Blanding v. JH Andrews & Sons

373 A.2d 19, 36 Md. App. 14, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 382
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 12, 1977
Docket443, September Term, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 373 A.2d 19 (Blanding v. JH Andrews & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blanding v. JH Andrews & Sons, 373 A.2d 19, 36 Md. App. 14, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 382 (Md. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Powers, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this ease we consider the several apportionment and waiver provisions found in the Workmen’s Compensation Law.

Henry M. Blanding, the appellant here, was employed in September 1969 by Bethlehem Steel Corporation. On 21 November 1969 he sustained an injury to his right eye. His compensation claim, supported by proof of a disability rated as loss of 36% of the vision of his right eye, was disputed, but was settled.

On 24 December 1971, while Blanding was employed by J, H. Andrews & Sons, appellee here, he was involved in a fight with a fellow employee at a Christmas party. Blanding’s right eye was injured, and a few days later it was surgically removed. 1 He filed a compensation claim, under which the Workmen’s Compensation Commission ultimately entered an order, on 15 July 1975, which included a finding

“ * * * that the claimant sustained a permanent partial disability resulting in 100% loss of vision in his right eye, 64% of such disability is reasonably attributable to the aforesaid accidental injury, and 36% thereof is due to a pre-existing condition.”

The Commission ordered the payment of compensation accordingly. Blanding appealed. The Superior Court of Baltimore City affirmed. Blanding appealed to this Court.

Appellant’s contention, which we restate for him, is that he is entitled to the full scheduled amount of compensation for the loss of an eye, 2 because apportionment does not apply when the second injury would have resulted in 100% loss of *16 vision of the eye, irrespective of the first injury. He not only points out that his ultimate permanent disability would have been the same, even without the preexisting infirmity, but he suggests that there could be no apportionment unless the previous infirmity caused the second injury, or caused its result to be greater.

We shall refer to the three apportionment provisions in the compensation law, to show what their application to this case may be, and to the two waiver provisions, to show that no waiver, as a precondition to apportionment, was required in this case.

Code, Art. 101, § 86 (7) says, in part:

“Whenever it shall appear that any permanent disability from which an employee is suffering following an accidental injury, is due in part to such injury, and in part to a preexisting disease or infirmity, the Commission shall determine the proportion of such disability which is reasonably attributable to the injury and the proportion thereof which is reasonably attributable to the preexisting disease or infirmity, and such employee shall be entitled to compensation for that proportion of his disability which is reasonably attributable solely to the accident and shall not be entitled to compensation for that proportion of his disability which is reasonably attributable to the preexisting disease or infirmity.”

Another apportionment provision, clearly not applicable here, is found in Art. 101, § 66 (1). It is of limited application, and is concerned with apportionment only as between the claimant’s employer and the Subsequent Injury Fund of the total compensation allowable for death or a presently existing disability of greater than 50% of the body as a whole. It is not concerned, as is § 36 (7), with apportionment of a presently existing disability between that part which is compensable and that part which is not compensable. For a recent application of § 66 (1) see Anchor Motor Freight v. Subsequent Injury Fund, 278 Md. 320, 363 *17 A. 2d 505 (1976), aff'g Subsequent Injury Fund v. Compton, 28 Md. App. 526, 346 A. 2d 475 (1975).

The other apportionment provision appears in the law coupled with authorization for a waiver by the employee as to preexisting permanent partial disabilities of the extremities or the eyes. As we shall show later, a number of cases decided under this subsection before 1969 held that when there was no waiver, there was no apportionment, and the entire disability was then compensable. The second paragraph of the subsection, quoted below, was added by Acts of 1969, ch. 721. It requires the Commission to apportion, in the absence of a waiver as well as when there was a waiver. The provision is in Art. 101, § 36 (1) (b). It says:

“Whenever any person who has suffered the loss, or loss of use of a hand, arm, foot, leg or eye, shall enter into a contract of employment, it shall be permissible for the employee to waive in writing, either in the contract of employment, or by a separate written instrument, any right to compensation to which he would be entitled because of the preexisting permanent partial disability, in the event of subsequent accidental injury, and in cases the employee so suffering an additional accidental injury, shall be entitled to the compensation for the disability resulting solely from such additional accidental injury. No such waiver shall be effective unless the preexisting permanent partial disability shall be plainly described therein, nor unless the same be executed by the employee with knowledge of its contents prior to the time of the accident upon which the claim is based.
“In the absence of any waiver of preexisting permanent partial disability, the Commission in determining any case involving a subsequent accidental injury shall apportion and make award *18 only for the permanent disability eaused by the subsequent accidental injury.”

A much broader kind of waiver, not applicable in the present ease, is permitted by Art. 101, § 51, which generally prohibits avoidance of the compensation law, but says, in part:

“ * * * except that an employee who has previously sustained any injury or a partial disability may, by a written contract freely and voluntarily entered into by him and executed in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, waive the benefit of this article as tó any subsequent injury naturally and proximately caused by such previous injury or disability.”

A relationship of proximate cause between the preexisting disability and the current accidental injury would be very material if the defense of Blanding’s employer were based upon a § 51 waiver. There was, of course, no such waiver or defense in/ this case. Except for a § 51 waiver, causal relationship has little significance in compensation law. So long as the disability results from an accidental personal injury arising out of and in the course of employment, and not from the employee’s wilful intention to cause injury, or solely from his intoxication or use of drugs, it makes no difference whether the injury was proximately caused by negligence or fault of the employee, of a fellow employee, of the employer, or of a stranger, or by no negligence or fault at all.

In construing a § 51 (then § 52) waiver as applying only to a proximately caused subsequent injury, the Court of Appeals, speaking through Judge Hammond in Bethlehem Steel Co. v. Ruff, 203 Md. 387, 101 A. 2d 218 (1953), said, at 396-97:

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Bluebook (online)
373 A.2d 19, 36 Md. App. 14, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanding-v-jh-andrews-sons-mdctspecapp-1977.