Opinion
ALLPORT, J.
Petitioner John T. Morgan contends the board and the permanent disability specialist erred in the manner in which they rated the multiple factors of disability from his industrial injury. We hold that the board needs to consider the question further. Accordingly, we annul the present award and remand the matter to the board.
I
Proceedings Before the Appeals Board
Morgan, while employed from November 1, 1946, through April 30, 1974, as a police sergeant by respondent City of Santa Monica, whose
workers’ compensation insurance carrier was respondent State Compensation Insurance Fund (State Fund), sustained an injury arising out of and occurring in the course of his employment causing hypertension, peptic ulcer, hepatitis,'gastrointestinal bleeding and hernia. On May 11, 1976, a findings and award issued finding permanent disability in the amount of 74 percent.
On March 29, 1977, Morgan filed a petition to reopen his claim, alleging new and further disability. (See Lab. Code, §§ 5410, 5803, 5804.) On the petition to reopen, the judge found good cause to reopen and directed the following description of the factors of Morgan’s permanent disability to the Disability Evaluation Bureau for evaluation:
“Applicant is limited to light work as a result of incisional hernia.
“Hypertension limited applicant to light work with no emotional stress.”
The rating specialist computed a 76 percent rating of the disability factors using the following formula:
19. -50 54H 56 61) ) 76
6.3 -20 541 27 31)
Morgan objected to the rating by filing a written “Motion to Strike Recommended Rating.” Morgan’s basic contention was that the rater erred in assigning a 20 standard rating to the hypertension disability in that such standard failed to encompass all the factors of disability described.
The rater was then cross-examined by the parties. The rater testified: the 50 standard for the hernia was based upon the light work restriction; the 20 standard for the hypertension disability is based on the restriction from emotional stress; the light work restriction for the hypertension (a 50 standard) “overlapped” with the light work restriction for the hernia and hence nothing in the 20 standard for the hypertension reflects the work restriction; the multiple disabilities table does not take into consideration such “overlapping”; and, in her opinion it would be improper to first rate the light work for the hernia at a 50 standard, then rate the hypertension at a 60 standard (50 percent for the light work plus 10 percent for the avoidance of emotional stress)
and then combine the two on the multiple disabilities table.
The judge denied Morgan’s motion to strike the rating and issued a 76 percent disability award.
Morgan sought reconsideration. The Board, with one commissioner of the three-member panel dissenting, granted reconsideration and issued new rating instructions as follows: “Applicant is limited to light work as a result of incisional hernia. Hypertension limited applicant to light work with no emotional stress. Abdominal discomfort on lifting virtually anything; tight clothing results in increased abdominal discomfort; hernia repair has resulted in 12" surgical scar causing applicant to be guarded in all his movements.”
The same rater issued the identical recommended rating of 76 percent on the new instructions. Morgan renewed his objection to the rating by filing a written “Motion to Strike Rating.” The Board noting the new rating of 76 percent was the same as the old then affirmed and accepted the 76 percent award.
II
Discussion
Morgan’s position is that the rating should be:
19. -50 54H 56 -61) ) 96 6.3 -60 541 69 -74)
This rating utilizes a 60 standard (light work plus no emotional stress) for the hypertension. The 74 rating for the hypertension and the 61 rating for the hernia are then combined on the multiple disabilities table to get the 96 rating.
A.
Hutchinson, Mercier, Hegglin and Mihesuah
Understanding the issues involved here requires review of three Supreme Court opinions and one opinion of this court.
In
State Compensation Ins. Fund
v.
Industrial Acc. Com. (Hutchinson)
(1963) 59 Cal.2d 45 [27 Cal.Rptr. 702, 377 P.2d 902], the injured employee suffered two successive industrial injuries. The first one was in 1958 to the injured’s neck and he received a 26 percent rating based upon the following factors of disability: “ ‘Constant minimal pain in the back of neck extending out over left shoulder, at times extending to the right shoulder, at times extending to the fingertips of both hands; at times pain becomes slight, particularly in performing overhead work, climbing ladders, and scaffolds, becoming moderate on lifting over 35 lbs.’ ”
(Hutchinson, supra,
59 Cal.2d 45, 47.)
Thereafter, the injured sustained the second injury, a back injury, which had the following factors of disability: “ ‘Minimal low back pain increased to slight on heavy work. He wears a corset-type brace which reasonably controls the low back pain.’ ”
(Ibid.)
