Lewis v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board

56 Cal. App. 3d 938, 128 Cal. Rptr. 752, 41 Cal. Comp. Cases 194, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1418
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1976
DocketCiv. 47167
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 Cal. App. 3d 938 (Lewis 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
Lewis v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, 56 Cal. App. 3d 938, 128 Cal. Rptr. 752, 41 Cal. Comp. Cases 194, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1418 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

FLEMING, Acting P. J.

In August 1968 Lewis, a television serviceman, then 45, suffered orthopedic injuries in a work-related automobile *941 accident. In July 1972, he died of heart disease. The single question in these compensation proceedings is whether the disability, discomfort, and pain consequent to the 1968 accident contributed to his death from coronary atherosclerosis in 1972.

Lewis’s widow filed two claims of entitlement to death benefits. In one, she claimed the pain suffered by the injured employee as a consequence of the automobile accident produced stress which accelerated his arteriosclerosis and caused his death from heart disease four years later. In the other, she claimed the work performed by Lewis on resumption of his employment after the accident increased his pain and thereby created stress, which accelerated his arteriosclerosis and led to his death from heart disease.

On the basis of lay testimony and two conflicting medical opinions, Compensation Judge Daraban accepted the claim that Lewis’s death was compensable by reason of pain and stress resulting from the accident. He rejected the claim for compensation based on stress caused by Lewis’s employment subsequent to his accident. The Worker’s Compensation Appeals Board ordered reconsideration, appointed an independent medical examiner, and referred both claims to Compensation Judge Trovillion for further hearings. The latter took further medical testimony and reported back to the board. On the basis of the evidence before both judges, the board found Lewis’s death not compensable under either claim.

The Supreme Court, citing Lamb v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd., 11 Cal.3d 274, 281-283 [113 Cal.Rptr. 162, 520 P.2d 978], granted a hearing, transferred the cause to this court, and directed a writ of review to issue.

The Evidence

The claim based on decedent’s employment subsequent to his accident was decided adversely to claimant, and that decision is not controverted here. The claim based on decedent’s pain resulting from his orthopedic injuries reasons that this pain caused stress, which in turn accelerated the progress of his underlying arteriosclerotic heart disease and led to his death. We review the relevant evidence.

In an automobile intersection collision in August 1968 Lewis suffered bruises, contusions, headaches, dizziness, fainting sensations, and pains of the cervical spine, lumbar spine, shoulder, and elbow. He returned to *942 work within three weeks and continued in the same occupation with different employers until his death in July 1972. However, he no longer lifted television sets or installed antennas. In July 1971 Lewis was awarded 61 percent partial permanent disability. The rating was based on scarring and limitation of motion and on “subjective back complaints consistent with a 60% loss of lifting ability and need to be restricted to work of light to moderate nature . : . plus constant slight but clearly apparent involuntary shaking of the head.” The award authorized “further medical treatment . . . including house traction equipment.” Lewis’s principal continuing complaint consisted of chronic pain on his left side, especially in his low back and buttock, for which he received medication and physiotherapy, including traction.

Subsequent to the award (and hence during the last year of his life) Lewis was regularly seen by orthopedists, his hospital physiotherapy continued, sometimes on a thrice:weekly basis, and his prescribed medication included “Indocin,” an anti-inflammatory and analgesic agent. In March 1972, he complained to his physician that despite his therapy he felt he was “retrogressing.” At the time of his death Lewis worked 40 hours a week, with Sundays and Mondays off. Sunday, 30 July 1972, was a day of inactivity. On Monday he drove from Pomona to Los Angeles to pick up a check and accompanied his children to the dentist. In the afternoon he went swimming. About 10 p.m. his wife observed him gasping for breath and called for assistance. He was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital.

An autopsy ascribed death to occlusive coronary atherosclerosis with severe pulmonaiy congestion. The immediate mechanism of death was a period of coronary insufficiency lasting minutes or hours, which caused fluid to back into the lungs and led to arrythmia or ventrical fibrillation. The autopsy disclosed that certain of his coronary arteries were 50 percent occluded. At the time of his death Lewis was 6 feet, 1 inch tall, and weighed 240 pounds. The only earlier indication of cardiovascular history was a 1942 diagnosis of hypertension while in the military service.

Four lay witnesses and two physicians testified in the first proceeding. Judge Daraban summarized the lay testimony thus:

“The testimony of Lena Pock reveals that the decedent formerly worked for her and her husband as a service man from October of 1958 until March 1, 1967, when they went out of business. The decedent never missed a day from work and he was proud of his good health. After he *943 left their employment he was seen about once every two weeks. After the automobile accident of August 24, 1968, until the time of his death, she observed there was a big change and that he talked about his ill health. He was not as alive or vivacious as before.

“Rudi Pock testified that during the time the deceased worked for him, he thought the deceased was an athletic and well-put together man, and that he handled equipment weighing up to 700 pounds by himself and set it up at the customer’s. After the 1968 automobile accident, he remembers the deceased telling him that he was disappointed in his progress and that he wasn’t snapping out of it. There was a rather definite spring in his step that was no longer there. His talk and speech were more measured and that extra sparkle that he had before was not quite there anymore subsequent to the accident.

“Grace Lewis Johnson testified that she had been a medical secretary for 22 years and was a sister of the decedent. They had a close relationship and they confided in each other. She testified that ‘he was not a complainer, but from the time of his accident until the time of his passing, he was not able to do what he normally did before. He couldn’t maneuver because of pain . . . she knew that he was getting therapy and taking Indocin for medication. The condition of her brother’s health became progressively worse in the last year after his accident. . . . This was not the same Edwin she knew ... As far as she knew he bent with pain; he couldn’t lift and she knew of it. He limped after the accident and this never did leave him. He became one-sided in her eyes. She saw her brother taking pain medication and muscle relaxant.’

“The widow, Dolores S. Lewis, testified that ‘he was in good health until August 24, 1968 . . . After that time he complained of pain to his back and had complaints to his left hand and left leg. He had these complaints eveiy night .... Since his injury of August 24, 1968, physically he was always tired. He constantly complained of back pain and had to get up in the evening to urinate frequently.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Cal. App. 3d 938, 128 Cal. Rptr. 752, 41 Cal. Comp. Cases 194, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-workers-compensation-appeals-board-calctapp-1976.