City of S. S.F. v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd.

229 Cal. Rptr. 3d 518, 20 Cal. App. 5th 881
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedFebruary 26, 2018
DocketA151857
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 229 Cal. Rptr. 3d 518 (City of S. S.F. v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of S. S.F. v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd., 229 Cal. Rptr. 3d 518, 20 Cal. App. 5th 881 (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

BRUINIERS, J.

*521*885Richard Johnson worked successively as a firefighter for the City of South San Francisco (CSSF) and for the City of Pacifica (Pacifica). He developed a nasopharyngeal cancer. Labor Code section 3212.11 establishes a presumption that cancer manifesting during and for a specified period following employment in certain public safety positions, including firefighters, arose out of and in the course of that employment. Section 5500.5, subdivision (a) (section 5500.5(a) ), however, limits employer liability for a cumulative injury to the employer who employed the applicant during the one year preceding the earliest of (1) the date of injury or (2) the last date of injurious exposure to the hazards that caused the injury. Thus, either CSSF or Pacifica would be potentially responsible for compensation for the entire injury, dependent upon the proper application of section 5500.5(a).

CSSF settled a workers' compensation claim by Johnson for this injury and petitioned for contribution from Pacifica. An arbitrator denied the petition, *886ruling that evidence of the latency period for the cancer suffered by Johnson showed the injurious exposure under section 5500.5(a) occurred during Johnson's earlier employment with CSSF. The Workers' Compensation Appeals Board (WCAB) upheld and adopted the arbitrator's order.

CSSF petitioned for review, contending the WCAB, in adopting the arbitrator's determination, erroneously utilized a more lenient preponderance evidentiary standard in applying section 5500.5(a), rather than the more stringent cancer presumption rebuttal standard provided in section 3212.1. We have granted review, but affirm the determination of the WCAB.

I. BACKGROUND

Johnson worked as a firefighter for CSSF from March 1973 to October 2001, and for Pacifica from November 2001 on. He was exposed to known carcinogens during each period of employment. In 2007, he was diagnosed with nasopharyngeal cancer, which had metastasized and caused a growth in his neck. The cancer was found to have initially manifested itself during 2005, when Johnson first noted symptoms of nasal obstruction. The disability was found to have occurred in 2007, during Johnson's employment with Pacifica.2

Johnson filed a workers' compensation claim against Pacifica. He invoked the presumption of section 3212.1 that cancer manifesting during (or within certain periods following) employment as a firefighter that involves exposure to known carcinogens arose out of and in the course of that employment. ( § 3212.1, subd. (b).)3 The *522presumption may be rebutted if the employer *887shows the primary site of the cancer has been identified and "the carcinogen to which the member has demonstrated exposure is not reasonably linked to the disabling cancer." ( § 3212.1, subd. (d).) Pacifica denied liability and joined CSSF as a party to the case.4 CSSF eventually settled with Johnson for all of his cancer-related compensation, and it then sought contribution from Pacifica.

The contribution case was submitted to arbitration based on a documentary record. (See § 5275, subd. (a)(2).) CSSF and Pacifica stipulated to "a single cumulative trauma period for purposes of assessing liability. The effect of this is that one party will bear full responsibility for the benefits paid ...." The issues submitted to the arbitrator concerned application of sections 3212.1 and 5500.5. Section 5500.5 provides that, in Johnson's circumstances, "liability for ... cumulative injury claims ... shall be limited to those employers who employed the employee during a period of [one year] immediately preceding either [ (1) ] the date of injury, as determined pursuant to Section 5412, or [ (2) ] the last date on which the employee was employed in an occupation exposing him or her to the hazards of the ... cumulative injury, whichever occurs first." ( § 5500.5(a).)5 The arbitrator determined the date of injury was in 2007. The dispositive issue was whether the last injurious exposure resulting in the injury occurred during CSSF or Pacifica employment.

The medical evidence before the arbitrator consisted of written reports and deposition testimony by Ira Fishman, M.D., the agreed medical examiner in Johnson's case against Pacifica.6 Fishman acknowledged there was little epidemiological literature regarding occupational risks for nasopharyngeal *888cancer, firefighting had "only a possible *523link" to the cancer,7 the cause of the cancer was unknown, and no studies established a latency period for the cancer. However, he testified that the latency period for exposure-related solid tumors generally was a minimum of 10 years.8 Based on that latency period, he opined that Johnson's last harmful carcinogen exposure occurred in 1996 or 1997, and that Johnson's six-year employment with Pacifica was not causally linked to his cancer.

The arbitrator found Fishman's evidence credible and persuasive. He found that Fishman "made a convincing case" that the CSSF exposure was the causative factor in Johnson's development of cancer, given the latency period involved, and that CSSF, while emphasizing deficiencies in Fishman's opinions, had not offered any contrary medical opinion. The arbitrator further found that Fishman's opinion provided "substantial evidence" on the question of latency, and that "the weight of the evidence shows [CSSF] employment as being within the latency period, and there is no medical evidence showing that either [CSSF] fell outside the injurious period vis-à -vis latency or that the Pacifica employment was the proper time frame given the latency period for nasopharyngeal cancer."

The arbitrator denied CSSF's petition for contribution. In doing so, he distinguished between the enhanced burden an employer must meet under section 3212.1 to rebut liability to the employee for the injury (i.e., establishing the absence of a "reasonable link" between the cancer and the industrial exposure to the carcinogen), and what he found to be the applicable preponderance of the evidence standard in a contribution action between employers (i.e., whether it is more likely that the cancer arose from one or another period of employment). The arbitrator wrote: "Had [Johnson] only been employed by Pacifica, with no prior public safety employment, it is likely that on this record of six years employment with Pacifica, the exposure to carcinogens and the operation of the presumption, that he would have established a compensable injury case as to Pacifica. ... [However, t]he fact that there is exposure with both [CSSF] and Pacifica shifts the factual determination solely to which employment is injurious.... [¶] ... [B]etween Pacifica and [CSSF], the stronger case is that the latency period implicates the [CSSF] employment."

Related

Padron v. Osoy
California Court of Appeal, 2025
Oakland Bulk & Oversized Terminal, LLC v. City of Oakland
321 F. Supp. 3d 986 (N.D. California, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 Cal. Rptr. 3d 518, 20 Cal. App. 5th 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-s-sf-v-workers-comp-appeals-bd-calctapp5d-2018.