Jillian Pang v. Air Wisconsin Airlines and Ace American Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 24, 2019
Docket1877181
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jillian Pang v. Air Wisconsin Airlines and Ace American Insurance Company (Jillian Pang v. Air Wisconsin Airlines and Ace American Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Jillian Pang v. Air Wisconsin Airlines and Ace American Insurance Company, (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Humphreys, Malveaux and Senior Judge Frank Argued at Hampton, Virginia UNPUBLISHED

JILLIAN PANG MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1877-18-1 JUDGE ROBERT P. FRANK SEPTEMBER 24, 2019 AIR WISCONSIN AIRLINES AND ACE AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

Matthew J. Weinberg (Gunther Law Group, on briefs), for appellant.

W. Thomas Chappell (Brian L. Sykes; Vandeventer Black LLP, on brief), for appellees.

Jillian Pang (“claimant”) appeals the decision of the Virginia Workers’ Compensation

Commission (“Commission”), which held that claimant did not prove that she suffered a

compensable injury or contracted an occupational disease/compensable ordinary disease of life

as a result of her employment as a flight attendant with Air Wisconsin Airlines (“employer”).

We affirm the Commission’s decision.

BACKGROUND

On appeal, this Court views the evidence in this case in the light most favorable to the

employer, the party prevailing before the Commission. See Samartino v. Fairfax Cty. Fire &

Rescue, 64 Va. App. 499, 502 (2015). On April 22, 2015, claimant flew with the captain and

first officer from Columbia, South Carolina to Norfolk, Virginia on an airplane operated by

employer. The plane was being taken to Norfolk for repairs because the warning light for the

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. service door turned on even though the door was properly sealed. The Federal Aviation

Administration (FAA) issued a special flight permit (a ferry permit) for the plane to travel to

Norfolk, and only the three crew members were onboard. Even though there were no

pressurization issues inside the aircraft, the plane was not pressurized on the flight as a safety

precaution. Two air conditioning packs supplied air to the plane during the entire flight, and the

plane did not exceed 10,000 feet in altitude.

Claimant testified at the hearing before the deputy commissioner in July 2018 that she

experienced severe headache and earache on takeoff, but the pain stopped when the plane

reached its top altitude. She also said that during the flight’s descent, she experienced

considerably worse pain in her ears and head, and the pain did not subside on landing. She said

that she had not experienced that reaction on previous flights. She admitted on

cross-examination, however, that she had been treated for anxiety and ear issues prior to April

22, 2015. Claimant subsequently sought medical treatment for multiple physical problems that

she alleged resulted from the flight, including headache, earache, jaw and neck pain, multi-level

back pain, numbness, tingling of hands and feet, chest pain, bowel and bladder dysfunction,

difficulty thinking and speaking, problems concentrating and focusing, anxiety, and depression.

Claimant received $4,238 in disability benefits through a policy employer maintained on

all employees. She filed claims for benefits from the Commission in June 2015, October 2016,

and November 2017. She alleged that she developed decompression illness after a ferry flight of

a “malfunctioned aircraft” due to an “air pressure problem of the aircraft” that caused a change in

air pressure.

Claimant testified at the hearing that the gate agent in South Carolina informed her that

the airplane had been sitting at the terminal for two weeks and that no captain was willing to fly

it because of its damage. She said that the ground staff advised the crew not to fly the plane

-2- because it was very risky and might have an accident. According to claimant, the captain told

her that there was a small air pressure problem with the aircraft and the first officer told her that

she should not scream until they landed. She said that the captain appeared nervous and afraid

when he went into the cockpit. Claimant also testified that during the flight she observed an

altitude meter reading of 11,000, which she photographed and showed to the captain, who

informed her that the aircraft was set to stop at that altitude.

Dr. Florence V. Paragas, claimant’s physician since 2009, testified that in her opinion

claimant suffered decompression syndrome and that her medical condition was related to the

incident of April 22, 2015. She opined that decompression sickness was the only explanation for

claimant’s symptoms, as “there really wasn’t any other reason [she] should be having these

pains.” However, the doctor’s notes from an office visit with claimant on October 28, 2014,

indicated that claimant’s “ongoing medical problems” were “decompression sickness,

degenerative arthritis.” The doctor examined claimant on May 27, 2015, and again on

November 7, 2016. On cross-examination, she testified that she had not reviewed any medical

records in anticipation of claimant’s diagnosis and that her belief as to the events of the flight in

question came solely from claimant.1 The doctor agreed that the accuracy of the history and

symptoms rested on claimant’s statements to her. She admitted that she was not board certified

and had no training in aviation.

Employer presented evidence that refuted claimant’s evidence. Chief Operating Officer

Robert Frisch testified that his review of the flight telemetry confirmed that the aircraft had not

exceeded 10,000 feet and in fact had flown at approximately 9,000 feet.2 He said that the

1 Dr. Paragas later stated that she reviewed all the reports from the other physicians before the hearing with the deputy commissioner. 2 The flight data report from the aircraft shows that it flew at 9,000 feet, with its highest altitude at 9,100 feet. -3- photograph of the altitude indicator taken by claimant actually did not say that the aircraft

reached 11,000 feet and that claimant was misreading the instrument. Moreover, Frisch testified

that the flight plan showed that the aircraft arrived in Columbia on the morning of April 22,

2015, and had not sat there for two weeks as contended by claimant. He stated that there were

no issues with pressurization of the aircraft other than the malfunctioning warning light for the

service door.3 He testified that even when the cabin is pressurized, the aircraft feels like it is at

8,000 feet and the April 22, 2015 flight would have felt no different from a flight at normal

altitude when the cabin is pressurized. He stated that it was very rare for lack of pressurization

to be an issue under 25,000 feet and that “there’s never been anything even remotely reported

under 18,000 feet.” He also said that neither the captain nor the first officer had indicated any

discomfort about proceeding with the flight.

Employer’s loss prevention manager, Brian Mollgaard, also testified that the

investigation of claimant’s allegations determined that the aircraft’s altitude never exceeded

10,000 feet. Employer thus concluded no compensable injury occurred and rejected the claim.

Matthew Stewart, who was the captain of the flight, testified by video deposition that

although the aircraft was not pressurized, air still came into the aircraft from air conditioning

pack units. He stated that the aircraft flew at 9,000 feet and never went above 10,000 feet. He

explained that the flight would have been like any other flight without pressurization problems

because of the low altitude. Stewart recalled no unusual circumstances, problems, or concerns

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