Darling v. Johnson Controls Battery Group, Inc.

70 P.3d 894, 188 Or. App. 190, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 712
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 12, 2003
Docket00-00719; A115889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 70 P.3d 894 (Darling v. Johnson Controls Battery Group, Inc.) 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
Darling v. Johnson Controls Battery Group, Inc., 70 P.3d 894, 188 Or. App. 190, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 712 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

LINDER, J.

Claimant filed a workers’ compensation claim for a right shoulder injury. While investigating the claim, employer asked her to attend an insurer medical examination (IME)1 pursuant to ORS 656.325(1)(a), in which she would be examined by an orthopedic surgeon and a neuropsychologist. Claimant refused to attend that exam. Employer subsequently denied her claim, and claimant requested a hearing to review that denial. Employer then twice sought to have claimant attend the IME that she had earlier refused to attend. Claimant refused both times. In response, employer moved to dismiss claimant’s request for a hearing. The administrative law judge (AU) granted that motion, and the Workers’ Compensation Board (board) affirmed. Claimant now seeks judicial review of the board’s order. We affirm.

The pertinent facts are undisputed. Claimant began working for employer Johnson Controls Battery Group in July 1997, putting decals on batteries on its production line. In October 1999, she filed a workers’ compensation claim for right shoulder pain as an occupational disease. She was diagnosed with a right shoulder strain and received medical treatment.

Claimant has a history of mental health problems including post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, and chronic pain syndrome. While working for employer, she was taking psychiatric medication. During that same time period, claimant threatened to commit suicide and expressed suicidal thoughts to a coworker. Claimant was observed at work staring blankly at coworkers for up to 20 [193]*193minutes at a time. Additionally, claimant engaged in behavior that was disruptive to the work force. That behavior intensified during the fall of 1999, around the time that claimant filed her claim. Claimant’s coworkers witnessed her displaying erratic mood swings, ranging from crying to hysterical laughter, even though there appeared to be no cause for such behavior. Claimant also made threats against her coworkers and was often seen talking to herself.

In response to claimant’s workers’ compensation claim, employer requested that claimant submit to an IME consisting of evaluations by a neuropsychologist as well as an orthopedic surgeon. The IME was scheduled for the first part of December, approximately two months after claimant provided employer with notice of her claim. About a week before the IME was to take place, claimant’s attorney notified employer that claimant would not attend the IME if it included any form of psychological or psychiatric examination. The parties apparently reached an impasse on the point and, meanwhile, the employer was required to accept or deny the claim within 90 days pursuant to ORS 656.262(6)(a) (1999).2 Employer denied it, and claimant requested a hearing to dispute that denial. A hearing date was set and, in the interim, employer rescheduled the IME. Claimant again refused to attend, indicating that she was “quite willing” to submit to an orthopedic examination but was not willing to submit to any examination by a neuropsychologist “without an order from the ALJ.”

Claimant then filed with the ALJ a motion to quash the IME. Her position was that she would willingly submit to an orthopedic examination but not the psychiatric portion of the examination because, she maintained, such an examination would not produce evidence relevant to the hearing. In response, employer moved to dismiss claimant’s request for a hearing on the ground that claimant’s failure to attend the twice-scheduled IME had resulted in an unreasonable delay of the hearing. See OAR 438-006-0071(1).3

[194]*194The ALJ concluded that the psychological examination was “reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence” and therefore denied claimant’s motion to quash in an interim order. The ALJ also declined to dismiss the hearing based on the delay caused by claimant’s failure to attend the IME on either of the previously scheduled dates, deciding instead to give claimant one more opportunity to attend the next scheduled IME. The hearing was accordingly rescheduled.

Employer then notified claimant of a third date for conducting the IME. For a third time, claimant refused to attend because the IME included a psychiatric examination. Employer responded by filing another motion to dismiss claimant’s request for a hearing, noting that “claimant has refused to attend the IME for over nine months.” Relying on the ALJ’s interim order, employer argued that, because claimant’s objections to the IME had been litigated and resolved, she had “no legitimate legal basis to refuse to attend the reasonably scheduled IME. The delay her noncooperation has caused must certainly be considered unjustified at this point.” Claimant again responded that she was “anxious to cooperate in the orthopedic examination” but that she was unwilling to undergo a psychiatric examination because she did not believe it was relevant to her claim.

At a hearing on employer’s motion to dismiss, claimant and employer advanced the same arguments that they had been making throughout the proceeding as to whether a psychological or psychiatric examination was necessary to evaluate and likely to produce evidence relevant to her claimed shoulder condition. Inconsistently with claimant’s expressed continuing willingness to submit to an orthopedic examination, claimant further urged that ORS 656.325(1) did not give employer the authority to request her to submit to an IME once employer denied the claim.

The AU concluded that a psychiatric IME was likely to produce relevant medical evidence and that, under the circumstances, claimant’s refusal to attend such an examination was “persuasive grounds for dismissal of her [195]*195hearing request under OAR 438-006-0071(1).” By way of a footnote, the ALJ summarily rejected claimant’s assertion that employer lacked authority to compel her attendance at any post-denial IME, noting that claimant had raised the argument only to preserve it for appeal and that the board’s settled rulings were to the contrary.

Before the board, claimant renewed her argument that her refusal to attend the IME was not unreasonable because, as she put it, the IME “cannot lead to relevant medical information.” Claimant also renewed and developed the argument that there is no statutory authority for an employer to require a worker to attend a post-denial IME. The board adopted and affirmed the AU’s order and opinion. The board also supplemented the ALJ’s order by specifically addressing and rejecting claimant’s contention that employer had no authority to require her to submit to an IME once the employer denied the claim.

On judicial review, claimant abandons her arguments related to the relevance of the psychological examinations and instead relies exclusively on the argument that she developed before the board that ORS 656.325(1)(a) does not require a claimant to submit to a “post-denial” IME.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 P.3d 894, 188 Or. App. 190, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darling-v-johnson-controls-battery-group-inc-orctapp-2003.