Estate of Jenkins v. Recchi America

658 So. 2d 157, 1995 Fla. App. LEXIS 7720, 1995 WL 421120
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 19, 1995
Docket93-3812
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 658 So. 2d 157 (Estate of Jenkins v. Recchi America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Jenkins v. Recchi America, 658 So. 2d 157, 1995 Fla. App. LEXIS 7720, 1995 WL 421120 (Fla. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

658 So.2d 157 (1995)

ESTATE OF Gordon JENKINS, Deceased, Appellant,
v.
RECCHI AMERICA and Alexsis, Appellee.

No. 93-3812.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

July 19, 1995.
Rehearing Denied August 22, 1995.

*158 Brian D. Guralnick of David G. Eaton, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Robert L. Teitler of Walton, Lantaff, Schroeder & Carson, Miami, for appellees.

VAN NORTWICK, Judge.

The estate of Gordon Jenkins appeals an order of the judge of compensation claims (JCC) which determined that Gordon Jenkins' death by suicide was not compensable under the workers' compensation laws. After a thorough review of the record, we conclude that, in determining that Jenkins' estate failed to present sufficient evidence of causation between the employment injury and the suicide, the JCC erred in applying the incorrect legal standard to the causation testimony of the medical experts. As a result, the medical evidence upon which the JCC relied is not competent to support the conclusion reached. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

Gordon Jenkins and his wife, Inez, were married for almost 40 years. She characterized her husband as a healthy, well-built, intelligent, happy and loving man. He had no prior psychiatric problems. After retiring from one job, he began working for the employer as a bulldozer operator. He was injured on August 28, 1991, when the bulldozer he was operating flipped over, causing him to fall backwards onto the ground. He fractured the L-1 vertebrae, cracked three ribs, struck and injured his head, herniated the L-2/3 disk, and suffered mild bulging of the L-3/4 and L-5/S-1 disks.

Dr. Friend, Jenkins' treating neurologist, diagnosed a closed head injury, possible concussion, and organic brain syndrome manifested by difficulty in concentration, increased anxiety and visual blurring of an unknown etiology. After the accident, Jenkins suffered from constipation, loss of weight, hot flashes, nervousness and anxiety, blurred vision, loss of ability to concentrate, memory fluctuations and daily pain in his lower back for which he wore a plastic brace at all times, except at bedtime. His brace was positioned under his chin and around his neck and continued all the way down his entire back and chest to his pelvis.

On the afternoon of November 17, 1991, Inez Jenkins, a realtor, was conducting an open house across the street from the Jenkins' home. Her husband walked with her to the open house. After greeting the owner of the house, he went home to watch a football game. Later, he returned briefly to give his wife a telephone message. A little after 4:00 PM, Inez returned home to find her husband, dead from a gunshot wound to the head.

Inez Jenkins filed a claim for spousal death benefits. In his order denying the claim, the JCC stated the relevant inquiry as follows:

I was requested to make a determination as to whether or not the claimant's suicide was compensable under the Florida Workers' Compensation Law. In order for a suicide to be compensable under the Florida Workers' Compensation Statute, the claimant's estate would need to prove that the claimant's suicide was not willful. Pursuant to § 440.09(3) Florida Statute (1990), no compensation shall be payable to an employee if the injury was caused by the willful intention to injure or kill himself ... There are exceptions to § 440.09(3) that would allow for a suicide to be found compensable. An intent to injure or to kill oneself is not "willful" for purposes of § 440.09(3) where the initial work related injury and its consequences cause the employee "to become devoid of normal judgment and dominated by a disturbance of mind so as to dethrone his reason and destroy his will."

(Citation omitted).

The JCC's order quotes language from the opinion of the Supreme Court of Florida in Whitehead v. Keene Roofing Co., 43 So.2d 464 (Fla. 1949), interpreting when an employee has "the willful intention ... to injure or kill himself ..." under section 440.09(3), Florida Statutes. In Whitehead, the employee fell from a roof on which he was working *159 and sustained serious bodily injuries resulting in severe pain. Prior to the accident, the employee had been a good-natured man, but subsequent to it, he became morose and ill-humored. A little more than three months after the accident, he swallowed a mixture of potash and lye from which he died four days later. The lower court denied compensability on the grounds that the decedent was aware of what he was doing at the time he took the poison and of the consequences of his act and that his mental condition was such that he had the willful intention to take his own life, and therefore compensability was precluded under section 440.09(3). The Supreme Court disagreed, stating:

[W]e are not persuaded that the fact that a workman knew that he was inflicting upon himself a mortal wound will, in all cases, amount to a "willful intention" to kill himself, within the meaning of the statute. We believe that in those cases where the injuries suffered by the deceased result in his becoming devoid of normal judgment and dominated by a disturbance of mind directly caused by his injury and its consequences, his suicide cannot be considered "willful" within the meaning and intent of the Act.

Id. at 465 (emphasis theirs).

With this language, the Whitehead court rejected the line of cases from other jurisdictions[1] which treated the act of suicide as an independent intervening cause of the death. The court stated:

There is no force to the argument, propounded by some courts, that the act of suicide is an independent intervening cause of the death of the workman, thus breaking the chain of causation from the injury to the death of the deceased. While it may be an independent intervening cause in some cases, it is certainly not so in those cases where the incontrovertible evidence shows that, without the injury, there would have been no suicide; that the suicide was merely an act intervening between the injury and the death, and part of an unbroken chain of events from the injury to the death, and not a cause intervening between the injury and death.

The line of cases rejected in Whitehead impose a greater burden on a claimant by requiring that, for a suicide not to be found to be an independent intervening cause it must result from an uncontrollable impulse, delirium or frenzy, without knowledge of the physical consequences of the act. Under Whitehead, however, the court held that for suicide not to be considered a willful act of the employee, the work-related injury "... must cause the employee to become devoid of normal judgment and dominated by a disturbance of mind resulting in the act of suicide." Id. at 465. In other words, the deceased's suicide act is not willful when the act is caused by a disturbance of mind which, in turn, is caused by the employment injury.

Thus, in Florida, compensability turns not on "the fact that a workman knew that he was inflicting upon himself a mortal wound," id. (emphasis theirs), or that he was governed by an uncontrollable impulse at the time of the suicide, but rather on the existence of "an unbroken chain of events from the injury [to the mental disturbance] to the death." Id. This legal test follows the majority rule in United States jurisdictions and is generally known as the "chain of causation" *160 test. 1A A. Larson, The Law of Workmen's Compensation § 36.30 (1993).

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Bluebook (online)
658 So. 2d 157, 1995 Fla. App. LEXIS 7720, 1995 WL 421120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-jenkins-v-recchi-america-fladistctapp-1995.