Den Hartog Industries and West Bend Mutual Insurance Company v. Tyler Dungan

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 3, 2025
Docket23-1402
StatusPublished

This text of Den Hartog Industries and West Bend Mutual Insurance Company v. Tyler Dungan (Den Hartog Industries and West Bend Mutual Insurance Company v. Tyler Dungan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Den Hartog Industries and West Bend Mutual Insurance Company v. Tyler Dungan, (iowa 2025).

Opinion

In the Iowa Supreme Court

No. 23–1402

Submitted September 10, 2025—Filed October 3, 2025

Den Hartog Industries and West Bend Mutual Insurance Company,

Appellants,

vs.

Tyler Dungan,

Appellee.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Jeanie Vaudt, judge.

An employer and a carrier seek further review of a court of appeals decision

affirming the dismissal of their petition for review of a workers’ compensation

decision awarding partial permanent disability benefits to an employee based on

lost earning capacity. Decision of Court of Appeals Vacated; District Court

Judgment Reversed and Case Remanded with Instructions.

Mansfield, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices

joined.

Lee P. Hook, Michael S. Roling, Christopher S. Spencer, Morgan R. Todd

Borron, and Jordan R. Reed (until withdrawal) of Peddicord Lillis LLP, West Des

Moines, for appellants.

Janece Valentine of Valentine Law Office, P.C., Fort Dodge, for appellee. 2

Mansfield, Justice.

I. Introduction.

Read, and declare the meaning.

William Shakespeare, Cymbeline act V, sc. 5, l. 530.

These words were addressed to a soothsayer in Shakespeare’s play, but

today they are addressed to our court. The present case requires us to declare

the meaning of Iowa Code section 85.34(2)(v) (2019), and most particularly its

third sentence. That sentence provides,

If an employee who is eligible for compensation under this paragraph returns to work or is offered work for which the employee receives or would receive the same or greater salary, wages, or earnings than the employee received at the time of the injury, the employee shall be compensated based only upon the employee’s functional impairment resulting from the injury, and not in relation to the employee’s earning capacity.

We interpret those words according to their plain meaning. Thus, we hold

that an employee eligible for compensation under that paragraph who returns to

work at the same or greater salary, wages, or earnings should be compensated

based upon their functional impairment resulting from the injury. We are not

persuaded by the contrary, nontextual arguments advanced in this litigation. In

some other cases, references to a “bifurcated litigation process,” to a rule of

construction that workers’ compensation laws should be interpreted in

claimants’ favor to effectuate their humanitarian purpose, and to other policy

arguments might carry the day. But they cannot overcome plain text here.

Accordingly, we hold that the commissioner erred in awarding permanent

partial disability benefits based on earning capacity rather than functional

impairment, and we reverse and remand for further proceedings. 3

II. Facts and Procedural History.

On July 24, 2019, Tyler Dungan was working as an outdoor loader and

material handler for Den Hartog Industries in Hospers. Den Hartog

manufactures plastic tanks of various sizes. One such container was shipped to

Las Vegas, Nevada, where it was used to make the world’s largest margarita.

Dungan’s job duties included lifting and carrying loads up to seventy-five

pounds.

On the 24th, Dungan was hoisting a seventy-pound hoop as part of a

loading process. Unexpectedly, the hoop caught on the trailer as Dungan jerked

it upward. Dungan immediately felt a lightning-like sensation up and down his

back. Dungan dropped to his knee. Later, he informed his supervisor that he

might have injured his back. Dungan missed the next three days of work.

Although Dungan returned to work, his back pain continued. Initially,

Dungan sought chiropractic care, but in September, he was referred to a medical

clinic that specialized in neuroscience, orthopedics, and the spine. Dr. Hendrik

Klopper, a neurosurgeon, became Dungan’s treating physician. He diagnosed

Dungan with a disc herniation at L4–L5 and an annular tear at L5–S1. Dungan

received steroid injections. Dungan also underwent physical therapy, which

provided some relief but didn’t alleviate all symptoms.

Dungan had been earning $15.16 per hour from Den Hartog at the time of

his back injury. After his injury, Den Hartog increased Dungan’s pay to $15.50

per hour, even though Dr. Klopper had placed Dungan on a forty-pound weight

restriction. Still, the pain caused Dungan to miss “a fair bit of work.”

In June 2020, Dungan and his fiancée decided to relocate from Sioux

County. Although Dungan “loved” his job at Den Hartog, the couple had just had

their first child and wanted to be closer to family. So, Dungan resigned from 4

Den Hartog and went to work at Meridian Manufacturing as a welder. Pay

increases at Meridian brought Dungan’s wages up to $17.48 per hour.

Dungan continued to see Dr. Klopper and reported ongoing discomfort. He

received steroid injections at L4–L5 in June and September.

By the time of the hearing, Dungan had left his employment with Meridian.

He was working as a welder at Gomaco in Ida Grove, earning approximately

$20.15 per hour. When Dungan joined Gomaco, he sought and obtained a

release from Dr. Klopper as to all work restrictions. Dungan’s welding job at

Gomaco is less physically demanding than his job as a loader and handler at

Den Hartog had been.

On March 12, 2021, Dungan filed a petition for workers’ compensation

benefits relating to his work injury at Den Hartog.1 Dungan’s treating

physician—Dr. Klopper—applied the American Medical Association Guides to the

Evaluation of Permanent Impairment to Dungan’s back injury and assigned a 5%

impairment to the body as a whole.

Each side in the proceeding retained a physician to perform an

independent medical exam (IME). Dr. Sunil Bansal—who had been retained by

Dungan’s counsel—assigned an 8% impairment to the body as a whole. Another

physician—retained by Den Hartog’s counsel—concurred in Dr. Klopper’s 5%

figure. Dr. Bansal’s higher percentage rating was based largely on his

determination that Dungan was suffering from ongoing radiculopathy.

Following a hearing, the deputy found Dr. Bansal’s evaluation more

persuasive. He concluded that Dungan did indeed have ongoing radiculopathy.

1In discussing the workers’ compensation proceeding, we will refer to the employer and

its workers’ compensation carrier collectively as “Den Hartog.” 5

He therefore determined that Dungan had sustained an impairment of 8% to the

body due to the July 24, 2019 work injury.

Yet the deputy also concluded that an unscheduled injury, such as

Dungan’s back injury, was required to be compensated according to the

industrial method under Iowa Code section 85.34(2)(v). In other words, the

ultimate issue was Dungan’s loss of earning capacity, not his functional

impairment, from the work injury. The deputy noted that Dungan was twenty-six

years old, had no postsecondary education, and would “more likely than not be

unable to return to work as physically demanding as his day-to-day duties at

Den Hartog made that job.” Considering these factors, the deputy found that

Dungan had sustained a 15% industrial disability and, therefore, awarded

Dungan seventy-five weeks of permanent partial disability benefits in addition to

costs and continued medical care.

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Den Hartog Industries and West Bend Mutual Insurance Company v. Tyler Dungan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-hartog-industries-and-west-bend-mutual-insurance-company-v-tyler-iowa-2025.