Ballard v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board

478 P.2d 937, 3 Cal. 3d 832, 92 Cal. Rptr. 1, 36 Cal. Comp. Cases 34, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 373
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1971
DocketL.A. 29738
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 478 P.2d 937 (Ballard v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballard v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board, 478 P.2d 937, 3 Cal. 3d 832, 92 Cal. Rptr. 1, 36 Cal. Comp. Cases 34, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 373 (Cal. 1971).

Opinions

Opinion

PETERS, J.

While working as a secretary on July 22, 1966, petitioner sustained injuries to her back. She received temporary disability through February 12, 1967, and on April 22, 1968, she received an award of 12k4 percent permanent disability. Neither party sought reconsideration.

On July 1, 1968, she petitioned to reopen the matter on the grounds that her condition had worsened and that she was in need of further treatment. She claimed that medication she required to alleviate the continuing pain caused by her injury had resulted in her becoming addicted to such medication. She had been treated by a number of doctors for her back condition.

It was shown by pharmacy and doctors’ records that during the period from September 6, 1966, to February 1, 1967, she was provided with 100 capsules of Parafon Forte, 50 Equagesie, 30 Fiorinal, 12-ounce Riopan, 80 Librium, 48 Tylenol, 36 Tylenol with codeine, 90 Darvon compound, 90 Darvo-Tran, 18 Seconal, 60 Zactirin, 30 Nembutal, an unknown quantity of Phenaphen with codeine, and an .unknown quantity of Noludar.

Dr. Poindexter, an internist, reported in October 1967 that in addition to her back problem petitioner had a drug dependency which “is directly related to the original accident and can best be described as a complication of the industrially caused accident of July, 1966.”

Dr. Strassman, a psychiatrist, examined petitioner, at her attorney’s request, twice in late May of 1968 because of reports that she had been taking increasing dosages of pain medication, over and above that prescribed by the various physicians. She told him that she took pain pills throughout the day for the pain in her back, excessive sleeping pills at night, “bennies to even get going in the morning,” and tranquilizers to relieve nervousness and tension. Included in the drugs she was then taking were Darvon, Seconal, Nembutal, Codeine, Miltown, Demeral, Percodan, and Benzedrine. She denied ever using marijuana, LSD, or heroin.

Dr. Strassman, stated in his report of June 17, 1968: “Diagnosis: Drug habituation secondary to back injury, iatrogenically produced. Discussion: [835]*835This patient has a low tolerance for pain of any kind. Following her injury she began to increase the intake of drugs in order to remove any vestiges of pain or discomfort. This necessitated ingesting large amounts of narcotics and sedatives. The secondary effects of these drugs interfered with her normal physiology and now it is necessary that she continue to ingest high quantities of drugs because of drug effects. She sees her irritability and problems as secondary to her back injury but it is my opinion that they are now causedly the interference of normal physiology through drug effect. She is now in a vicious cycle of needing to take more drug to create the drug effect and the original reason (her back injury) has now been lost. It is my opinion that the personality problem of this patient initially led to the increased ingestion of drug, but at this point the drugs themselves have created problems for the patient.”

Petitioner testified at the hearing that she took medication prescribed by respondents’ physicians to cure and relieve from the effects of her back injury and that because the dosages prescribed did not relieve her, she took the increased dosages and supplemented the prescriptions by obtaining medication elsewhere. She stated that although she had taken tranquilizers on occasion prior to her employment, she had not taken them for any substantial period immediately preceding her injury and had made no regular use of medication during the six months prior to working for respondent employer. Some of petitioner’s testimony was vague and contradictory, and the referee commented that she was extremely nervous throughout the hearing and frequently on the verge of tears. On one or two occasions she broke down in tears, necessitating recesses.

Dr. Malitz, a psychiatrist, examined petitioner on four occasions in September and October of 1968 apparently at the request of the insurer. She told the doctor that she had been buying numerous medicines on the “black market,” and displayed a number of the pills that she had been taking, including Librium, 10 mg., Barvon Compound, 65 mg., Nembutal or Seconal, Tuinal, grains 1 Vi, Phenaphen, Benzedrine, a small white tablet resembling Phenobarbital, Percodan, and Tylenol with Codeine (#3). She also said that she sometimes took Miltown, Bexedrine, and Dexedrine Spansules, although she did not have any of those with her. She claimed to take varying and large amounts of the pills each day.

Dr. Malitz said the patient was vague, evasive, guarded, and negativistic and admits that she frequently tells lies. He concluded that Mrs. Ballard has “a lifelong personality disorder characterized by passive-aggressive and sociopathic behavior and unresolved oral needs. This has apparently resulted in excessive use and abuse of medicines, which we are able to document as far back as 1965 when she took more tranquilizer than had been [836]*836prescribed and was also taking her mother’s tranquilizer. . . .” The doctor did not doubt that she was currently taking medicine improperly but stated that she was not taking as many drugs as she claimed.

The doctor also stated: “Even if we were to accept the patient’s statements at face value, there would be nothing to indicate that the negligible psychic stress associated with her injury was a causative factor. The claimant’s psychiatric consultant states, ‘It is my opinion that the personality problem of this patient initially led to the increased ingestion of drug’; yet in his diagnosis he indicates that the problem was ‘iatrogenically produced’ (induced by physicians). I think it is highly inaccurate and unfair to blame the patient’s doctors for a manifestation of her pre-existing personality disorder, especially when the records do not indicate that they prescribed most of the medications she claims to take. Mrs. Ballard is not psychotic, she is mentally competent, and she must accept full responsibility for any of her actions in illegally obtaining and using drugs.”

In a supplemental report in May 1969, Dr. Malitz stated that as to several of the prescribed medications there was no evidence of dependence or habituation resulting from therapeutic dosages. Although he stated that two of the prescribed drugs may be habit forming and others may result in dependence or habituation after prolonged or excessive use, he found “no evidence that Mrs. Ballard was given by prescription the types and dosages and quantities of medicines that could conceivably, even in a person psychiatrically susceptible, result in a problem of drug dependence or drug habituation or drug addiction.”

The referee’s report on the petition for reconsideration, adopted by the appeals board in its order denying reconsideration, stated that in the “sense that she probably is habitually using drugs, she would be considered ‘addicted,’ and it is probable that she has now reached the point that she is in need of the treatment described by Dr. Strassman,”1 although the referee said that she was not taking the full amount of drugs she claimed.

The referee reasoned: “Dr. Malitz cogently analyzes the habit-forming potential of all of the various medications prescribed by defendants’ physicians.

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Bluebook (online)
478 P.2d 937, 3 Cal. 3d 832, 92 Cal. Rptr. 1, 36 Cal. Comp. Cases 34, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-workmens-compensation-appeals-board-cal-1971.