Mathis v. State Accident Insurance Fund

499 P.2d 1331, 10 Or. App. 139, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 790
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 27, 1972
Docket371-740
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 499 P.2d 1331 (Mathis v. State Accident Insurance Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathis v. State Accident Insurance Fund, 499 P.2d 1331, 10 Or. App. 139, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 790 (Or. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

LANGTRY, J.

Claimant incurred a compensable occupational disease, asbestosis, during the course of his employment. His claim against his last employer was denied by the State Accident Insurance Fund, the defendant. Claimant requested a hearing on his rejected claim and, pursuant thereto, an order was entered by the hearing officer of the Workmen’s Compensation Board denying the claim because there was “neither medical-causal relationship or legal-causal relationship connecting this workman’s asbestosis with his * * * [last] employer.”

Claimant rejected the order of the hearing officer, which, under ORS 656.808 acted as an appeal to the medical review board; the Workmen’s Compensation Board then certified the record to the circuit court pursuant to ORS 656.810(4). The comments following the medical board’s findings, set out infra, *142 generally supported the hearing officer’s order. The circuit court, however, reversed the order of the hearing officer and remanded the case to the Workmen’s Compensation Board for entry of an order allowing compensation. Defendant appeals.

Claimant was disabled in September 1970. He had been an asbestos worker since 1939, during which time he had worked for several employers. His last employment with Metalclad Insulation commenced in April of 1970 and ended in about four months. On September 2, 1970, after a routine physical examination, claimant was informed that he had contracted asbestosis and was advised to discontinue his work in asbestos-related employment.

Claimant testified his work with Metalclad consisted primarily of wrapping pipes with insulation material, which included mixing dry powder and water to form the “mud” used to seal the pipe joints. The dry powder, he said, contained asbestos, and mixing it with the water caused dust to go into the air, making him cough. He estimated that he handled close to a half ton of this material while employed by Metalclad. He also testified his job required him to cut insulation pipe with a hand saw, causing dust to go into the air.

A company manager testified that 98 per cent of claimant’s work with Metalclad was on “commercial” jobs, in which 90 per cent of the materials used were fiberglas. In the other 10 per cent, a 3 per cent asbestos material was used. In relation to this testimony the hearing officer concluded: “any exposure to asbestos that claimant may have experience [sic] with this employer had nothing to do with either the etiology of the disease or the commencement of the disability * # # »

*143 The medical review board made the following findings pursuant to the questions enumerated in OES 656.812:

“1. Does claimant suffer from an occupational disease or infection? If so, what? Yes, asbestosis.
“2. When was such disease or infection, if any, contracted and approximately how long has claimant suffered therefrom? Indeterminate, but probably for at least 10 years.
“3. Has such disease or infection, if any, been caused by and did it arise out of and in the course of claimant’s regular actual employment in such industrial process, trade or occupation? Yes.
“4. Is such disease, if any, disabling to the claimant? Yes.
“5. If so, to what degree is claimant disabled by such occupational disease? Permanently and totally disabled as regards returning to his former occupation.”

To these the board attached a report in which the following comments were made.

“* * * If the diagnosis of asbestosis had been made in 1968 or 1969, it would have been made during the patient’s long employment with the Bartells Company, for whom he had worked for nearly 20 years.
“The Board has no doubts that Mr. Mathis has asbestosis, as a cumulative result of years of employment in his trade. It is not medically probable that clinically significant exposure to asbestos occurred during the four months employment in 1970 at Metalclad. Some minimal degree of inhalation of asbestos fibers probably did occur during this employment, in spite of the small proportion of asbestos in the materials used and the safety precautions which were taken. Exposure to asbestos in years past with a different employer was no *144 doubt far more important in the causation of Ms disease * *

(1). The principal issue on appeal is: To what extent, if any, must the last employment of a workman disabled by an occupational disease cause or contribute to the disease in order to make the employer liable for the disability?

Defendant takes the position that the employment must be a “material contributing cause” of the disease, a standard used in accidental injury cases. Claimant contends the last employer should be chargeable if the employment at the time of disability was “of a Mnd contributing to the disease,” which generally represents the rule in other jurisdictions. Neither party cites controlling Oregon case authority and we find no legislative history which aids us. The Occupational Disease Law was enacted as Oregon Laws 1943, eh 442, and has remained relatively unchanged since that time.

Before examining the statutes, which are largely silent on the question before us, it is helpful to turn to the general law. In his treatise on workmen’s compensation Larson states the rule applicable to carrier liability (which is handled in the same manner as employer liability) where there has been successive exposure to conditions contributing to an occupational disease.

“In the case of occupational disease, liability is most frequently assigned to the carrier who was on the risJc when the disease resulted in disability, if the employment at the time of disability was of a hind contributing to the disease. It will be observed that, in broad outline, this is comparable to the ‘last injurious exposure’ rule discussed in the previous subsection, except that it places more stress *145 on the moment of disability. Occupational disease cases typically show a long history of exposure without actual disability, culminating in the enforced cessation of work on a definite date * * *.
“Among the conditions to which this rule has been applied are asbesto sis, silicosis, pneumoconiosis, tuberculosis, dermatitis, occupational loss of hearing, and various diseases produced by inhalation of chemicals and fumes.
“It goes without saying that, before the last-injurious-exposure rule can be applied, there must have been some exposure of a hind contributing to the condition.

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Bluebook (online)
499 P.2d 1331, 10 Or. App. 139, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathis-v-state-accident-insurance-fund-orctapp-1972.