Claim of Brierley v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division

2002 WY 121, 52 P.3d 564, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 129, 2002 WL 1856964
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 2002
Docket01-166
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2002 WY 121 (Claim of Brierley v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claim of Brierley v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division, 2002 WY 121, 52 P.3d 564, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 129, 2002 WL 1856964 (Wyo. 2002).

Opinion

GOLDEN, Justice.

[11] After suffering a compensable injury in 1999, Appellant Lynn J. Brierley suffered chronic, intense pain. In 2000, he unsuccessfully attempted suicide, inflicting injuries that generated medical costs. Bri-erley filed claims for these costs and for temporary disability benefits, which Appel-lee Workers' Compensation Division denied. After a contested case hearing, the hearing examiner upheld the denial of benefits, concluding that Brierley failed to prove his compensable injury caused a mental injury that resulted in the attempted suicide. Our review of the entire record reveals that Brierley received a diagnosis that his physical condition had caused a major depression, which had "adequate symptoms to stand alone as a DSM-IV diagnosis." Bri-erley was also diagnosed with anxiety and pain disorder consistent with standards found in the DSM-IV. The diagnosis was made by a licensed clinical psychologist who later testified that it was probable and logically sound to find that the injury that had caused Brierley's pain and depression resulted in the attempted suicide. This clear and convincing evidence proves that Brierley's attempted suicide was the result of a mental injury suffered subsequent to a compensable physical injury.

[12] We reverse and remand for entry of an order granting benefits.

ISSUES

[13] Brierley presents this issue for our review:

The Hearing Examiner's conclusion that Lynn J. Brierley failed to prove his self-inflicted gunshot wound was a direct and proximate result of his compensable work related injuries of March 28, 1999 was arbitrary, capricious and not in accordance with law in that it was clearly contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

The Division rephrases the issue as:

Did Appellant's compensable injury produce a mental injury so severe that his suicide attempt was not a willful act?

FACTS

[14] On March 28, 1999, Brierley: sustained compensable, work-related injuries to his lumbar spine and lower back while acting within the course and scope of his duties as a boilermaker for his employer, LP.C. Industrial Power, at the Jim Bridger Power Plant in Sweetwater County, Wyoming. Since then he has suffered chronic and unrelenting pain as a direct result of his work-related injuries and has been unable to work. His *566 treating physician, Dr. Bosworth, a family practitioner, diagnosed him as suffering from a depression caused by the pain from his work-related injuries. On April 5, 2000, Bri-erley was referred for a psychological examination to obtain an opinion whether he was a suitable candidate for back surgery. Brier-ley was examined by Dr. Hart, Ph.D., a licensed clinical psychologist, and, during an interview with Dr. Hart, Brierley described his physical and mental conditions and stated he had suicidal thoughts. In a written report that was admitted at the hearing, Dr. Hart made the following statement; however, this statement was not referred to by the hearing examiner in its findings of fact and conclusions of law:

After integrating the data obtained through my review of the medical record with the insights from my clinical interview and the results of the psychometric testing, I have arrived at the following psychological diagnoses.
1. Anxiety Disorder, NOS. The DSM-IV code is $00.0. This diagnosis allows for a mixed condition of depression and anxiety. Typically, it is used when neither construct meets all the criteria. I am using it in a different sense in that I believe Mr. Brier-ley has vulnerability to psychological intensity and anxiousness, but his physical condition has exacerbated that vulnerability and brought on a major depression, which, in fact, does have adequate symptoms to stand alone as a DSM-IV diagnosis. I am wanting to show the interconnection between these two psychological conditions by using this present DSM-IV 800.00 diagnosis. I should note the severity of these symptoms puts him in the moderate to severe range. Presently, the condition is severe with respect to depression.
2. Pain Disorder Associated with Psychological Factors and a Medical Condition. The DSM-IV code is 307.89. The ICD.9 code is 784.4.

Dr. Hart's final opinion was that Brierley was not a good candidate for back surgery.

[¶15] On June 9, 2000, Brierley shot himself in the abdomen, inflicting injuries that he survived. He filed a claim for medical and temporary total disability benefits that was denied by the Division. The matter then went to hearing. In its findings of fact, the hearing examiner stated the parties' positions: Brierley contended the self-inflicted gunshot wound injuries were caused by his work-related injuries and compensable under Wyo. Stat. Aun. § 27-14-102(a)(xi), while the Division contended the gunshot injuries were the result of his willful intent to injure or kill himself and, therefore, were not compensable under Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 27-14

[¶16] Dr. Bosworth appeared at the hearing and testified. The hearing examiner found that, although Dr. Bosworth was not a licensed psychiatrist or clinical psychologist, Dr. Bosworth's opinion was that, to a reasonable degree of medical probability, the claimant's chronic pain and inability to return to work caused or substantially contributed to the claimant's becoming depressed. Dr. Hart did not testify at the hearing, but a transcript of an earlier deposition containing Dr. Hart's testimony was entered into evidence. Relying upon a portion of Dr. Hart's deposition testimony, the hearing examiner found that Dr. Hart was unable to opine with "any reasonable degree of psychological probability that the claimant's self-inflicted gunshot wound was the direct result of his work-related back injury." The hearing examiner quoted the following:

There's a linkage there that you could make inferentially, but I'm not sure I can go clear back to that. I believe that his suicide gesture was due to depression and anxiousness associated with his failure-his perception of his inability to care for his family and function as a whole man. I believe that those thoughts came from the pain experiences that he had secondary to a very bad, bad back, a back which I believe was not just caused by a single incident.

The hearing examiner does not quote the entire statement but skips to this:

Now, the logic flows in that sequence of things, since I've already ruled out the fact that he had not had major depression in the past, at least I didn't have documentation of that and I don't think anybody else has, either, that he didn't have collateral *567 problems along the way, other than financial pressures which may have been the result of not being able to work which may have been the result of pain. Then the pain, the inability to function, the depression, the suicide gesture. But you've got to make that connection. I ean't just link, automatically say, hey, he killed himself because he's got pain because of an injury.

In its conclusions of law, the hearing examiner stated:

6. In State ex rel Wyoming Workers' Compensation Division v. Ramsey, 839 P.2d 936

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2002 WY 121, 52 P.3d 564, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 129, 2002 WL 1856964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claim-of-brierley-v-state-ex-rel-wyoming-workers-safety-compensation-wyo-2002.