Department of Labor & Industries v. Shirley

288 P.3d 390, 171 Wash. App. 870
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 13, 2012
DocketNo. 66994-0-I
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 288 P.3d 390 (Department of Labor & Industries v. Shirley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Labor & Industries v. Shirley, 288 P.3d 390, 171 Wash. App. 870 (Wash. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinions

Lau, J.

¶1 A surviving spouse of an industrial worker whose death is work related is entitled to compensation under the Industrial Insurance Act, Title 51 RCW. Brian Shirley suffered an industrial injury in 2004. He died accidentally in 2007 after ingesting multiple prescription medications — prescribed to treat pain resulting from the industrial injury — simultaneously with alcohol. The Department of Labor and Industries (Department) appeals a superior court order denying its motion for summary judgment and affirming an award of survivor benefits to Mr. Shirley’s widow. The Department argues that Mr. Shirley’s simultaneous ingestion of alcohol and prescription medications constituted an intervening activity that broke the chain of causation between his industrial injury and his death, thereby precluding the payment of survivor benefits. Because the medications were prescribed to treat the last[874]*874ing effects of Mr. Shirley’s industrial injury and thus were a proximate cause of death under Washington’s multiple proximate cause analysis, we affirm the superior court’s order affirming the award of survivor benefits to Ms. Shirley.

FACTS

¶2 In June 2004, Brian Shirley sustained an industrial injury to his low back. He filed an application for industrial insurance benefits with the Department. The Department allowed his claim and paid benefits.

¶3 The Department closed Mr. Shirley’s claim in March 2005 with no award for permanent partial disability. Mr. Shirley filed a protest and request for reconsideration, but the Department affirmed its closing order in May 2005. At the time his claim closed, Mr. Shirley was taking only ibuprofen and no physician was prescribing him opioid medications. Mr. Shirley never filed an application to reopen his claim.

¶4 On the morning of May 3, 2007, Mr. Shirley’s wife, Desiree Shirley, found him dead. According to Ms. Shirley, Mr. Shirley was employed at the time he died. The day before he died, Mr. Shirley went to work as usual. That evening, he helped his neighbor chop wood and then returned home and went to bed. He did not wake up the next morning.

¶5 The King County medical examiner performed an autopsy and listed the cause of death as “[a]cute combined ethanol [alcohol], oxycodone, citalopram, alprazolam, amitriptyline, carbamazepine, and acetaminophen intoxication. Hypertensive and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease contributed to death. The manner of death is classified as ACCIDENT.” Ex. 4, at 1. Mr. Shirley had a history of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, pancreatitis, smoking, and alcoholism. The autopsy report also indicated an enlarged heart.

[875]*875¶6 The toxicology report indicated that Mr. Shirley’s blood alcohol content was 0.07 grams per 100 mL, slightly lower than the state-presumed intoxication level of 0.08 grams per 100 mL. The report also indicated that the following additional substances were present in Mr. Shirley’s blood at the time he died:

oxycodone 0.13 mg/L
citalopram 0.43 mg/L
desmethylcitalopram pos[1] mg/L
Alprazolam 0.02 mg/L
amitriptyline 0.10 mg/L
Nortriptyline 0.11 mg/L
Carbamazepine I. 2 mg/L
acetaminophen II. 0 mg/L
Promethazine pos mg/L
caffeine pos
nicotine/ cotinine pos

Ex. 4, at 7. When his claim closed in 2005, Mr. Shirley was not being prescribed any of the medications found in the 2007 toxicology report.

¶7 The medical experts agreed the immediate cause of death was the combination of ethanol (alcohol), oxycodone, citalopram, alprazolam, amitriptyline, carbamazepine, and acetaminophen. The experts agreed that the levels of oxycodone and citalopram found in Mr. Shirley’s blood during the autopsy were inconsistent with normal dosing. Dr. Jaymie Mai testified that the oxycodone level, while higher than normal dosage, was closer to a “therapeutic” level than a “toxic” level. Dr. Donald Reay testified the oxycodone was on the low end of the toxic range. The experts agreed that none of the drug levels in Mr. Shirley’s blood were highly elevated. They also agreed that the combination of drugs and alcohol suppressed Mr. Shirley’s respiration and gag reflex, causing him to suffocate. Nei[876]*876ther the drags alone nor the alcohol alone would have killed Mr. Shirley.

¶8 From the time Mr. Shirley was injured until he died — including the period between the 2005 claim closure and his 2007 death — Dr. Chester Jangala treated him for the effects of the industrial injury. Dr. Jangala testified in his deposition that Mr. Shirley experienced low back pain and depression that were causally related to the industrial injury. Of the substances found in Mr. Shirley’s blood at the time of death, Dr. Jangala had prescribed oxycodone, citalopram, alprazolam, and amitriptyline. Dr. Jangala had prescribed the alprazolam and amitriptyline “in the distant past.” Jangala Dep. (Oct. 26, 2009) at 12-13.2 He testified that the prescriptions were related to the effects of Mr. Shirley’s industrial injury.3 Dr. Jangala testified that he was “usually fairly cautious” about warning patients not to mix medications or consume alcohol while taking certain medications, and it was “likely” that he counseled Mr. Shirley not to mix alcohol and medications.4 Jangala Dep. at 26.

¶9 No evidence indicated that Mr. Shirley committed suicide. Dr. Jangala testified he was “puzzled why [Mr. Shirley] took so many different things at once. I mean none of them were in particular high dose. I think he took a little bit of everything that he had in the house.” Jangala Dep. at 15. Dr. Jangala suspected that Mr. Shirley “was in a lot of pain and maybe tried one of something and it didn’t help [877]*877the pain, and he took a couple of something else and it still didn’t help the pain and decided to take a couple more of something else and still didn’t help the pain.” Jangala Dep. at 18. Dr. Reay reviewed the autopsy and toxicological findings and testified that “this would be a death that’s attributed to multiple medications and probably taken in a therapeutic setting which caused death.” Reay Dep. at 29.

¶10 Ms. Shirley filed an application for survivor benefits under the Industrial Insurance Act, RCW 51.32.050(2)(a), which the Department denied. Ms. Shirley protested, and the Department affirmed its order of denial. Ms. Shirley then appealed to the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (Board). The industrial appeals judge found that Mr. Shirley’s ingestion of alcohol simultaneously with multiple medications constituted an “independent, supervening cause which broke the causal connection between Mr. Shirley’s industrial injury and his death.” Certified Appeal Board Record (CABR) at 45. Ms. Shirley appealed to the full Board, which reversed the industrial appeals judge and allowed the claim. CABR at 2-10, 28-31. The Board reasoned that

[t]he clear preponderance of the evidence ... is that Dr. Jangala prescribed opioids for Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
288 P.3d 390, 171 Wash. App. 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-labor-industries-v-shirley-washctapp-2012.