House v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board

634 A.2d 592, 535 Pa. 135, 1993 Pa. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 4, 1993
Docket34 E.D. Appeal Docket 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by259 cases

This text of 634 A.2d 592 (House v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
House v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board, 634 A.2d 592, 535 Pa. 135, 1993 Pa. LEXIS 264 (Pa. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

ZAPPALA, Justice.

Laura Reedy was employed as a nursing assistant by Inglis House, a home for persons with physical disabilities. On January 3, 1987, she fell from a chair while on duty. Shortly thereafter she began experiencing back pain. She continued working until the end of her shift and the next day she sought medical attention.

*137 Inglis House denied Workmen’s Compensation Benefits and Reedy filed a Claim Petition on January 16, 1987. The referee held a hearing on August 12, 1987, at which the claimant testified. On February 4, 1988, the referee received the deposition testimony of the claimant’s medical expert. On December 8, 1988, he received the deposition testimony of the employer’s medical expert and the record was closed. At the employer’s request, however, the record was reopened on February 23, 1989, and a further hearing was held on March 22, 1989. At this hearing, the employer presented evidence that the claimant had been employed from October 17, 1988, until March 11, 1989, and the claimant testified in response.

The referee issued his decision on June 2, 1989. The claimant was awarded total disability benefits from January 3, 1987. the date of the injury, through October 16, 1988, and partial benefits thereafter, the total benefits being reduced by the amount of earnings from the job commenced October 17, 1988. The referee determined that total benefits should not resume as of the date this employment ceased, however, based on a finding that the claimant had voluntarily abandoned this job.

The Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board sustained the claimant’s appeal and reinstated total benefits as of March 12, 1989. The Board’s rationale was that

[tjhere is no medical evidence in this record which would establish anything other than the Claimant was either totally disabled or completely recovered from the work injury.... [T]he Referee accepted medical evidence indicating the Claimant was totally disabled. It was therefore error on the Referee’s part to modify compensation to partial disability other than for the period of time the Claimant actually worked. The Claimant testified she could no longer perform the alternative employment. There is no medical evidence accepted by the Referee indicating to the contra [sic]. (Emphasis in original.)

Commonwealth Court affirmed. After restating the Board’s conclusion that the referee’s findings did not support a deter *138 mination of partial disability after March 11, 1989, the court stated

Once a Claimant discharges the burden of proving that because of his injury he is unable to do the type of work he was engaged in when injured, the employer has the burden of proving that other work is available to the claimant which he is capable of obtaining. Kachinski v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Vepco Construction Co.), 516 Pa. 240, 532 A.2d 374 (1987). An employer seeking to prove that a claimant’s earning power has increased must produce evidence of a referral (or referrals) to a then open job which fits in the occupational category for which claimant has received medical clearance. Id. at 252, 532 A.2d at 380.

Opinion at 599. The court then concluded that “[t]he mere fact that Claimant was employed ... for a few months neither supports the conclusion that such an opportunity is available to her now, nor that she received medical clearance for the position.” Id. at 599. We granted the employer’s petition for allowance of appeal to consider the application of the Kachinski rule in circumstances such as these 530 Pa. 636, 606 A.2d 904.

The appellant points out that the litigation in Kachinski developed out of an employer’s petition to modify compensation payments, whereas the present case involves an employee’s initial claim for benefits. In a modification proceeding, the employer bears the burden of proof, and Kachinski did no more than delineate the elements of that burden and the nature of the evidence necessary to meet it. In proceedings on a claim petition, the employee bears the burden of proof, and thus Kachinski is inapposite. It makes no sense, argues the appellant, to state that the employer “has the burden of proving that other work is available to the claimant which he is capable of obtaining” or “must produce evidence of a referral (or referrals) to a then open job which fits in the occupational category for which claimant has received medical clearance,” at a stage of the proceedings where the employee has the ultimate burden of proof and the employer is arguing that the employee is not entitled to any benefits.

*139 The appellee responds by asserting that she met the burden of establishing entitlement to benefits by proving her inability to do the job she held at the time of the injury. As a result, she argues, the Board and Commonwealth Court properly ruled that the burden shifted to the employer to show both change in her disability and availability of work she was capable of doing, and that there was no evidence in the record to substantiate such findings.

The confusion in this case stems, in large part, from the duration of the proceedings. The injury occurred on January 3, 1987, and the claim petition was filed two weeks later. It was seven months before the claimant testified, and the deposition testimony of her physician/expert was not introduced until six months after that. The next scheduled hearing five months later was continued, and five more months passed before the deposition testimony of the employer’s physician/expert was introduced. At this point, nearly two years had elapsed from the date of the injury. To this point, the only question was whether the claimant had sustained a compensable injury; the medical testimony, based on examinations conducted on or before June 10, 1987, was directed to this question. Had the referee made a decision awarding benefits based on his assessment of this evidence, the employer would have been required to meet the Kachinski burden in any later proceeding to modify benefits.

The case had still not been decided in January of 1989, however, when the employer requested that the record be reopened and made an offer of proof based on information that had come to its attention that the claimant had been engaged in full-time employment. At the hearing on March 22, 1989, the claimant acknowledged that she had worked full time from October 17, 1988 to March 11, 1989. She testified that she had done so despite continuing pain in her back, and that she had quit because her knees and back were bothering her more than when she had started. Her supervisor testified that the claimant had never appeared to be in pain, had never advised anyone that she was having difficulties in performing *140 her duties on account of pain, and had simply not shown up for work on March 11, for which she was terminated. 1

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Bluebook (online)
634 A.2d 592, 535 Pa. 135, 1993 Pa. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/house-v-workmens-compensation-appeal-board-pa-1993.