Cruz-Salazar v. SAIF

506 P.3d 1145, 317 Or. App. 342
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 2, 2022
DocketA171110
StatusPublished

This text of 506 P.3d 1145 (Cruz-Salazar v. SAIF) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cruz-Salazar v. SAIF, 506 P.3d 1145, 317 Or. App. 342 (Or. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Argued and submitted September 17, 2020, reversed and remanded February 2, 2022

In the Matter of the Compensation of Reina Cruz-Salazar, Claimant. Reina CRUZ-SALAZAR, Petitioner, v. SAIF CORPORATION and KB Restaurant, Respondents. Workers’ Compensation Board 1801511; A171110 506 P3d 1145

Claimant seeks review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Board (board) affirming an order of an administrative law judge that reduced claim- ant’s award of benefits for impairment caused by undiagnosed conditions. Held: The Court of Appeals remanded the case to the board for reconsideration in light of the Supreme Court’s opinion in Caren v. Providence Health System Oregon, 365 Or 466, 487, 446 P3d 67 (2019), holding that a worker is entitled to benefits for the worker’s total impairment if the work injury is a material contrib- uting cause of the worker’s total impairment. Reversed and remanded.

Philip M. Lebenbaum argued the cause for petitioner. On the briefs was Theodore P. Heus. Allison Lesh argued the cause and filed the brief for respondents. Before Egan, Presiding Judge, and Lagesen, Chief Judge, and DeHoog, Judge pro tempore.* DeHOOG, J. pro tempore. Reversed and remanded.

______________ * Lagesen, C. J., vice DeVore, S. J. Cite as 317 Or App 342 (2022) 343

DeHOOG, J. pro tempore Claimant seeks review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Board (board) affirming an order of an administrative law judge (ALJ) that had reduced claimant’s award of benefits for impairment made by the Appellate Review Unit of the Workers’ Compensation Division of the Department of Consumer and Business Services (ARU). We conclude that, in light of the Supreme Court’s opinion in Caren v. Providence Health System Oregon, 365 Or 466, 487, 446 P3d 67 (2019), which issued after the board’s order in this case, the board erred, and we therefore reverse and remand for reconsideration. Claimant injured her left arm at work after slip- ping and falling on a wet floor. SAIF, on behalf of its insured employer KB Restaurant—KGK Foods—Carl’s Jr., accepted a claim for “left elbow contusion and impingement syndrome of left shoulder.” After claimant’s attending physician deter- mined that claimant’s injury was medically stationary, SAIF issued a notice of closure that did not award any benefits for permanent disability. On reconsideration, a medical arbiter opined that claimant had findings, such as decreased sen- sation, that were not explained by the medical record and that were possibly indicative of undiagnosed conditions. He opined that 20 percent of claimant’s impairment was due to the accepted condition and 80 percent due to the undiag- nosed conditions. The ARU awarded claimant benefits for 100 percent of her impairment, including impairment poten- tially linked to the as-yet undiagnosed conditions. The ALJ reduced that award, reasoning that the apportionment of benefits for impairment was appropri- ate under former OAR 436-035-0007(1) (2017), because the record did not establish that the impairment due to the undiagnosed conditions was attributable to the accepted conditions. The board upheld the apportionment, reasoning that claimant was not entitled to benefits for impairment due to conditions that had not been claimed and accepted, essentially reasoning that, under ORS 656.214(1)(a) (provid- ing that “[p]ermanent impairment resulting from the com- pensable industrial injury” is “the loss of use or function of a body part or system due to the compensable industrial 344 Cruz-Salazar v. SAIF

injury”); ORS 656.268(15)1 (“Conditions that are direct med- ical sequelae to the original accepted condition shall be included in rating permanent disability of the claim unless they have been specifically denied.”); and OAR 436-035- 0007 (2017), benefits for impairment may not be awarded for a condition that has not been accepted or that is not the direct medical sequela of an accepted condition. On judicial review, claimant contends that the board’s order must be reversed in light of the Supreme Court’s opinions in Caren, in which the court held that a worker is entitled to benefits for the worker’s total impair- ment if the work injury is a material contributing cause of the worker’s total impairment, and Schleiss v. SAIF, 354 Or 637, 317 P3d 244 (2013), in which the court held that appor- tionment may be applied only to “legally cognizable” pre- existing conditions. Claimant is correct that Caren requires a reversal of the board’s order. Caren involved the question of whether a claimant’s benefit for impairment could be reduced by that portion of the impairment caused by a preexisting condi- tion. The court said in Caren that, by providing a process for claim closure in claims involving combined conditions, ORS 656.268(1)(b) (setting forth procedure for the denial of combined conditions), the legislature had created an excep- tion to the “general rule” that a worker is to be compensated for total impairment that is caused in material part by the compensable injury. “[T]he method for calculating impairment in cases of com- bined conditions [as described in ORS 656.268(1)(b)] is an exception to, and limitation on, the general rule that the employer pays compensation for the full measure of the workers’ permanent impairment if the impairment as a whole is caused in material part by the compensable injury.” Caren, 365 Or at 487. The court held that, if an insurer believes that a portion of a worker’s impairment is due to a combining of the compensable injury with a preexisting con- dition, it is not up to the claimant to first seek benefits for 1 ORS 656.268 has been amended since the filing of the claim, but the rel- evant subsections are unchanged. We therefore cite to the version currently in effect. Cite as 317 Or App 342 (2022) 345

the preexisting condition; it is the insurer’s responsibility to deny that condition before claim closure. Id. at 480-81. If the insurer does not deny the condition before claim closure, the claimant is entitled to benefits for the total impairment caused in material part by the compensable injury. As we understand the court’s opinion in Caren, it means that a worker’s total impairment is compensable if it is caused in material part by a compensable injury, and that benefits for impairment may not be reduced for impairment caused by a preexisting condition, unless (1) the preexisting condition is one that is “cognizable” under ORS 656.005(24) (to qualify as a preexisting condition, a condition must have been treated or diagnosed before the compensable injury, “[e]xcept for claims in which a preexisting condition is arthritis or an arthritic condition”); and (2), before claim closure, the insurer has formally denied a combined condi- tion involving the preexisting condition. If those procedural steps do not occur before claim closure, apportionment of impairment is not permitted under ORS 656.214 or ORS 656.268(1)(b). Here, the medical record shows that claim- ant’s impairment is caused in material part by her work- related injury.

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Related

Schleiss v. SAIF Corp.
317 P.3d 244 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2013)
Caren v. Providence Health Sys. Or. (In re Caren)
446 P.3d 67 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2019)
Robinette v. SAIF
475 P.3d 470 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2020)
Johnson v. SAIF
475 P.3d 465 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2020)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
506 P.3d 1145, 317 Or. App. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruz-salazar-v-saif-orctapp-2022.