Jardine v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board

163 Cal. App. 3d 1, 209 Cal. Rptr. 139, 49 Cal. Comp. Cases 787, 1984 Cal. App. LEXIS 2874
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 1984
DocketA024798
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 163 Cal. App. 3d 1 (Jardine v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jardine v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, 163 Cal. App. 3d 1, 209 Cal. Rptr. 139, 49 Cal. Comp. Cases 787, 1984 Cal. App. LEXIS 2874 (Cal. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Opinion

NEWSOM, J.

The instant petition for a writ of review to annul the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board’s (hereafter Board or WCAB) opinion and decision arises in the following factual context, which we summarize as necessary to our opinion.

On February 7, 1979, Jardine, a man of 58, sustained serious injuries 1 in the course of his employment with J & K Equipment Co., when a loader rolled over him and crushed his body. His injuries included extensive damage to the chest, abdomen and pelvis, and brain surgery was required in order to relieve pressure for a bilateral frontal subdural hematoma. In the course of his physical recuperation, he developed psychological and emotional problems.

*4 On September 12, 1979, he filed an “Application for Adjudication of Claim” against J & K Equipment. J & K’s insurance carrier, Fremont Indemnity Company (Fremont), meanwhile provided Jardine with temporary total disability benefits at the rate of $154 weekly.

But on June 1, 1981, based upon medical reports that Jardine’s condition had stabilized, Fremont reduced its payment to $70 per week. A dispute arose between the parties: was Jardine merely “permanently partially disabled”—and entitled to $70 per week—or “permanently totally disabled”— and entitled to $154 per week?

On December 8, 1981, a pretrial conference was held concerning this issue and the parties agreed upon the appointment of two “agreed medical examiners” to decide the issue: Dr. Joseph Bernstein would evaluate Jar-dine’s orthopedic disability, while Dr. Bradford Murphey would evaluate his claimed psychiatric disability.

On April 13, 1982, Dr. Bernstein released his evaluation, which concluded that Jardine was permanently totally disabled. On June 14th, Dr. Murphey’s report echoed this finding. Nonetheless, Fremont continued paying benefits of $70 weekly.

Thereafter, petitioner repeatedly demanded of Fremont Indemnity that it pay him full benefits; receiving no response, on November 10, 1982, he filed a “Declaration of Readiness to Proceed before the Board.”

On December 2, 1982, Fremont reconsidered and began paying Jardine full permanent disability benefits, and reimbursing him retroactively for the difference in payments.

In July of 1983, the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board judge issued his findings and award, concluding that petitioner had indeed sustained a full permanent disability and imposing a 10 percent penalty against Fremont, as provided by Labor Code section 5814, for the latter’s unreasonable delay in making payments.

Fremont thereupon filed a petition for reconsideration asserting error on the part of the judge in imposing the penalty, while petitioner filed a petition for reconsideration seeking multiple penalties under section 5814.

Thereafter, the Board issued its opinion and order denying petitioner’s claim and granting Fremont’s, upon the ground that the latter had acted reasonably in delaying Jardine’s benefits.

*5 The first issue before us, then, is whether substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding that Fremont’s long delay in paying Jardine total disability benefits was justified. Put slightly differently, was it reasonable to believe that between June 14th and December 2d of 1982, Jardine was only partially disabled?

Our inquiry begins with a review of the chronology of events and consideration of all relevant medical reports.

As earlier stated, Jardine’s injuries were massive: they resulted from his being crushed by a tractor. Unsurprising, then, is the conclusion of his treating physician, Dr. Silverberg, on September 14, 1979—eight months after the accident—that “unless something changes, I think he is disabled insofar as work is concerned for the rest of his life”; that, a few months later, “he still remains incapacitated for work .... I suspect . . . permanently”; that, another six months later, “I think it unlikely . . . [he] will ever be able to return to work as an operating engineer.”

At about the same time as Dr. Silverberg’s last report in August 1980, Dr. Kiernan, a psychologist, noting that Jardine had sustained multiple fractures and internal injuries as well as serious brain trauma, found residual intellectual dysfunction, depression, confusion, constant pain and continuing mental disability, sufficient to warrant a neuropsychiatric referral.

Dr. Kiernan’s comments include the information that Jardine, who had formerly functioned in the average range of intelligence, now performed none of the Wechsler Scale tests in the average range. He found that Jardine suffers from “continuing mental disability,” and “word finding difficulty,” and “feels useless because of his pain.” Included in the Kiernan report is Mrs. Jardine’s concern over her husband’s confusion and frustration, and her poignant description of having found her husband digging small holes in the garden because, he said, “he was making a place to store rocks.”

In early 1981, Jardine was examined by Fremont’s doctors for the first time.

First among these was Dr. Barnes, who, while depreciating all other of Jardine’s claims, 2 physical and emotional, concluded that, because of the brain injury, “It would probably be reasonable to consider him permanent and stationary with regard to the effects of the head injury at this point.”

*6 Dr. Denenberg’s report for Fremont is no less skeptical and indeed, no less extraordinary. After noting that Jardine was unable to walk for more than 20 minutes, and suffered from sacro-iliac arthritis and persistent diastasis of the symphysis, and that Jardine’s symptomatology “will persist without . . . surgical intervention,” Dr. Denenberg concluded that Jardine should “avoid heavy bending or lifting ... or activities which would require running or long walking.”

Dr. Detrick, also retained by Fremont, found as follows: “Mr. Jardin [ízc] is functioning significantly better than he was at his previous neuropsychological assessments (August 15, 1980). At the previous assessment he had a wide variety of behavioral deficits due to disturbed cortical functioning. The present assessment indicated that the primary area of disturbed cortical functioning is presently in the area of his memory. The present assessments showed his cognitive flexibility to be within normal limits and his capacity to do arithmetical calculations excellent. He showed no motor or sensory disturbance due to cortical dysfunction. In regard to his cognitive functioning he should be able to perform adequately insofar that [sz'c] the tasks do not rely primarily on memory. His significant level of depression should be seen as a major contributor to his lowered level of functioning in his every day life.” (Italics added.)

At this point, and based upon the combined reports of the three physicians just mentioned, on June 1, 1981, Fremont reduced Jardine’s benefits from $154 to $70 weekly. Three months later, Fremont received from Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
163 Cal. App. 3d 1, 209 Cal. Rptr. 139, 49 Cal. Comp. Cases 787, 1984 Cal. App. LEXIS 2874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jardine-v-workers-compensation-appeals-board-calctapp-1984.