McGlinn v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board

68 Cal. App. 3d 527, 137 Cal. Rptr. 326, 42 Cal. Comp. Cases 214, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 1342
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1977
DocketCiv. 39420
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 68 Cal. App. 3d 527 (McGlinn 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
McGlinn v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, 68 Cal. App. 3d 527, 137 Cal. Rptr. 326, 42 Cal. Comp. Cases 214, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 1342 (Cal. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

*529 Opinion

RATTIGAN, J.

Gene D. McGlinn is the applicant for workers’ compensation benefits in four successive proceedings to be described. He petitioned respondent Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board for reconsideration of a combination of awards, made by a board referee, in which it was determined that applicant was not entitled to certain temporary disability benefits and medical expenses because they were not attributable to any of three prior industrial injuries he had received. The board denied his petition. We granted review of the board’s action.

All of the injuries involved applicant’s back. He received the first one while working for Herwig of California in 1969. He sought workers’ compensation benefits in proceeding number 27062, which he commenced in September 1969. He was again injured in July 1970, while working for Northwestern Drywall. This resulted in proceeding number 30536, which he commenced in November of 1970.

The workers’ compensation insurance carriers for Herwig of California and Northwestern Drywall are respondents Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company and General Insurance Company of America, respectively. Each carrier regularly appeared in the two proceedings mentioned. In “Supplemental Findings And Award[s]” filed in each .on August 3, 1972, after various proceedings in both, applicant was given permanent disability ratings of 15*A percent for the 1969 injury and IVi percent for the one incurred in 1970, and was awarded disability benefits accordingly. In each proceeding, he was also awarded “[a]ll further medical treatment reasonably required to cure or relieve from the effects of the injury herein.”

The 1969 injury was a compression fracture for which applicant had necessary back surgery (a spinal fusion) followed by a lengthy period of convalescence. On August 13, 1973, he went to work for Senco of California (hereinafter Senco) in a job which required him to engage in heavy lifting. He worked at Senco for nine months, during and after which the following events occurred in 1974:

While on the job in March, applicant experienced severe back pains and consulted Richard T. Okumura, M.D. Dr. Okumura hospitalized him for the back trouble from April 14 to April 19 and from April 29 to May 9. Applicant returned to his Senco job after each hospitalization, but was laid off on May 16 for reasons not associated with industrial *530 injury. Dr. Okumura did not release him for work until July 1, when he accepted less strenuous employment by San Jose Friction Materials (who is not involved in the proceedings under review). He worked there until he was similarly laid off on September 6. While working around his home later in that month, he experienced another seizure of severe back pain. He again consulted Dr. Okumura and was hospitalized for five more days commencing September 26, 1974.

In October of 1974, applicant filed with the appeals board (1) a petition to reopen proceeding No. 27062, in which he claimed “new and further” temporary and permanent disability from the 1969 injury; (2) a petition to reopen number 30536, in which he made the same claim relative to the 1970 injury; (3) a new application (No. 43607) in which he sought workers’ compensation benefits for a specific industrial injury he claimed to have incurred on March 22, 1974, while working for Senco; and (4) a new application (No. 44636) in which he sought benefits for a cumulative industrial injury he claimed to have incurred from his “repetitive work activities” during the nine months he had worked for Senco.

These petitions and applications resulted in consolidation of the four cases for further proceedings, in which Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company and General Insurance Company of America again appeared as the respective insurance carriers for applicant’s 1969 and 1970 employers. Respondent Continental Casualty Company appeared as the carrier for Senco. Applicant filed medical reports by Dr. Okumura and by Arthur H. Holmboe, M.D. Continental Casualty Company filed a report by James B. Ludwig, M.D.

The medical and other evidence was received, and applicant testified, at hearings conducted by a board referee on and after March 26, 1975. On March 22, 1976, the referee filed:

(1) In number 27062, “Supplemental Findings And Award” in which he (the referee) found that applicant had not incurred “new and further” disability from the 1969 injury.
(2) In number 30536, “Supplemental Findings And Award” in which the referee made the same finding relative to the 1970 injury and denied applicant’s petition to reopen;
*531 (3) In number 43607, “Findings And Award” in which the referee found that applicant had not sustained a specific industrial injury while working for Senco on March 22, 1974, as alleged in the application; and,
(4) In number 44636, “Findings And Award” in which the referee found that applicant had incurred the cumulative industrial injury alleged in the application, fixed a permanent disability rating of 4% percent for that injury, found “temporary total disability” to have occurred from May 17, 1974, through June 30, 1974 (i.e., between the times when applicant was laid off at Senco and Dr. Okumura subsequently released him for work), awarded indemnity payments accordingly, and awarded medical expenses incurred by applicant from February 1 through—but not after—September 6, 1974.

Applicant did not challenge the result reached in number 43607, but petitioned the board for reconsideration of the findings and awards made in the other three proceedings. The referee filed a report (“Report And Recommendation”) in which he analyzed the three awards and recommended that the board deny applicant’s petition. In an “Order Denying Reconsideration” filed on June 4, 1976 (with one commissioner dissenting), the board adopted the report in full and denied the petition. We granted applicant’s petition for review of this order.

Applicant contends on the review, as he did in his petition for reconsideration, that the evidence establishes that the seizure he experienced at his home after September 6, 1974, 1 was an “aggravation” of the back condition which had been caused by the three industrial injuries he had received in 1969, 1970 and earlier in 1974; that he is accordingly entitled to reimbursement of his self-incurred medical expenses, and to temporary disability benefits, at pertinent times after the dates upon which both were terminated in the award made in number 44636 (June 30 and September 6, respectively) and that all three respondent insurance carriers are responsible for these benefits because of the involvement of all three prior industrial injuries. 2

*532 As shown by the referee’s report which it adopted in full, the board rejected these contentions upon the basis that the September seizure was a “non-industrial injury,” incurred by applicant in an “incident at home,” to which all his needs and complaints after September 6 were solely attributable and were accordingly apportioned

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 Cal. App. 3d 527, 137 Cal. Rptr. 326, 42 Cal. Comp. Cases 214, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 1342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcglinn-v-workers-compensation-appeals-board-calctapp-1977.