Meyers v. Board of Administration for Federated City Employees Retirement Fund

224 Cal. App. 4th 250, 168 Cal. Rptr. 3d 560, 79 Cal. Comp. Cases 284, 2014 WL 788266, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 193
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 2014
DocketH038351
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 224 Cal. App. 4th 250 (Meyers v. Board of Administration for Federated City Employees Retirement Fund) 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
Meyers v. Board of Administration for Federated City Employees Retirement Fund, 224 Cal. App. 4th 250, 168 Cal. Rptr. 3d 560, 79 Cal. Comp. Cases 284, 2014 WL 788266, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 193 (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

PREMO, J.

Plaintiff William Meyers was injured on the job while employed by the City of San Jose (the City). He applied to defendant, the Board of Administration for the Federated City Employees Retirement Fund (the Board) for the City of San Jose, for disability retirement benefits as provided for City employees by the San Jose Municipal Code. The Board denied Meyers’s application. Meyers challenged that denial by way of an administrative mandate petition, which the superior court denied. Meyers now appeals from that denial.

We reverse the judgment and direct the trial court to grant Meyers’s petition for a writ of mandate and remand the matter to the Board for further proceedings.

I. Background

A. Factual Background

1. Meyers’s Injury, Medical Treatment, and Workers’ Compensation Claim

Meyers began working for the City as an associate construction inspector in 2001. In February 2003, he fell on the job, hitting his back and elbow on the pavement. Meyers sought treatment for the resulting back and neck pain, and, in August 2003, underwent surgery during which three of his vertebrae were fused together.

Meyers returned to work in December 2003 but continued to experience muscle spasms and back pain for which he took medication and received ongoing treatment. On July 18, 2004, Meyers was transferred to the Department of Transportation (DOT) as a sidewalk inspector. Meyers’s back pain *253 increased, and, in October 2004, became so severe that he went to the emergency room.

Meyers filed a workers’ compensation claim. In connection with that claim, Meyers was examined by two qualified medical examiners, John Horowitz, D.C., and Richard Abend, D.C. In his October 18, 2004 report, Dr. Horowitz noted that Meyers’s new position as a sidewalk inspector required repetitive bending, which had exacerbated his lower back pain. Dr. Horowitz took Meyers off work at that time, noting that Meyers’s condition was “persistent and his pain [was] nearly intolerable.” Dr. Horowitz’s report noted that Meyers may not be able to tolerate the repetitive bending required by his current job as a sidewalk inspector. Dr. Horowitz again examined Meyers on February 23, 2005, and concluded that Meyers could not bend, crawl, crouch, or kneel; lift or carry 25 pounds or more; engage in push/pull activity exerting significant force; or frequently extend or rotate his head and neck. On October 18, 2005, Dr. Horowitz concluded that Meyers could not return to his job as a result of his disability, which Dr. Horowitz concluded was caused by the February 2003 workplace fall.

Dr. Abend concluded in December 2004 that “Mr. Meyers’ present disability .. . was a direct result of his industrial injury of February 14, 2003.” On November 15, 2005, Dr. Abend concluded that “Meyers has a disability that limits him to semi-sedentary work.” Dr. Abend further concluded that Meyers could not “tolerate strenuous activity,” “sit for more than 30 minutes without a short break,” “stand for more than 15 minutes in one place,” “perform any repeated bending or stooping, pushing or pulling, or lifting greater than 15 pounds.”

Meyers was separated from City service on May 19, 2005.

A letter from a City workers’ compensation claims adjuster dated November 10, 2005, informed Meyers that the City “has no modified or alternative work available for you.” That conclusion was based on the restrictions imposed by Dr. Horowitz on February 23, 2005.

In April 2006, the State of California’s Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board awarded workers’ compensation benefits to Meyers, finding that an industrial injury had caused him to be permanently disabled.

In July 2006, Meyers was examined by John E. Massey, M.D., a certified pain management specialist. Dr. Massey concluded that Meyers suffered from “a chronic pain syndrome” for which he was on “chronic opioids” and *254 required “significant doses of anti-seizure or anti-neuropathic pain medicines.” Dr. Massey noted that the likelihood of Meyers returning to work while on those medications was low. In August 2008, Dr. Massey stated his belief that it is “within a medical certainty that [Meyers’s] current symptoms are related to his specific industrial injury of February 14, 2003.” Dr. Massey further stated that Meyers is “limited to semi-sedentary work and unable to tolerate any kind of strenuous activity.”

In 2007, Meyers completed an eight-week functional restoration program at the Bay Area Pain and Wellness Center, , where he was treated by Maliheh Massih, M.D. At the completion of that program, Dr. Massih concluded that Meyers could return to work with the following physical limitations: (1) no bending for more than one hour per eight-hour work day, (2) no squatting for more than one hour per eight-hour work day, (3) no kneeling for more than 10 to 30 minutes per hour, (4) no standing for more than 10 to 30 minutes per hour, (5) no lifting more than 20 to 25 pounds, (6) no sitting more than 20 to 30 minutes at a time without an opportunity to stand, (7) no standing statically for more than 15 minutes without an opportunity to sit; and (8) no walking more than five hours total per day.

2. Meyers’s Application for Disability Retirement Benefits

On March 5, 2005, Meyers applied for service-connected disability retirement benefits. In connection with his application for disability retirement benefits, Meyers was examined by Rajiv Das, M.D., the Board’s medical director. In a December 21, 2005 memorandum to the Board, Dr. Das found the cause of Meyers’s “significant disability [to be] unclear.” Dr. Das concluded that the following work restrictions were appropriate for Meyers: (1) “avoiding] repetitive bending and stooping,” (2) “avoiding] lifting weights greater than 20 pounds,” and (3) “be[ing] allowed to . . . stand when seated for more than 15 to 20 minutes.”

The Board asked the DOT whether the restrictions set forth by Dr. Das “could have been accommodated at the time” Meyers was separated from City service. In its January 4, 2006 response memorandum, the DOT described Meyers’s duties as an associate construction inspector assigned to the sidewalk section. The memorandum then stated that the DOT was “able to accommodate [Meyers] in the Sidewalk Section based on the current work restrictions” imposed by Dr. Das. The memorandum further noted that Dr. Das’s “restrictions differ from [Meyers’s] previous restrictions from Dr. Horowitz dated 2/23/05, which we were unable to accommodate at the time.”

*255 At Meyers’s subsequent hearing before the Board, Allen Demers, the retum-to-work manager for the City’s human resources department, noted that at the time the DOT issued the January 4, 2006 memorandum, Meyers was not eligible to return to work because he had already separated from City service. Therefore, he explained, the conclusion of the January 2006 memorandum was that Meyers “theoretically” could have been accommodated at the time of his separation—May 2005—using Dr. Das’s restrictions.

B. Procedural Background

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Bluebook (online)
224 Cal. App. 4th 250, 168 Cal. Rptr. 3d 560, 79 Cal. Comp. Cases 284, 2014 WL 788266, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-board-of-administration-for-federated-city-employees-retirement-calctapp-2014.