Irving v. Missouri State Treasurer

35 S.W.3d 441, 2000 Mo. App. LEXIS 1691, 2000 WL 1692687
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 14, 2000
DocketNo. WD 58579
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 35 S.W.3d 441 (Irving v. Missouri State Treasurer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irving v. Missouri State Treasurer, 35 S.W.3d 441, 2000 Mo. App. LEXIS 1691, 2000 WL 1692687 (Mo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

LAURA DENVIR STITH, Judge.

Jane Irving-Genovese appeals the denial of her claim against Missouri’s Second Injury Fund for death benefits under Section 287.220.5 RSMo 1991,1 of the Worker’s Compensation Act, in which she asserted that her husband’s death resulted from heart problems caused by work-related stress. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission denied her claim on the basis that she failed to meet her burden of proving her husband’s death was job-related. Because competent and substantial evidence exists on the record to support the Commission’s decision that Mr. Irving’s death did not arise out of his employment, and because the decision is not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

William Irving married Jane Irving-Ge-novese (hereinafter “Ms. Irving”) on August 17, 1971. In the late 1980s, Mr. Irving worked for the Derson Group (hereinafter “Derson”) as a “career out-placement specialist.” His job responsibilities consisted of presenting seminars to unemployed individuals to assist them in finding employment. Mr. Irving aided them in preparing their resumes and provided them with suggestions on obtaining and performing well at future job interviews. He searched for job openings for these individuals and notified them of job fairs.

Beginning in the spring of 1988, and for the following eight months, Mr. Irving’s [443]*443job responsibilities with Derson included performing out-placement counseling for 8,000 laid-off employees of Lockheed Aeronautics (hereinafter “Lockheed”) in Atlanta, Georgia. Mr. Irving traveled from his home in Kansas City, Missouri, to Atlanta each work week. He usually flew home to Kansas City on Fridays and returned to Atlanta on Sundays. Although Mr. Irving had previously counseled smaller groups of “white-collar” unemployed individuals, in Atlanta he worked with “blue-collar” employees. The record does not reveal whether Derson had other counselors based in Atlanta or whether Derson brought in other counselors from Kansas City or elsewhere, nor does it reveal the total numbers of Derson employees. It does reveal that Ms. Irving visited her husband’s workplace in Atlanta on one occasion and saw other persons similarly counseling employees, and that she assumed these persons also worked for Der-son.

Ms. Irving claims that when her husband called her in the evenings from Atlanta he sounded “worn out,” and that when he came home on the weekends, rather than relaxing he often worked. She contends that she noticed “a continuous grinding down” of her husband’s appearance and his health. Prior to 1989, Mr. Irving developed adult-onset diabetes and also took medication for high blood pressure. On a Saturday evening in early 1989, Ms. Irving saw her husband gasping for breath. On February 6, 1989, Mr. Irving called Dr. James Stoddard, M.D., complaining of this shortness of breath. Mr. Irving saw Dr. Stoddard the next day. Dr. Stoddard’s records reflect that Mr. Irving complained of anxiety and a continued shortness of breath that had lasted for two weeks. Mr. Irving’s health began to deteriorate more severely and by February 1989 he no longer could travel to Atlanta.

Due to the effects of all of his health problems, Mr. Irving underwent a cardiac catheterization on March 6, 1989. Dr. Stoddard’s records indicate that Mr. Irving was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. The records also noted that he suffered hypertension, diabetes, and hy-percholesterolemia, and that his cholesterol level was 318. By April 1989, Derson fired Mr. Irving because he could no longer travel to Atlanta. Due to his health, Mr. Irving also could no longer work. He eventually applied for Social Security and received group disability benefits. Mr. Irving’s health continued to decline, and on October 9, 1991, some 18 months after leaving Derson’s employ, he died of arte-riosclerotic heart disease.

Ms. Irving filed a worker’s compensation claim against Derson, and learned that Derson did not have insurance covering Mr. Irving. She eventually settled her claim against Derson for $5,000. Ms. Irving then filed a claim for death benefits against Respondent, the Missouri Second Injury Fund, pursuant to Section 287.220.5, which states in pertinent part:

If an employer fails to insure or self-insure as required in section 287.280, funds from the second injury fund may be withdrawn to cover the fair, reasonable, and necessary expenses to cure and relieve the effects of the injury or disability of an injured employee in the employ of an uninsured employer, funds from the second injury fund may be withdrawn to cover fair, reasonable, and necessary expenses in the manner required in sections 287.240 and 287.241.

Sec. 287.220. Ms. Irving contends that Mr. Irving’s diabetes, congestive heart failure, and uncontrolled hypertension combined with his work-related stress caused his death, and that, as Derson was an uninsured employer, the Second Injury Fund is therefore liable for death benefits under Section 287.220.

Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) R. Carl Mueller, Jr. held a hearing on Ms. Irving’s claim on October 26, 1999. Ms. Irving was the sole live witness. She testified about her husband’s job, about her "visit to his work in Atlanta, and about her [444]*444husband’s prior health problems with diabetes and high blood pressure. She discussed the deterioration in his health after he began working in Atlanta. She said she saw the connection between his decline in health, the stress caused by his job, and his reasons for quitting work after he experienced shortness of breath and underwent the cardiac catherization.

Ms. Irving also presented the deposition testimony of Dr. Rory Childers, M.D., a specialist in cardiovascular disease. Dr. Childers based his opinions about Mr. Irving’s health on medical records he reviewed after Mr. Irving’s death. Dr. Childers verified that the records he examined could be reasonably relied on by cardiologists to form opinions about a patient’s health, and testified about Mr. Irving’s heart problems. Based on these records, a deposition taken of the deceased before his death, and a review of excerpts of other physicians’ depositions, Dr. Child-ers testified, on cross-examination, and without objection, that Mr. Irving’s diabetes never appeared to be controlled in any of the blood tests taken from 1984 until his death, and that Mr. Irving’s high blood pressure also was poorly controlled. Dr. Childers concluded that prior to 1991, Mr. Irving suffered from cardiac failure as a result of inadequately controlled diabetes mellitus and hypertension, rather than as a result of his work at Derson. The Second Injury Fund relied on this testimony and did not present additional evidence.

On November 19, 1999, the ALJ issued an Award in which he denied all benefits to Ms. Irving. The ALJ found that Ms. Irving failed to establish that Derson had five employees, a prerequisite to Second Injury Fund liability under Section 287.030(3), which provides that employers “must have five or more employees to be deemed an employer for the purposes of this chapter.” The ALJ further held that Mr. Irving’s death did not arise out of the scope of his employment with Derson and that he was not acting within the course and scope of his employment at the time of his death. Ms. Irving appealed this ruling to the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission. On April 14, 2000, the Commission affirmed the ALJ’s decision. Ms. Irving now appeals to this Court.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W.3d 441, 2000 Mo. App. LEXIS 1691, 2000 WL 1692687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irving-v-missouri-state-treasurer-moctapp-2000.