Mahoney v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services

953 A.2d 739, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 331, 2008 WL 2827540
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 24, 2008
DocketNo. 06-AA-1368
StatusPublished

This text of 953 A.2d 739 (Mahoney v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahoney v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services, 953 A.2d 739, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 331, 2008 WL 2827540 (D.C. 2008).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Associate Judge:

Petitioner Otis Mahoney challenges an order of the Compensation Review Board (the “CRB”) upholding the denial of his claim for reinstatement of wage-loss and medical benefits.1 Contending that his benefits were improperly terminated, Ma-honey argues that his employer, the District of Columbia, had the burden of justifying the termination and that the CRB erred in ruling that it was petitioner who bore the burden of proof. We affirm the CRB’s ruling that Mahoney had the burden of proving that he had a recurrence of symptoms of a work-related injury that entitled him to a reinstatement of benefits. However, because the Department of Employment Services (“DOES”) administrative law judge (“ALJ”) who conducted the administrative evidentiary hearing on Ma-honey’s claim repeatedly advised Mahoney that the District had the burden of proof, and because it is possible that this erroneous advice prejudiced Mahoney, we reverse the CRB’s decision upholding the denial of Mahoney’s claim and remand for further proceedings.2

I.

Petitioner Mahoney worked for a number of years as a maintenance laborer for the District of Columbia Housing Authority (“DOHA”). On March 31, 1999, he accidentally slipped into a meter hole while raking leaves at the Lincoln Heights Housing Development, spraining and tearing ligaments in his right ankle. He filed a claim for disability benefits and' was paid Temporary Total Disability (“TTD”) benefits beginning in April, 1999. On June 16, 1999, Dr. John Cohen evaluated Mahoney as “recovered” and released him to return to full duty. Mahoney returned to work, and his disability payments (but not his medical expense benefits) were terminated. Thereafter, he experienced pain in his right ankle and was treated at Kaiser Per-manente by Drs. Joseph Avery and Lawrence Manning, who periodically restricted his work. On July 12, 2000, Mahoney was examined by Dr. Herbert Joseph for an independent medical evaluation (“IME”). Dr. Joseph found that Mahoney had a limited range of motion in his ankle, could not work in a situation involving more than a few hours standing, and was a candidate for a sit-down occupation, but also found that “the degenerative changes seen on MRI antedated his [workplace] accident.” Dr. Joseph opined that the painful motion of Mahoney’s ankle was the result of a degenerative ankle condition following a 1986 ankle fracture, “a longstanding problem and not causally related to the industrial accident of March 31, 1999. Therefore, I do not feel that the above-described need for treatment is on a compensable [741]*741basis.”3 Mahoney’s benefits were terminated on the basis of Dr. Joseph’s report.

In September 2000, December 2000, and April 2001, Mahoney filed successive applications for a formal hearing on the termination of benefits. His first two applications were dismissed for procedural defaults (failure to appear at the hearing scheduled on the first application and failure to file a pre-hearing statement in connection with the second application), and Mahoney withdrew the third application without prejudice.

By October 2001, Mahoney had used all of his sick and annual leave and ceased working because DCHA had no light-duty work for him. On December 14, 2001, he filed a claim for reopening of his disability benefits. He informed claims examiner Zee Cabbagestock, an employee of the vendor that acted as Third Party Administrator (“TPA”) for the disability program, that he had experienced a flare-up of his work-related injury.4 Cabbagestock advised Mahoney that, because of the recent transition between the previous TPA and Cabbagestock’s employer, she did not have his file or information about his claim. She sought information from Mahoney about his injury and his ability to work. Mahoney told Cabbagestock that he had injured his ankle in 1999, and that he had been released to light-duty work, but that DCHA no longer had light-duty work for him. Mahoney was “a very poor historian,” however, and did not tell Cabbages-tock that his benefits had previously been terminated.

Cabbagestock testified that, giving Ma-honey the “benefit of the doubt,” she approved a reinstatement of temporary disability benefits. But in April 2002, Cabbagestock received documentation showing that Mahoney’s benefits had previously been terminated. She “was directed by [her] supervisor to forward a termination letter based on the prior termination that benefits should not have been paid in the first place.” The notice that was sent, dated April 8, 2002, advised Mahoney that, effective May 14, 2002, “no further compensation or medical benefits are payable pursuant to the Independent Medical Evaluation performed by Dr. Jospeph [sic].”5 A final notice of termination was dated July 17, 2002.

Mahoney thereafter sought a hearing, which was held before ALJ Robert Middleton on January 3 and 24, 2003. On October 29, 2004, ALJ Middleton issued a Recommended Compensation Decision concluding that, in March 1999, Mahoney had suffered “a temporary aggravation ... of a pre-existing condition which has long since resolved.” ALJ Middleton found no evidence that Mahoney “suffered either a new employment related injury or a recurrence of the earlier 1999 employment-related injury.” In his recommended decision, ALJ Middleton acknowledged that, ordinarily, “once the TPA has accepted a claim, and determined [that TTD] benefits [742]*742should be paid, the burden of production to support the change of circumstance or change of conditions rest with the employer,” the “employer must adduce persuasive medical evidence sufficient to substantiate a modification or termination of an award of benefits,” and “the evidence relied upon to support a modification or termination of compensation benefits must be current and fresh in addition to being probative and persuasive of a change in medical status.” ALJ Middleton found, however, that there were “distinctions about this case which demand a different application of the above-mentioned evidentiary protocols.” The distinction that ALJ Middleton went on to identify was that the TPA “was unable to conduct a standard investigation of the claim since it did not have claimant’s medical evidence without subjecting claimant to what may have been a disastrous delay.”6 As the TPA did not have Maho-ney’s file at the time of approving his claim for reinstatement of benefits, ALJ Middleton found, acceptance of his claim was merely “provisional[ ].” ALJ Middleton found that “[o]nce Dr. Cohen’s evaluation was located, and the IME’s report was determined to be reliable, the second TPA took the correct step in terminating claimant’s compensation benefits.” He concluded that at that time, “the burden of production of evidence shifted to [Mahoney], who has presented nothing in the way of reliable, probative and substantial evidence of continuing employment related impairment.”

The Assistant Director of DOES adopted ALJ Middleton’s ruling as a Final Compensation Order, but the CRB reversed and remanded, finding that ALJ Middleton had erred in not mentioning the opinions from Mahoney’s treating physicians that were in the record (opinions that were written more recently than Dr. Joseph’s opinion) that Mahoney’s disability is related to his March 1999 injury,7 in not evaluating Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
953 A.2d 739, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 331, 2008 WL 2827540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahoney-v-district-of-columbia-department-of-employment-services-dc-2008.