Thus, while the first and second disabilities were not identical, they did overlap in that each contained a pain factor. The issue in
Hutchinson
was whether under Labor Code section
the second injury could be apportioned to the first injury even though the two injuries arguably involved different parts of the body. The court held that there could be apportionment since the issue was not whether different parts of the body were involved but whether the second injury had changed the injured’s “capacity or ability to compete” in the open labor market differently from the first: “[T]he disability resulting from a subsequent injury should be compensable only to the extent that it can be said that the employee’s earning capacity or ability to compete has been decreased from what it was immediately prior to the second injury. The computation of this figure cannot be determined by a mechanical application of a method of apportionment based upon whether the injury occurs to the same anatomical part of the body. It must come from a consideration of the nature of the disability caused by the injury. If successive injuries produce separate and independent disabilities then each is properly rated separately without concern for the theoretical 100 per cent assigned to ‘total’ disability. (See
Smith
v.
Industrial Acc.
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Opinion
ALLPORT, J.
Petitioner John T. Morgan contends the board and the permanent disability specialist erred in the manner in which they rated the multiple factors of disability from his industrial injury. We hold that the board needs to consider the question further. Accordingly, we annul the present award and remand the matter to the board.
I
Proceedings Before the Appeals Board
Morgan, while employed from November 1, 1946, through April 30, 1974, as a police sergeant by respondent City of Santa Monica, whose
workers’ compensation insurance carrier was respondent State Compensation Insurance Fund (State Fund), sustained an injury arising out of and occurring in the course of his employment causing hypertension, peptic ulcer, hepatitis,'gastrointestinal bleeding and hernia. On May 11, 1976, a findings and award issued finding permanent disability in the amount of 74 percent.
On March 29, 1977, Morgan filed a petition to reopen his claim, alleging new and further disability. (See Lab. Code, §§ 5410, 5803, 5804.) On the petition to reopen, the judge found good cause to reopen and directed the following description of the factors of Morgan’s permanent disability to the Disability Evaluation Bureau for evaluation:
“Applicant is limited to light work as a result of incisional hernia.
“Hypertension limited applicant to light work with no emotional stress.”
The rating specialist computed a 76 percent rating of the disability factors using the following formula:
19. -50 54H 56 61) ) 76
6.3 -20 541 27 31)
Morgan objected to the rating by filing a written “Motion to Strike Recommended Rating.” Morgan’s basic contention was that the rater erred in assigning a 20 standard rating to the hypertension disability in that such standard failed to encompass all the factors of disability described.
The rater was then cross-examined by the parties. The rater testified: the 50 standard for the hernia was based upon the light work restriction; the 20 standard for the hypertension disability is based on the restriction from emotional stress; the light work restriction for the hypertension (a 50 standard) “overlapped” with the light work restriction for the hernia and hence nothing in the 20 standard for the hypertension reflects the work restriction; the multiple disabilities table does not take into consideration such “overlapping”; and, in her opinion it would be improper to first rate the light work for the hernia at a 50 standard, then rate the hypertension at a 60 standard (50 percent for the light work plus 10 percent for the avoidance of emotional stress)
and then combine the two on the multiple disabilities table.
The judge denied Morgan’s motion to strike the rating and issued a 76 percent disability award.
Morgan sought reconsideration. The Board, with one commissioner of the three-member panel dissenting, granted reconsideration and issued new rating instructions as follows: “Applicant is limited to light work as a result of incisional hernia. Hypertension limited applicant to light work with no emotional stress. Abdominal discomfort on lifting virtually anything; tight clothing results in increased abdominal discomfort; hernia repair has resulted in 12" surgical scar causing applicant to be guarded in all his movements.”
