Lanes v. Montana State Fund

2008 MT 306, 192 P.3d 1145, 346 Mont. 10, 2008 Mont. LEXIS 461
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 2008
DocketDA 07-0651
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2008 MT 306 (Lanes v. Montana State Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lanes v. Montana State Fund, 2008 MT 306, 192 P.3d 1145, 346 Mont. 10, 2008 Mont. LEXIS 461 (Mo. 2008).

Opinion

JUSTICE COTTER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 The Montana State Fund (State Fund) appeals a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Court (WCC) which found it liable for occupational disease benefits to appellee Charles Lanes (Lanes). We affirm the decision of the WCC.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 Lanes began work as an electrician for MSE Technology (MSE) of Butte, Montana in 1991. His job duties included light and heavy industrial work, as well as standing, kneeling, crawling, and lifting anywhere from forty to fifty pounds on a regular basis. In addition, Lanes holds a bachelor of arts degree in ministry and bible theology. In 1988, he began performing minister duties for the Whitehall Assembly of God Church (Assembly) in Whitehall, Montana. Initially, he received $400.00 per month for his services, but when the Assembly could no longer pay him, he continued to serve without pay until February 2005.

¶3 In May 2001, Lanes sustained an occupational disease to his left knee while in the course and scope of his employment with MSE. State Fund, as MSE’s workers’ compensation insurer, accepted liability for Lanes’ left knee condition. From the time that Lanes filed his occupational disease claim in May 2001, until he had knee surgery with Dr. Nicholas Blavatsky (Blavatsky) of Butte, Montana in April 2004, he continued working for MSE. After Lanes healed from the surgery and was released to full duty by Dr. Blavatsky, Lanes returned to work for MSE, but later accepted a reduction in force buyout in January 2005. Lanes testified that he would have continued working for MSE if the buyout had not been offered.

¶4 After surgery, Lanes’ left knee improved for a period of time, but he eventually began to experience progressive pain in that knee. Lanes eventually developed a limp in the left knee, and put more weight on his right knee to compensate. Lanes testified that he would stand primarily on his right leg to perform his electrician duties. After Lanes accepted the buyout, he put his name on a union list for future jobs, but then removed his name by the fall of2005 because he felt his knees were not strong enough for him to perform future work.

¶5 From February 2005 until November 2005, the Assembly paid Lanes $800.00 per month. During that time, Lanes estimated that he worked approximately thirty hours per week. His job duties included *12 studying the bible and preparing weekly sermons, attending funerals and weddings, preaching, and visiting the sick and elderly. According to his testimony, these tasks required him to perform roughly the same physical duties as daily living, including walking, standing, and sitting. In the course of performing these tasks, Lanes would have to walk on a variety of different surfaces and stand dining the sermons for approximately forty-five minutes. Lanes testified that standing for his sermons would aggravate the pain he felt in both knees after about thirty minutes, and that he would lie down immediately after sermons to rest his knees. After he rested, the pain would return to its normal levels. Lanes testified that the pain would always alleviate with rest and that he did not believe it permanently worsened while he performed his duties as a minister.

¶6 In November 2005, Lanes gave up his full-time position as a minister because he felt that his knees prevented him from doing his duties; in particular, his left knee would give way and be unable to support weight. On November 11, 2005, Lanes went back to see Dr. Blavatsky. Dr. Blavatsky noted that Lanes had more discomfort in his left knee as well as in his right, and that he had been unloading weight from the left knee to the right knee. He also noted that previous examinations of the right knee showed some changes, although they were not as advanced as his left knee. In deposition testimony, Dr. Blavatsky stated that Lanes’ right knee had had no previous problems and did not start to bother him until after he had quit his employment with MSE. Pursuant to his examination of Lanes, Dr. Blavatsky reviewed job analyses for the electrician and minister positions and approved only the minister job, stating that Lanes was not employable in a position which required standing for any length of time, nor could he stoop, bend, climb, or regularly use stairs or ladders. Dr. Blavatsky classified the minister position as sedentary.

¶7 By January 2006, the increased pain in both Lanes’ right and left knees effectively prevented Lanes from performing his duties as a minister. Lanes filed an occupational disease claim for his right knee with the State Fund on January 16, 2006. In his claim, Lanes alleged that his right knee occupational disease was the result of his employment as an electrician with MSE. The last date of his employment with MSE was January 18, 2005. In his claim, Lanes requested total disability benefits for bilateral occupational disease conditions that prevented him from working. The State Fund denied the claim and also stopped payment of all partial disability benefits to Lanes.

*13 ¶8 On April 20, 2006, Dr. Blavatsky wrote a letter to State Fluid’s counsel in which he opined that Lanes’ knee complaints were based on his occupational exposure as an electrician, and not due to his work as a minister. It was Dr. Blavatsky’s opinion that the activities Lanes performed as a minister were sedentary and would not be responsible for the injuries to his knee. Instead, the “frequent stooping, bending, lifting and crawling during the course of [Lanes’] work as an electrical contractor and electrician would most likely be the source of his current complaints.” In response, Patricia Hunt, a claims adjustor for State Fund, sent Dr. Blavatsky a letter seeking further clarification of Dr. Blavatsky’s opinion in light of an expert opinion he rendered in a somewhat similar case, Mont. State Fund v. Murray, 2005 MT 97, 326 Mont. 516, 111 P.3d 210. In Murray, Dr. Blavatsky had opined that a claimant’s job duties, which required him to walk and stand on hard surfaces, were a significant contribution to a claimant’s pre-existing degenerative knee condition which eventually required knee surgery, and thus gave rise to a compensable occupational disease claim. Murray, ¶¶ 12,16-17, 22. Ms. Hunt quoted to Dr. Blavatsky his expert testimony from the Murray case and provided a farther job description of the types of tasks that Lanes performed as a minister, including standing and walking frequently on carpet, tile, grass, dirt, gravel, snow and ice. Ms. Hunt specifically asked Dr. Blavatsky if it would be medically probable that Lanes’ year-long employment as a minister, in which he had to walk on several types of sin-faces, could have aggravated his underlying knee condition.

¶9 Dr. Blavatsky responded on June 9, 2006, and stated that in his opinion Lanes had developed arthritic changes in his right knee and that several factors, including age and a rather marked state of deconditioning, had exacerbated his condition. Dr. Blavatsky also acknowledged that Lanes’ employment as a minister walking on several types of surfaces following his employment atMSE aggravated his underlying knee condition.

¶10 On June 16,2006, Lanes filed a petition in the WCC for a hearing on the denial of his claim.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 MT 306, 192 P.3d 1145, 346 Mont. 10, 2008 Mont. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanes-v-montana-state-fund-mont-2008.