Estate of Gainey v. Southern Flooring & Acoustical Co.

646 S.E.2d 604, 184 N.C. App. 497, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 1468
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 3, 2007
DocketCOA06-785
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 646 S.E.2d 604 (Estate of Gainey v. Southern Flooring & Acoustical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Gainey v. Southern Flooring & Acoustical Co., 646 S.E.2d 604, 184 N.C. App. 497, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 1468 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

STROUD, Judge.

Defendants appeal from the Opinion and Award of the Industrial Commission filed on 2 March 2006, which granted workers’ compensation benefits and attorney’s fees to plaintiff’s estate for permanent and total disability due to asbestosis. We affirm.

I. Factual Background

Plaintiff testified under oath as follows: He began work for defendant-employer in 1969 as a field installer, which primarily involved the installation of asbestos tiles in ceilings. He later became a superintendent for approximately three to four years, worked as a salesman, and was a part owner for the last four or five years of his employment with Southern Flooring and Acoustical Co., Inc. (“Southern Flooring”). Plaintiff retired from his position with defendant-employer in 1983 and started his own company, Gainey Acoustical.

As owner of Gainey Acoustical, plaintiff’s primary duty was soliciting contractors in order to procure orders for his company. He retired from Gainey Acoustical in November 1995, because he “just got tired and didn’t want to work.” He was having breathing problems at the time of his retirement, although he admitted that no doctor ever advised him to stop working. Plaintiff alone made the decision to retire because it was what he wanted to do. In addition, plaintiff’s interrogatory answers state that his “retirement was in no way related to any medical problem. Plaintiff was age 60 in 1995 and decided it was time to retire.” Plaintiff testified that at the time of the 30 November 2000 hearing he was having difficulty breathing, and that he “gave out” when climbing steps or walking. He also testified *499 that he continued to play golf, could walk a mile on level ground and had been walking for exercise for approximately ten years. Plaintiff testified that he was first diagnosed with asbestosis “five or six years” before the 30 November 2000 hearing.

Additional record evidence was offered by physicians who treated plaintiff. Dr. Robert A. Rostand was the panel physician appointed by the North Carolina Industrial Commission to examiné plaintiff. Dr. Rostand testified that plaintiff had asbestosis. A letter written by Dr. Rostand on 3 December 1999 stated that plaintiff had “classic asbestos related, disease,” proximately caused by “occupational exposure to asbestos while employed by Southern Flooring and Acoustical,” and that plaintiff was “not anticipated [to] return to gainful employment.” However, the letter stated that Dr. Rostand was “unable to date the onset of [plaintiffs] pulmonary problem.”

Furthermore, the record includes deposition testimony from Drs. Frederick U. Vorwald and Sever Surdulescu. Dr. Vorwald testified that plaintiff had asbestosis, and that plaintiff was “physically disabled from gainful employment.” Dr. Surdulescu testified that “it would be very difficult, if not impossible [for plaintiff] to do any job that require [d] any amount of physical activity” and that he recommended plaintiff use oxygen whenever he walked. Plaintiff died on 9 May 2005.

II. Procedural History

On 8 April 1999, plaintiff filed Form 18B with the Industrial Commission, seeking benefits for an occupational disease resulting from exposure to asbestos during his employment with defendant Southern Flooring, where he was employed from 1969 to April, 1983. Defendants denied that plaintiff was entitled to benefits, contending that he did “not have a compensable occupational disease, and that he was not last injuriously exposed to the hazards of any such disease while employed by defendant-employer.” The claim was initially heard before Deputy Commissioner W. Bain Jones on 30 November 2000. By an Opinion and Award filed on 30 March 2001 (“2001 Opinion and Award”), the deputy commissioner concluded that “plaintiff [had] failed to prove by the greater weight of the evidence that he [had] contracted asbestosis as a result of his employment with defendant-employer,” and his claim was therefore denied.

Plaintiff appealed the 2001 Opinion and Award to the Full Commission. The Full Commission reviewed plaintiff’s claim on 12 March 2003. On 2 September 2003, the Commission reversed the 2001 *500 Opinion and Award and entered an Opinion and Award (“2003 Opinion and Award”) which concluded that “plaintiff was last injuriously exposed to asbestos during his employment with Southern Flooring and that plaintiff had contracted asbestosis as a result of that exposure.” The Commission concluded that plaintiff was entitled to medical compensation as a result of his asbestosis and remanded the matter to a deputy commissioner for immediate hearing and Opinion and Award regarding the disability of plaintiff as a result of his asbestosis.

On 22 September 2004, plaintiffs claim as to disability was heard by Deputy Commissioner George T. Glenn, II, upon remand by the Full Commission. At the 2004 hearing no additional lay testimony was offered, and the only new evidence presented was the deposition testimony of plaintiff’s treating physicians, Dr. Sever Surdulescu and Dr. Frederick Vorwald. After the hearing, Deputy Commissioner Glenn entered an Opinion and Award on 16 June 2005 (“2005 Opinion and Award”) which concluded that plaintiff had been totally disabled since January 1995 and that he was entitled to compensation from that date forward at the rate of $481.24 per week. On 28 June 2005, defendants filed notice of appeal to the Full Commission from the 2005 Opinion and Award.

The Full Commission reviewed plaintiff’s claim on 8 November 2005. In its Opinion and Award filed 2 March 2006 (“2006 Opinion and Award”), the Commission found that (1) plaintiff had received medical treatment for asbestosis-related problems; (2) plaintiff suffered from breathing problems as a result of asbestosis; (3) plaintiff had suffered from asbestosis as a result of his employment with defendant-employer and the disease had rendered him unable to perform gainful employment since 3 December 1999; (4) plaintiff’s breathing problems severely impaired his daily activities; (5) as a result of asbestosis, it was difficult, if not impossible, for plaintiff to do any job that required any amount of physical activity; and (6) plaintiff stopped working in 1995 as a result of his disease and plaintiff’s asbestos-related condition continued to deteriorate until his death. The Commission concluded that as a result of his asbestosis, plaintiff was entitled to permanent and total disability compensation at the weekly rate of $481.24 from 3 December 1999, the date of the panel examination by Dr. Rostand, through the date of his death, 9 May 2005. Defendants were ordered to pay the compensation awarded to plaintiff’s estate in a lump sum, along with attorney’s fees in the amount of 25% of the compensation awarded. Defendants filed notice *501 of appeal to this Court from the 2006 Opinion and Award. On appeal, defendants assign error to two findings of fact in the 2006 Opinion and Award 1 and to the conclusion of law and the award of the 2006 Opinion and Award.

III. Findings of Fact

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Bluebook (online)
646 S.E.2d 604, 184 N.C. App. 497, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 1468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-gainey-v-southern-flooring-acoustical-co-ncctapp-2007.