Indiana State Police v. Wiessing

836 N.E.2d 1038, 2005 Ind. App. LEXIS 2128, 2005 WL 3005784
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 2005
Docket93A02-0412-EX-1010
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 836 N.E.2d 1038 (Indiana State Police v. Wiessing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana State Police v. Wiessing, 836 N.E.2d 1038, 2005 Ind. App. LEXIS 2128, 2005 WL 3005784 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

MAY, Judge.

The Indiana State Police ("the Police") appeal a decision of the Full Worker's Compensation Board ("the Board") awarding benefits to the descendants of James Wiessing ("the Descendants"). The Police raise three issues, which we consolidate and restate as:

1. Whether the Board erred when it found Wiessing's suicide by gunshot wound to the head was compensable in light of Ind.Code § 22-8-2-8; and

2. Whether the Descendants' application for adjustment of claim was timely filed.

We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Wiessing was a trooper with the Indiana State Police. During a routine traffic stop on April 16, 1994, a motorist attempted to take Wiessing's gun. A struggle ensued, and Wiessing shot and killed the motorist.

On October 10, 2000, Wiessing died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. Wiessing had two sons, who lived in Missouri with their mother, Wiessing's ex-wife. On May 23, 2001, the Descendants filed an application for adjustment of claim with the Board, requesting death and burial benefits for Wiessing. The Police asserted as an affirmative defense that Wiessing's injury was knowingly self-inflicted.

A single member of the Board first heard the case. After the hearing, the Single Hearing Member denied the Descendants' claim in an order that provided:

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

1. Although Plaintiff's decedent, Indiana State Police Trooper James A. Wiessing, appears to have sustained personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment with Defendant, the injury so sustained was that of post-traumatic stress disorder, diagnosed June 15, 1995.
2. The May 23, 2001 Application for Adjustment of Claim was not timely filed, thereby depriving the Board of jurisdiction over said accidental injury.
3. Even were the Board to have jurisdiction over this matter, the Single Hearing Member finds that Trooper Wiessing's October 10, 2000 suicide was not a proximate result of the April 16, 1994 incident.
4. Although the Board does not need to reach the issue of whether the claim would be barred because the final injury was knowingly self-inflicted, the Single Hearing Member finds that this would not defeat the present claim were it compensable.
5. The Single Hearing Member finds that were this claim to have been deemed compensable, the receipt of the State Police pension death benefits would not serve as a bar to recovery under the Worker's Compensation Act. Instead, said pension death benefit payments would constitute a credit in favor of Defendant.

{Appellant's App. at 279.)

The Descendants appealed to the Board. The Board reviewed the evidence, heard argument from the parties, and then entered an order that provided in pertinent part:

*1042 It is further found that the Full Worker's Compensation Board by a majority of its members reverses the Single Hearing Member's decision and replaces it with the following Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Award:
FINDINGS OF FACT
1. On April 16, 1994 James A. Wiessing was performing his duties as a State Police trooper when he encountered an , individual driving erratically. Trooper Wiessing turned his vehicle around to pursue the individual and did so at a high rate of speed. During the traffic stop that followed, a struggle ensued during which the detainee gained control of Trooper Wiessing's gun. After Trooper Wiessing regained control of the gun he perceived that the struggling detainee was lunging for his weapon and he shot the man in the mouth killing him instantly.
Evidence was presented at hearing that the foregoing event precipitated a dramatic change in Trooper Wiess-ing's personality. In fact, on June 15, 1995, John F. Ireland, Ph.D., diagnosed Trooper Wiessing as suffering from chronic post-traumatic stress disorder. Dr. Ireland would later report that the PTSD symptoms and depression occurred in response to the April 16, 1994 event through a perceived risk of dying as well as the shooting and killing of the detainee.
During 1996 Trooper Wiessing initiated divorcee proceedings from his wife of nearly thirteen (18) years following an extramarital affair he had with a nineteen (19) year old woman.
In 1997 Trooper Wiessing appears to have come close to committing suicide. He phoned his ex-wife, telling her to tell his sons that he loved them and ended the conversation. After Trooper Wiessing's ex-wife notified his supervisors of the potential problem, Trooper Wiessing was ultimately located on a rural road with his gun unholstered and wish [sic] a disheveled appearance. His responding colleagues were able to sufficiently diffuse [sic] the apparent situation to the point they felt they could return him to his home that evening.
In 1998, Trooper Wiessing's ex-wife remarried and moved to Missouri, taking their two sons with her. Up until that time, Trooper Wiessing had been seeing his sons on a daily basis. Thereafter, however, he was only able to see them infrequently due to the distance and, in the beginning, the unavailability of a vehicle other than his duty vehicle.
During 1999 and the early part of 2000, Trooper Wiessing was assigned to duty on a casino riverboat. This was not voluntary service for Trooper Wiessing; instead, he received the assignment through use of a lottery system. While working at the casino, Trooper Wiessing appears to have met Tina O'Neil. Although Mrs. O'Neil was married, she and Trooper Wiessing began having an affair.
The evidence established that his behavior, that of extramarital affairs, is completely at odds with his prior behavior as a husband and father. Dr. Hale appropriately associates this as maladjustment consistent with the PTSD symptomatology.
In May or June of 2000 Trooper Wiessing transferred back from the casino riverboat duty to road patrol. *1043 Since he had recently purchased a home in Evansville, his road patrol duty was going to be transferred from Posey County to Vanderburgh County.
The testimony of Gregg R. Wagner, a sergeant with the Indiana State Police Post where Trooper Wiessing was stationed, revealed that the final two to three weeks of Trooper Wiessing's life visited a great deal of stress on Trooper Wiessing. Sgt. Wagner testified that when he became aware that Trooper Wiessing had called in sick on September 20, had two days off, then called in sick again on September 28, he felt he needed to go to his home to check on him. At that time, Trooper Wiess-ing reported being emotionally sick rather than physically sick.
10. As a result of the maladjustment behavior, Trooper Wiessing had problems develop in his personal relationships.

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836 N.E.2d 1038, 2005 Ind. App. LEXIS 2128, 2005 WL 3005784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-state-police-v-wiessing-indctapp-2005.