Hammons v. Oklahoma Fixture Co.

2003 OK 7, 64 P.3d 1108, 74 O.B.A.J. 442, 2003 Okla. LEXIS 7, 2003 WL 231652
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 4, 2003
Docket97,262
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2003 OK 7 (Hammons v. Oklahoma Fixture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammons v. Oklahoma Fixture Co., 2003 OK 7, 64 P.3d 1108, 74 O.B.A.J. 442, 2003 Okla. LEXIS 7, 2003 WL 231652 (Okla. 2003).

Opinion

OPALA, V.C-.J.

¶ 1 The dispositive issues on certiorari are whether the Court of Civil Appeals [COCA] (1) was correct in implicitly declaring a failure of competent proof to support the panel’s order that denied claimant’s quest for permanent total disability [PTD] and (2) erred in directing that on remand benefits be awarded to the claimant (based on his evidence) without first affording the employer an opportunity to supply the COCA-found void in its medical proof. We answer both questions in the affirmative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

¶ 2 Otis Hammons (claimant) was adjudicated in 1997 permanently partially disabled from an injury to his lungs while working for Oklahoma Fixture Company (employer). 2 On claimant’s 1997 and 1999 motions to reopen the claim, the trial tribunal awarded him increased permanent partial disability [PPD] benefits. 3 In 2001 claimant pressed for PTD status. At the hearing he interposed a probative-value objection to employer’s lone medical report. The trial judge overruled claimant’s objection and denied his PTD quest. Because he found that claimant had a significant pre-existing component of lung-related impairment occasioned by smoking, the trial judge ruled claimant was not permanently totally disabled as a result of his work-related injury alone. 4 This order was adopted by a three-judge review panel. Claimant then sought corrective relief from the panel’s order. Vacating that order, COCA (a) concluded there was no competent proof to support the panel’s finding that claimant’s pre-existing impairment from smoking is so significant in its effect on the PTD status as to defeat his quest and (b) remanded the claim to the trial tribunal with directions' to enter a PTD award (to be based on claimant’s expert proof in the record).

¶ 3 On certiorari granted upon the employer’s petition, we now vacate COCA’s opinion as well as the panel’s and the trial judge’s orders and, for the reasons to be stated, remand the claim for further proceedings before the trial judge.

II

AN ORDER OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COURT WHICH RESTS ON A CRITICAL FINDING OF FACT THAT IS UNSUPPORTED BY COMPETENT EVIDENCE ADDUCED BEFORE THE TRIAL TRIBUNAL MUST BE VACATED ON REVIEW AS UNRESPONSIVE TO THE PROOF DEVELOPED IN THE COURSE OF PROCEEDINGS

A.

The Statutory Mandate

¶4 The issues to be resolved in compensation cases are ordinarily formed by *1110 the evidence, 5 as well as by the required written materials 6 . The Workers’ Compensation Court is required to make specific, on-the-record 7 findings of ultimate facts responsive to the issues shaped by the evidence upon which its order is to be rested. 8 85 O.S.Supp.2001 § 26. When an order rests on a critical fact that is unsupported by competent evidence adduced before the trial tribunal, (a) it must be vacated on review as unresponsive to the proof developed during the proceedings and (b) the claim must be remanded for proceedings that will ultimately culminate in an order which meets the law’s standards for a judicially acceptable decision. 9

B.

The Panel’s Order Cannot Stand for Want of a Crumby Finding

¶ 5 The Workers’ Compensation Court’s finding that denies the claimant a PTD status is based on the presence of preexisting conditions unrelated to the accidental harm in contest which militate against conferring a PTD award. COCA’s opinion correctly concludes there is here no competent medical evidence to support the panel’s order of PTD denial. This is so because entirely missing from the employer’s medical report is a rated assessment of the effect, if any, upon the claimant’s alleged capacity status (PTD) from the interplay of his compen-sable harm with the unrelated pre-existing conditions. 10 By “effect” we refer to that component of claimant’s total disability from pre-existing impairments which may (or may not) contribute to his current condition and which has an effect on (or does not affect) his present capacity for work. That element of the evaluation process is known in the language of the compensation bar as a Crumby finding. 11

¶ 6 The employer’s lone medical report (admitted in evidence) notes that claimant had been awarded PPD in 1997, 1998 and 2000. 12 The text then opines that claimant had sustained neither a change of condition for the worse nor any impairment “over and above” that which had been previously *1111 awarded, 13 concluding that claimant is not permanently and totally disabled (based on his age, education, training and work experience) and may return to work. 14 The report’s vice lies not in providing defective proof but rather in its utter failure of showing the extent of claimant’s prior (unrelated) disability and the compensable injury’s impact, if any, on the claimant’s prior impairments. 15 Because the panel’s decision, now on review, is based on an underlying (trial judge’s) order that lacks support in competent proof, the panel’s order cannot stand. 16

C.

COCA Erred in Directing That on Remand an Award Be Made To Claimant for PTD Benefits

¶ 7 Employer argues on certiorari that COCA’s vacation of the panel’s order and the claim’s remand with directions to award claimant PTD benefits (for want of employer’s medical evidence to support the panel-ordered denial) constitutes an impermissible “Perlinger jackpot award.” 17 Relying on the teachings of Gaines v. Sun Refinery and Marketing, 18 employer urges that, at the very least, the claim should be remanded for proceedings before the trial judge.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 OK 7, 64 P.3d 1108, 74 O.B.A.J. 442, 2003 Okla. LEXIS 7, 2003 WL 231652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammons-v-oklahoma-fixture-co-okla-2003.