to employer on the same dates.

There follow findings which are not in question establishing periods of disability for which full wages were paid by Claimant’s employer with the result that Claimant’s compensable period is limited to the time between December 17,1979 and April 30, 1981. There is testimony of Charles M. Cohen, Ph. D., a psychologist, retained by Claimant’s employer on September 10, 1981, that certain sedentary jobs had been available, reflected in a referee’s finding, during periods from January 16, 1980 through February 25, 1981. There are other findings, however, as follows:

14. Claimant failed to adduce competent medical evidence to establish a legal nexus between said injury and his alleged disability.
15. It was claimant’s contention that he was entitled to a suspension of compensation from October 17, 1979, through October 22, 1979, and for an indefinite period from April 30, 1981, and that he was entitled to compensation for total disability from December 18,1979, through April 29, 1981.
16. The reasonable inference is that claimant preferred to complete his education in com[342]*342puter programming rather than return to work for employer or for any other firm.
17. It is significant that Dr. Phillips, claimant’s medical 'Witness, found or made no definite positive findings as a result of his physical ¡examination ¡of claimant on November 11, 1979. It was only the result of x-rays that the developmental flaw (¡spondylolysis and ¡spondylolisthesis) was discovered.
18. Said flaw was not work-related.
19. Claimant failed to sustain his burden of proof.

Other findings state that Claimant was paid full wages during disability periods, until he was laid-off as of December 17, 1979, with failure of the employer to rehire him as of March 1, 1980, when the lay-off period ended. As noted, Claimant seeks total disability compensation for the period following December 18, 1979 to April 29, 1981, and claimed at the referee level a suspension thereafter for continuing partial disability, admittedly without loss of earnings. The Board concluded that the burden of proof remained upon the Claimant so that the sole issue before the Board was whether the referee in disallowing compensation capriciously disregarded competent evidence. The Board stated:

The claimant has alleged total disability from December 17, 1979, when he was laid off from work until April 30, 1980 [sic], when he obtained his new job. The medical testimony by both parties clearly established that claimant’s injury did prevent him returning to his job in his former capacity. The testimony also indicated that the claimant was able to. work in sedéntary employment as long as he refrained from lifting heavy objects.

[343]*343The Board went on to indicate, relying upon the deposition of Dr. Cohen that his detail of sedentary employments which once existed in the Pittsburgh area was adequate to support the referee’s determination that Claimant had no continuing disability for which compensation was payable.

First of all, there can be. no question on review of the record in this case that the findings on. which the referee and Board predicated their denial of benefits are in capricious disregard of the competent evidence. Specifically, the uncontradicted evidence is counter ■to the referee’s Findings of Fact Nos. 14 and 19 quoted above.1 The only medical testimony in the case, that of claimant’s expert medical witness, Dr. Howard T. Phillips, and of defendant’s expert, Dr. Robert F. Botkin, both qualified specialists in. orthopedics, establishes without disagreement that Claimant suffered the disability as claimed from work injuries by aggravation of Claimant’s preexisting condition of spondylolysis.2

Dr. Phillips testified:

[344]*344Q. Prior to these incidents in October 1979, did Mr. Backowski relate to you whether his symptoms were symptomatic?
A; He had complained of no symptoms prior to his injury.
Q. What role did these incidents play — at work, the fall and also the tires falling on him —in his condition which you diagnosed?
A. I suspect it aggravated a pre-existing condition.
Q. Is that your opinion?
A. ' Yes.
Q. When you say ‘I suspect’, do you have an opinion, within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, these symptoms were an aggravation of a previous condition?
A. Yes.
Q. What role did these incidents at work, in October 1979, play on this pre-existing condition of spondylolysis-spondylolisthesis?
A. I believe it was a situation that caused the condition to be painful to him after the inJury.
Defendant’s expert, Dr. Botkin, testified:
Q. Would you attribute whatever problems Mr. Backowski may have experienced to that developmental flaw?
A. Well, I think we have to accept the fact that trauma precipitated pain in an otherwise and previously asymptomatic back, but which was the site of a developmental flaw.
Q. What is the technical medical term for this flaw?
A. Spondylolisthesis and spondylolysis.
As to disability, Dr. Botkin testified:
[345]*345Q. Are you able to say whether or not Mr. Backowski remained disabled from lifting weights on a regular basis in excess of 15 pounds for the entire period from October, 1979, through the date of your examination?
A. I personally would have advised him against it.
Q. So about December of ’79 when he was laid off from his work because of lack of business he could have kept doing that light and sedentary job, but it was the heavier job that he couldn’t perform; is that right?
A. That’s my opinion exactly.
Q. And that is a result of the back sprain superimposed on the preexisting condition?
A. Yes.

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Bluebook (online)
503 A.2d 58, 93 Pa. Commw. 339, 1985 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/backowski-v-workmens-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-1985.