Finch v. Stayton Canning Co.

761 P.2d 544, 93 Or. App. 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 14, 1988
DocketWCB Nos. 83-03809, 85-00155 and 85-13714 CA A42313
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 761 P.2d 544 (Finch v. Stayton Canning Co.) 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
Finch v. Stayton Canning Co., 761 P.2d 544, 93 Or. App. 168 (Or. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

*170 NEWMAN, J.

Claimant seeks review of a Workers’ Compensation Board order which affirmed the referee’s order upholding the denials of compensability and refusing penalties for late denial by Tom’s Auto Body (Tom’s). The Board did not reach the issue of responsibility. We review de novo, hold the claim compensable and reverse and remand to the Board with instructions to determine the issues of responsibility and penalties.

For 13 days in November, 1982, claimant worked at Stayton Canning Company (Stayton) as a seasonal employe peeling onions. After a few days of work, she developed a continuing pain at the base of her left wrist. She did not report the condition to her supervisor or seek medical attention then.

In December, 1982, claimant began to work at Dave’s U.S. Gas (Dave’s) as a service station attendant. Her left wrist pain continued, although it did not worsen. On February 1, 1983, claimant consulted Dr. Ellison, who noted that “[s]he may have a little ulnar nerve irritation,” and encouraged her to continue with normal activities, including work. Claimant filed a workers’ compensation claim against Stayton, which it denied.

Claimant continued to work for Dave’s until July, 1983. For a short time thereafter, she did light clerical work at a feed store in California. She returned to Oregon and, in November, 1983, she began to work for Tom’s, sanding and masking cars. Claimant continued to experience pain and returned to Ellison in December, 1983. He ordered electrical studies, which revealed some medial entrapment of the wrist. In January, 1984, he diagnosed her condition as left carpal tunnel syndrome. He felt that her condition was medically stationary and not disabling and did not recommend surgical treatment.

In October, 1984, claimant filed a compensation claim against Dave’s. At its request, Dr. Steele examined claimant in November, 1984. He diagnosed mild carpal tunnel syndrome but stated that it was medically stationary. He noted that the symptoms would probably recur if she “goes back to doing vigorous work with her left hand and wrist.” He did not believe that claimant’s work at Dave’s contributed to *171 her condition, which he believed was precipitated by her job peeling onions at Stayton. Dave’s denied the claim.

The referee consolidated the claims against Stayton and Dave’s and held an initial hearing in June, 1985. At the employers’ request, the referee continued the hearing for further evidence, principally to depose Ellison. Claimant then filed a claim against Tom’s in July, 1985. Tom’s denied it on December 17, 1985. At Tom’s request, Dr. Nathan examined claimant. He also diagnosed mild carpal tunnel syndrome. He did not recommend surgery. He concluded that claimant’s condition was idiopathic and that the work actvities had not aggravated it.

The referee consolidated all three claims and reopened the hearing in February, 1986, to determine compensability. He held that claimant’s carpal tunnel syndrome was work-related but not compensable, because claimant had not yet lost time from work or required medical treatment other than diagnostic services. He did not reach the responsibility issue. He also held that, because no compensation was due, Tom’s owed no penalties for late denial. Ellison’s deposition was introduced into the record. The referee wrote:

“I accept as true the testimony of Dr. Ellison that carpal tunnel syndrome is in itself merely a group of symptoms. The symptoms themselves are the disease, and without the symptoms there is no disease. * * * It is Dr. Ellison’s opinion, with which I agree, that each symptomatic exposure permanently worsens the ability of the median nerve to get through the carpal tunnel unobstructed.
“It is Dr. Ellison’s opinion, with which I agree, that initially, the symptoms started at Stayton Canning and therefore the disease started with work exposure at Stayton Canning. The symptoms increased at Dave’s US Gas and therefore the disease worsened on a permanent basis, with the activity at Dave’s US Gas. The symptoms further increased with the work exposure at Tom’s Auto Body and thereby permanently worsened with the activity at Tom’s Auto Body.
“Even with those findings, I do not believe that the claimant has shown a compensable disease. There will be no compensable carpal tunnel disease until such time as the claimant’s work activities (or off the job activites) cause the claimant’s condition to worsen to the point where she should *172 be taken off work or where surgery would be advisable. This has not yet happened.
<<* * * * *
“In order for this to be a ‘compensable injury’ it must require medical services.
“While diagnostic services which are necessitated because of conditions which arise on the job * * * are medical services, all it does is entitle the claimant to have the diagnosis paid for by the employer.
£<* * * * *
“[T]he only thing claimant is entitled to is payment for diagnostic services. There is no indication these services were not paid for by the various employers.”

Claimant assigns as error that the Board affirmed the referee’s ruling on compensability and penalties. She argues that, because she had shown that she had a work-related condition requiring medical services — either diagnostic or for treatment — she established a compensable claim. All three employers respond that claimant failed to prove the compensability of her claim, because it required no medical treatment and, therefore, presented only the “potential for a claim.” Dave’s and Stayton, relying on Nathan’s opinion, also contend that claimant failed to prove that her carpal tunnel syndrome arose out of her employment. None of employers dispute the ruling of the referee that the symptoms are the disease.

We agree with the Board that the medical evidence in this record — and it is principally Ellison’s extensive testimony — establishes that claimant’s carpal tunnel syndrome was an occupational disease that her work at Stayton caused and that her employment both at Dave’s and Tom’s permanently worsened. We also find that her work was the major contributing cause of her disease. This case is unlike AMFAC, Inc. v. Ingram, 72 Or App 168, 694 P2d 1005 (1985), where the parties did not agree that the symptoms were the disease and the preponderance of the medical evidence established that the claimant had a pre-existing, asymptomatic carpal tunnel disease and that her work did not cause a worsening of that underlying condition.

*173 The board erred, however, when it held that claimant’s occupational disease was not a compensable claim because it required only diagnostic medical services. Former ORS 656.005

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
761 P.2d 544, 93 Or. App. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finch-v-stayton-canning-co-orctapp-1988.