Briceno v. Cereal Food Processors, Inc.

820 P.2d 1310, 250 Mont. 362, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 292
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1991
Docket91-094
StatusPublished

This text of 820 P.2d 1310 (Briceno v. Cereal Food Processors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briceno v. Cereal Food Processors, Inc., 820 P.2d 1310, 250 Mont. 362, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 292 (Mo. 1991).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Jesse Briceno appeals from an order of the Workers’ Compensation Court denying his claim for continuing temporary total disability benefits and for a lump-sum payment of benefits. Nationwide Insurance Company cross-appeals on the issue of whether Briceno has proven that he suffered an industrial injury which resulted in a disability. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

The issues are:

1. Did the Workers’ Compensation Court err in concluding that Briceno’s condition is causally related to the injury received at Cereal Food Processors, Inc.?

2. Did the court err in ruling that Briceno was not entitled to continuing total disability benefits on August 7,1989, and thereafter during the retraining which he is pursuing?

3. Did the court err in failing to award Briceno any lump-sum payment of benefits and a 20 percent increase in his award pursuant to § 39-71-2907, MCA (1985)?

The parties stipulated that Jesse Briceno suffered a back injury on June 17,1986, while working for Cereal Food Processors, Inc. (Cereal *364 Food), and that this injury was an aggravation of a previous injury on December 4, 1985. Nationwide Insurance Company (Nationwide) is the insurance carrier for Cereal Food.

Cereal Food accepted liability for Briceno’s injury, and Nationwide paid him temporary total disability benefits from December 9, 1988, through August 7, 1989. At that time, Nationwide converted Briceno’s benefits to partial disability benefits, after being advised by Briceno’s doctor that he had reached maximum medical healing and was approved for several alternate job positions. Later that month, Briceno enrolled as a student at Eastern Montana College. He initially obtained funds for this endeavor from Project Challenge-Work Again, through the AFL-CIO, but since April 1990, he has been enrolled under a State of Montana Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services written rehabilitation program. He is pursuing a bachelor of science degree in human services.

Briceno filed a petition with the Workers’ Compensation Court alleging that he is entitled to continued temporary total disability benefits during retraining and asking for a lump-sum conversion of a portion of the benefits awarded to him. The Workers’ Compensation Court ruled that Briceno’s condition is causally related to the injury he received at Cereal Food. It also ruled that conversion of Briceno’s benefits from temporary total to permanent partial was proper because Briceno’s doctor had determined that he had reached maximum medical healing and could return to work in a full-time position as a management trainee, material clerk, inventory clerk, or keypunch operator, and Briceno had been given proper notice of the conversion of his benefits. The court ruled that Briceno is not entitled to receive temporary total disability benefits during retraining, nor is he entitled to receive a lump-sum payment or a penalty for unreasonable delay or refusal to pay pursuant to § 39-71-2907, MCA (1985). It awarded Briceno his attorney fees and costs for proving a causal relationship between his condition and his injury at Cereal Food.

I

Did the Workers’ Compensation Court err in concluding that Briceno’s condition is causally related to the injury received at Cereal Food Processors Inc.?

The Workers’ Compensation Court concluded that

“[t]he evidence indicates that when claimant began working with Cereal Foods or its predecessor in August 1978, his spine was already *365 involved in a degenerative process. However, the injury which occurred when he lifted a 70-pound motor happened to accelerate his condition.”

Nationwide argues that Briceno did not prove that his pre-existing degenerative disc disease was aggravated by an industrial accident so that benefits can be awarded. It argues that the deposition of Dr. Lewallen, which was not taken until shortly before the Workers’ Compensation Court hearing, supports its position that the cause of Briceno’s degenerative disc disease was wear and tear, not injury. Nationwide relies upon the following testimony of Dr. Lewallen:

“Q: Based upon your knowledge and treatment and evaluation of Jesse Briceno, can you state to a reasonable degree of medical certainty whether Jesse’s degenerative disc disease is due to injury or to wear and tear?
“[Objection omitted.]
“A: Well, I think it’s — I guess my opinion is that it’s a result of wear and tear.
“Q: And upon what are you basing that opinion?
“[Objection omitted.]
“A: Well, in going through the records, it doesn’t seem like — Well, there was one incident where he lifted an object and had increased pain. But his medical record reflects exacerbations of back discomfort associated with activity, and some of it associated to activities at work, some not, that resulted in exacerbation of his back discomfort. It was Dr. Dorr’s opinion when he initially saw him that he had”
“[Objection omitted.]
“A: It was his opinion that he had some degenerative disc problems initially.”

Briceno’s uncontradicted testimony was that he had a complete physical and was not having any trouble with his back when he began work for Cereal Food in 1978. Then, for several years, he was an “elevator man” for Cereal Food, which involved shoveling grain with a scoop shovel weighing approximately forty to fifty pounds when filled. In December 1985, he began suffering back pain. Briceno’s doctor took him off work for a week.

On June 17,1986, when Briceno was lifting a seventy-pound motor to be used in emptying a grain bin at work, he had a crushing sensation in his back and went home, unable to continue working. He saw Dr. Lewallen, who prescribed pain medication. Briceno returned to work about a week later, but his back continued to bother him. In October 1987, on the advice of the Cereal Food company doctor, he *366 was moved to a lighter duty job at Cereal Food. However, he continued to have pain and problems with his back. In November 1988, a .ain on the company doctor’s advice, his employment was terminated. Dr. Lewallen testified that a 1990 CAT Scan of Briceno’s back showed no change from a CAT Scan conducted in 1988, just before he terminated his employment with Cereal Food.

If there is strong enough evidence that a gradually developing injury is job related, it is an “injury” within the meaning of the workers’ compensation law and is compensable. Jones v. St.Regis Paper Co. (1981), 196 Mont. 138, 149, 639 P.2d 1140, 1146. During his deposition, Dr. Lewallen was not advised of the technical definitions of “injury” and “wear and tear” when used in workers’ compensation matters.

There is no evidence that Briceno suffered any injury to his back other than in the performance of his duties for Cereal Food.

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Related

Jones v. St. Regis Paper Co.
639 P.2d 1140 (Montana Supreme Court, 1981)
Peile v. Department of Highways
817 P.2d 1149 (Montana Supreme Court, 1991)

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Bluebook (online)
820 P.2d 1310, 250 Mont. 362, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briceno-v-cereal-food-processors-inc-mont-1991.