Magaw v. Middletown Bd. of Educ.

731 A.2d 1196, 323 N.J. Super. 1
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 2, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 731 A.2d 1196 (Magaw v. Middletown Bd. of Educ.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magaw v. Middletown Bd. of Educ., 731 A.2d 1196, 323 N.J. Super. 1 (N.J. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

731 A.2d 1196 (1999)
323 N.J. Super. 1

Donald MAGAW, Petitioner-Respondent,
v.
MIDDLETOWN BOARD OF EDUCATION, Respondent-Appellant.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued June 16, 1999.
Decided July 2, 1999.

*1198 John H. Geaney, Mount Laurel, for respondent-appellant (Capehart & Scatchard, attorneys; Mr. Geaney, of counsel; Jody L. Wiedemann, on the brief).

Michael E. McGann, for petitioner-respondent (Amdur, Boyle, Maggs & McGann, attorneys, Eatontown; Mr. McGann, of counsel and on the brief).

*1199 Before Judges BAIME, A.A. RODRIGUEZ and LEFELT.

*1197 The opinion of the court was delivered by LEFELT, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned).

Donald Magaw was a physical education teacher in the Thorne Middle School, Middletown, New Jersey for 26 years. Magaw claimed in a workers' compensation case that he contracted tonsil cancer from a colleague's second-hand cigarette smoke. A workers' compensation judge agreed with Magaw and concluded that Magaw's tonsil cancer was a compensable occupational disease. The compensation judge also directed the Middletown Board of Education (Board) to pay Magaw past and future medical expenses, temporary disability benefits and attorney fees. The judge also directed the Board to reimburse all accumulated sick time used during his disability period. The Board appealed from the Workers' Compensation Judge's decision. We affirm the compensability determination but reverse and vacate the sick time directive.

On September 7, 1995, the first trial day in this matter, Magaw was fifty-one years old. Neither Magaw nor his wife smoke. Magaw, who suffered from asthma, has never smoked and, when he can, avoids all environments with people who smoke. He never chewed tobacco and has never lived with anyone who smokes. When Magaw worked at summer jobs, he was never exposed to cigarette smoke. Neither of Magaw's parents smoked. Furthermore, Magaw's alcohol consumption is quite minimal-he has no more than two alcoholic drinks a year. At work, however, Magaw shared an office with a chain smoking co-worker, Robert Anderson.

Magaw and Anderson shared this office from 1968, when Magaw was hired, until the end of the 1994 school year, when Anderson retired. The office, a small interior room 15 feet by 9 feet by 8 feet high, with no window or direct access to outside air, was also shared with two other teachers. After Magaw's complaint, the State Department of Health inspected the room and did not find any apparent health hazard. Magaw's desk was within an arm's length of Anderson's. Anderson smoked every time he did not have direct contact with students, between every class and during lunch break and free periods. At times during Magaw's career, he and Anderson shared one or two free periods and lunch. When together in the room during these shared periods or lunch and between classes, Anderson would smoke. Magaw believed that Anderson smoked a pack of cigarettes a day in Magaw's presence. Anderson thought he would smoke about two cigarettes during each of his free periods and probably smoked on average one-half pack, or ten cigarettes, per day.

Another teacher who shared the room testified that Anderson smoked at every opportunity. It was an "automatic thing" with him. "He would light up sometimes and I don't even know why he would light up." He would light up, leave the cigarette there as he worked and puff every now and then. When the co-worker came to work in the morning, he noted that the room smelled of smoke from the previous day. "Bobby Anderson was a good person but he always had that problem of smoking. We were all around it all the time."

In February 1994, Magaw developed an inflammation of his left tonsil, minor swelling and a sore throat. A CT scan failed to show any major abnormality and Magaw was treated conservatively with a powerful antibiotic until the swelling subsided. When the inflammation returned in September of 1994, Magaw had a biopsy performed which led to his cancer diagnosis.

Magaw underwent surgery at Mt. Sinai Hospital on November 2, 1994, and he remained in the hospital for about 17 days. Besides removing the squamous cell carcinoma in his left tonsil, the surgeon partially removed his jaw and mouth. Squamous cell carcinoma is the type of cancer that *1200 usually develops in the lining of tissues. The surgeon also removed a bone from Magaw's leg and reconstructed his jaw using a skin graft from his right leg and muscle tissue from his left arm. The surgical procedure went through Magaw's neck and the shoulder area, which has limited Magaw's shoulder mobility. Magaw has scars on his face and neck into the collar bone area on his left arm. His left leg has a long scar where they removed the bone, and he has scarring on his right leg where they removed the skin graft.

After Magaw's hospital admission, he began radiation therapy around January 1995 at Monmouth Medical Center for five days a week. His radiation therapy ended the first week in March. Magaw then in December 1995 commenced physical and speech therapy.

The Board contested that Magaw's cancer was work related and, therefore, declined to pay him any temporary disability benefits. He utilized sick time up until March 15, 1995.

Dr. Kornmehl treated Magaw at Monmouth Medical Center and testified on his behalf. Dr. Kornmehl earned her medical degree in 1984 and is a board certified radiation oncologist who has treated several hundred patients with head and neck cancer. From 1994 to 1997 she was Chief of Radiation Oncology at Monmouth Medical Center and has been an investigator with the National Cancer Institute.

Dr. Kornmehl explained that the classic risk factors for head and neck carcinoma are tobacco and alcohol exposure. In Dr. Kornmehl's experience, "virtually everybody" with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck had risk factors from either or both smoking and alcohol. In adults who neither smoke nor drink, cancers of the mouth and throat are rare or nearly non-existent. She agreed, however, that the data do not exist to make a case for second-hand smoke as a cause of head and neck malignancy and that the Surgeon General has not released any report indicating that second-hand smoke causes tonsil cancer.

Dr. Kornmehl further testified that tobacco smoke was a class A carcinogen which means that it is a direct cause, rather than a promoter, of cancer. She explained that second-hand smoke contains essentially all of the carcinogenic and toxic agents that have been identified in inhaled smoke, but the concentrations in second-hand smoke are at greater levels. She concluded within a reasonable degree of medical probability that Magaw's tonsil cancer was caused by "occupational exposure to second-hand smoke." Dr. Kornmehl explained that Magaw's case was the first case of tonsil cancer she saw where the patient was a non-smoker.

She believed that a 1997 study entitled Squamous Cell Head and Neck Cancer in Non-Smokers supports her view that non-smoking patients who were exposed to environmental tobacco smoke had a significantly higher risk of developing squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck.

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731 A.2d 1196, 323 N.J. Super. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magaw-v-middletown-bd-of-educ-njsuperctappdiv-1999.