Dibrito v. Adult & Family Services

942 P.2d 865, 149 Or. App. 323, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1036
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 23, 1997
Docket91-13969; CA A89201
StatusPublished

This text of 942 P.2d 865 (Dibrito v. Adult & Family Services) 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
Dibrito v. Adult & Family Services, 942 P.2d 865, 149 Or. App. 323, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1036 (Or. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

EDMONDS, J.

Claimant seeks review of a Workers’ Compensation Board order that denied her injury claim. We review for substantial evidence, ORS 183.482(8)(c), and affirm.

This case has a lengthy history. We take our facts from the Supreme Court’s description in Dibrito v. SAIF, 319 Or 244, 246-49, 876 P2d 459 (1994).

“Claimant was a caseworker for Adult and Family Services. She suffered from preexisting colitis and a preexisting personality disorder. Because of health problems, claimant sought to reduce her daily work hours by half and to take the remaining half as leave without pay. Claimant became upset during a meeting with her supervisor on May 14, 1991, during which she was informed that she would not be able to retain her status as a full-time employee if her request to work part-time were granted. Claimant experienced an episode of colitis requiring medical treatment and experienced psychological symptoms.
“Claimant filed a workers’ compensation claim for her physical and mental conditions, which her employer’s insurer, SAIF Corporation (SAIF), denied. After a hearing, the referee concluded that claimant had suffered a compen-sable accidental injury under ORS 656.702 * * *.
“SAIF appealed to the Workers’ Compensation Board (Board). * * * On review of the record, the Board determined that ‘claimant’s psychological condition was due, in major part, to factors other than work conditions’ and that, ‘[accordingly, neither claimant’s mental condition nor her physical symptoms resulting from on-the-job stress are compensable.’
“Claimant sought judicial review in the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the Board’s order without opinion. DiBrito v. SAIF, 124 Or App 680, 865 P2d 1341 (1993). * * *
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“Claimant sought compensation for both her colitis and her personality disorder. She alleged that those disabilities were caused by the stress of the May 14, 1991, meeting at work. The Board found that claimant’s preexisting personality disorder was ‘unaffected by the stress at work’ and [326]*326that ‘the primary cause or major contributing cause of claimant’s personality disorder, which [was] diagnosed in August 1991, was claimant’s relationship with her mother and her inability to resolve her feelings after her mother died.’ The Board concluded that ‘claimant’s psychological condition was due, in major part, to factors other than work conditions’ and that claimant failed to prove ‘that her psychological condition arose out of and in the course of her employment.’ Substantial evidence supports the Board’s findings relating to claimant’s mental disorder. Given those findings, the Board was entitled to hold that claimant’s mental disorder was not compensable under ORS 656.802.
“The Board erred, however, in not analyzing separately, under ORS 656.005(7), claimant’s episode of colitis, alleged to have been caused by the stress of the May 14,1991, meeting at work. Claimant is entitled to the Board’s review of that portion of her claim under the standards that apply to injuries.” (Footnotes and citations omitted.)

On remand, the Board undertook to determine whether claimant’s colitis condition, alleged to have been caused by the stress of the May 14 meeting, was a compen-sable injury under ORS 656.005(7)(a). The Board adopted the administrative law judge’s (AU) findings that “claimant left the meeting sobbing uncontrollably, she lost control of her bowels, she went home, went to Dr. Marx and obtained a full-time release from work and went home. She was eventually admitted to the hospital for recurrent colitis and dehydration.” However, it rejected the ALJ’s ultimate finding that the events during the May 4, 1991, meeting were not generally inherent in every work environment and were not connected with a reasonable, corrective on-job performance evaluation. In its analysis, the Board noted:

“Here the medical evidence shows that prior to claimant’s May 14, 1991, episode of colitis, claimant had a longstanding history of abdominal distress, ‘including acute and chronic colitis.’ Furthermore, claimant’s treating physician, Dr. Marx, opined that the stress of the work meeting on that day made claimant’s preexisting colitis symptomatic.
(tifc * * * tfc
“Because claimant has had an extensive history of abdominal disease and a preexisting colitis condition, we [327]*327find that causation of claimant’s resultant condition is a complex medical question, the resolution of which turns on the medical evidence. [Citations omitted.] We rely on those medical opinions which are well reasoned and based on accurate and complete histories.”

There are several medical reports that discuss claimant’s resultant condition. Dr. Marx, claimant’s treating physician, reported that the stress of the May 1991 work meeting made claimant’s preexisting colitis symptomatic. He also concluded that claimant’s need for treatment and disability was in major part caused by the stress she suffered at work.

Dr. Herbert, who reviewed the medical records on behalf of SAIF, was doubtful that claimant had experienced a recurrence of colitis. His opinion was based on a nonspecific gastritis revealed by a gastroscopy and a normal barium enema. Because no documentation regarding claimant’s condition was obtained, Herbert supported a diagnosis of irritable bowel syndrome. He opined that the “usual cause” of worsening symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome was stress. However, whether the work environment was responsible for claimant’s condition was a determination that Herbert believed would “perhaps be made by the psychiatrist who will be seeing [claimant].”

Dr. Thompson, the psychiatrist who examined claimant, stated that the cause of claimant’s physical symptoms was in question. Thompson found that claimant had a preexisting “personality disorder mixed with dependent and compulsive traits” and “that the stress at work probably didn’t have any particular effect on the personality disorder.” When asked to assume that claimant had an irritable bowel syndrome and whether he felt that the May work incident was “the major cause of her problem” and the reason for her subsequent hospitalization, Thompson replied, “No.” He explained that claimant’s case was more complicated than merely making a temporal connection between the meeting and the onset of the condition. He suggested that claimant could have been stressed from her job but that her symptoms also could have come about because of either her faulty perceptions or as the result of preexisting “neurotic problems.”1

[328]*328The Board concluded:

“Claimant has failed to show that the May 1991 injury (the work meeting) is and remains the major cause of her resultant abdominal/colitis condition.”

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Related

Younger v. City of Portland
752 P.2d 262 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1988)
Garcia v. Boise Cascade Corp.
787 P.2d 884 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1990)
Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp. v. Verner
911 P.2d 948 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1996)
DiBrito v. SAIF Corp.
875 P.2d 459 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
942 P.2d 865, 149 Or. App. 323, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dibrito-v-adult-family-services-orctapp-1997.