Lewis v. INDUSTRIAL COM'N OF ARIZONA

614 P.2d 347, 126 Ariz. 266, 1980 Ariz. App. LEXIS 508
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJuly 10, 1980
Docket1 CA-IC 2183
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 614 P.2d 347 (Lewis v. INDUSTRIAL COM'N OF ARIZONA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. INDUSTRIAL COM'N OF ARIZONA, 614 P.2d 347, 126 Ariz. 266, 1980 Ariz. App. LEXIS 508 (Ark. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

JACOBSON, Judge.

The central issue in this special action review of an Industrial Commission award is whether the hearing officer misapplied the law in determining that a preexisting arthritic condition was not an “accident or injury” and therefore could not serve to convert a subsequent scheduled injury into an unscheduled injury.

Petitioner, Robert Lewis, has been unable to work since December 14, 1971 when a tire fell on his left foot while he was employed by respondent employer, Tucson Truck Terminal. Since that date, petitioner has suffered through a bunionectomy, a joint fusion on his left great toe, an amputation of that same toe and several nerve block treatments to relieve his pain. The claimant and the carrier responsible for the injury, the State Compensation Fund, have been parties to a procedural entanglement involving three stationary dates, four separate periods of temporary disability bene *268 fits, termination for failure to keep medical appointments, three petitions to reopen, a partially paid permanent scheduled award based on a 35% impairment of the lower left extremity entered in 1973, a lump sum award completing the scheduled award, and a special fund award.

The present review concerns a corrected notice of claim status issued on May 11, 1978 which, in conjunction with a prior notice, terminated benefits paid pursuant to a successful petition to reopen. The notice of claim status declared petitioner’s industrially related condition to be stationary as of April 28, 1978 and acknowledged that he suffered a permanent disability. This was followed by a special fund award of $300.00 annually for continuing medical care. A timely request for hearing was made stating: “Applicant is entitled to continuing medical treatment and temporary compensation subsequent to 4/28/78. Alternatively, the Applicant’s condition resulted in a permanent unscheduled disability.”

Two hearings were held in this matter and several medical reports were admitted. Dr. Larry I. Mann, petitioner’s treating physician, testified that petitioner was stationary as of April 19, 1978 and that he had a 30% permanent impairment of the left lower extremity. Medical reports authored by Dr. Mann made numerous references to petitioner’s degenerative arthritis in his great left toe which preexisted the injury date. Dr. John Wright Cortner’s testimony confirmed Dr. Mann’s statements as to the presence of degenerative arthritis at the time of the injury.

Testimony was received from petitioner indicating that prior to the industrial injury he suffered from pain in his feet and knees and in one hip. He stated that this forced him to change jobs to “lighter work.” Dr. Cortner testified that applicant’s complaints and change in jobs prior to the injury were consistent with an arthritic degenerative process.

Based on the evidence, the presiding hearing officer entered an award which held that petitioner was entitled to temporary disability payments from June 26, 1975 through April 28, 1978 and that petitioner’s condition was medically stationary as of April 28, 1978, with a 35% 1 disability of the lower left extremity. The hearing officer rejected the claimant’s argument that the preexisting arthritis served to convert the industrial injury to the non-scheduled variety. The award was affirmed on administrative review.

Petitioner contends that the hearing officer misinterpreted and misapplied the case law in addressing the issue of whether petitioner was entitled to an unscheduled award. We agree.

The hearing officer’s relevant findings were as follows:

In the case at bar, there having been no prior injury or accident, either “industrial” or “non-industrial”, the threshold prerequisite to reaching the question of converting the applicant's “scheduled injury” to an “unscheduled injury” on the above-identified basis [arthritic condition] is lacking . . . . [D]ispositively of the issue at bar ... is that there was apparently not, in the case at bar, a “pri- or” injury or accident, either “industrial” or “non-industrial” .

The hearing officer was obviously operating under the misconception that an “injury or accident” must cause a preexisting disabling condition in order for that condition to operate to remove a subsequent scheduled injury from the benefits schedule. We find no such “injury or accident” requirement in the workmen’s compensation statutes or case law. Indeed, the cases are to the contrary. In Leon v. Industrial Commission, 10 Ariz.App. 470, 459 P.2d 749 (1969), congenital deafness was held to constitute a sufficient preexisting disability to convert an industrial injury to the hand, which would have otherwise been sched *269 uled, into an unscheduled class. Similarly, in Ronquillo v. Industrial Commission, 5 Ariz.App. 233, 425 P.2d 135 (1967), the court held that preexisting hypertension, if shown to be partially disabling at the time of injury, would convert a 50% loss of function in the left leg into the unscheduled category-

In the award here, the hearing officer relied on the following language in Als-brooks v. Industrial Commission, 118 Ariz. 480, 578 P.2d 159 (1978), to support his “injury or accident” prerequisite:

We do not believe that any physical impairment, the result of a prior non-industrial accident, is a “previous disability” for the purposes of Paragraph E [of A.R.S. § 23-1044] unless there is some evidence, no matter how slight, that it is also an earning capacity disability. To hold that after a non-industrial injury, any physical impairment will convert a second scheduled injury into an unscheduled injury, would, in effect, do completely away with all scheduled injury awards since it is a rare person indeed who does not have some previous physical impairment as a result of some prior injury-

118 Ariz. at 483, 578 P.2d at 162. (Emphasis supplied). From the context of these statements it is evident that the court was not addressing the necessity of an injury or accident, but rather was speaking to the requirement that the preexisting condition result in an earning capacity disability. We reiterate the following remarks recently made by this court in the post-Alsbrooks opinion of Miller v. Industrial Commission, 122 Ariz. 493, 494, 595 P.2d 1038, 1039 (1979):

The Court in Alsbrooks appears to have assumed that the earning capacity disability would be the result of a previous injury. A previous injury is, however, apparently not a necessary prerequisite to converting a scheduled injury into an unscheduled injury.

(Emphasis in original.)

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Bluebook (online)
614 P.2d 347, 126 Ariz. 266, 1980 Ariz. App. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-industrial-comn-of-arizona-arizctapp-1980.