The same rater issued the identical recommended rating of 76 percent on the new instructions. Morgan renewed his objection to the rating by filing a written “Motion to Strike Rating.” The Board noting the new rating of 76 percent was the same as the old then affirmed and accepted the 76 percent award.
II
Discussion
Morgan’s position is that the rating should be:
19. -50 54H 56 -61) ) 96 6.3 -60 541 69 -74)
This rating utilizes a 60 standard (light work plus no emotional stress) for the hypertension. The 74 rating for the hypertension and the 61 rating for the hernia are then combined on the multiple disabilities table to get the 96 rating.
A.
Hutchinson, Mercier, Hegglin and Mihesuah
Understanding the issues involved here requires review of three Supreme Court opinions and one opinion of this court.
In
State Compensation Ins. Fund
v.
Industrial Acc. Com. (Hutchinson)
(1963) 59 Cal.2d 45 [27 Cal.Rptr. 702, 377 P.2d 902], the injured employee suffered two successive industrial injuries. The first one was in 1958 to the injured’s neck and he received a 26 percent rating based upon the following factors of disability: “ ‘Constant minimal pain in the back of neck extending out over left shoulder, at times extending to the right shoulder, at times extending to the fingertips of both hands; at times pain becomes slight, particularly in performing overhead work, climbing ladders, and scaffolds, becoming moderate on lifting over 35 lbs.’ ”
(Hutchinson, supra,
59 Cal.2d 45, 47.)
Thereafter, the injured sustained the second injury, a back injury, which had the following factors of disability: “ ‘Minimal low back pain increased to slight on heavy work. He wears a corset-type brace which reasonably controls the low back pain.’ ”
(Ibid.)
Thus, while the first and second disabilities were not identical, they did overlap in that each contained a pain factor. The issue in
Hutchinson
was whether under Labor Code section
the second injury could be apportioned to the first injury even though the two injuries arguably involved different parts of the body. The court held that there could be apportionment since the issue was not whether different parts of the body were involved but whether the second injury had changed the injured’s “capacity or ability to compete” in the open labor market differently from the first: “[T]he disability resulting from a subsequent injury should be compensable only to the extent that it can be said that the employee’s earning capacity or ability to compete has been decreased from what it was immediately prior to the second injury. The computation of this figure cannot be determined by a mechanical application of a method of apportionment based upon whether the injury occurs to the same anatomical part of the body. It must come from a consideration of the nature of the disability caused by the injury. If successive injuries produce separate and independent disabilities then each is properly rated separately without concern for the theoretical 100 per cent assigned to ‘total’ disability. (See
Smith
v.
Industrial Acc. Com., supra,
44 Cal.2d 364, 367 [282 P.2d 64].) But if the subsequent injury, even if to a different part
of the body, does not alter the earning capacity or ability to compete in the labor market it is not compensable. And if it does alter these factors, it should be compensable only to the extent of the alteration. (See
State Comp. Ins. Fund
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
56 Cal.2d 681, 686 [16 Cal.Rptr. 359, 365 P.2d 415].)”
(Hutchinson, supra, 59
Cal.2d 45, 53.)
Then came
Hegglin
v.
Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd., supra, 4
Cal.3d 162.
Hegglin
involved a single industrial injury which resulted in back and knee disability and also disability from hepatitis. Both the hepatitis and the back independently limited the injured’s work capacity. The board, however, described the factors of disability as follows: “ ‘Constant slight pain in the low back increasing after being on feet for 3 or 4 hours. [Par.] Right knee disability with slight pain after being on feet for 3 or 4 hours or in cold weather which gives way when walking on uneven terrain or in sand. Because of knee disability applicant should not walk on uneven terrain nor should he climb or descend stairs rapidly. [Par.] Slight to moderate fatigue from hepatitis limiting applicant to no heavy work or heavy exertion.’ ”
(Hegglin, supra, 4
Cal.3d at p. 167.)
The board in
Hegglin
did not include any work restriction for the back even though it alone restricted the injured from heavy work since they were “persuaded that it would be erroneous to describe the disabilities arising from both the back injury and the hepatitis as precluding applicant from heavy work and suggesting that the two be added together.” Thus, the board concluded that the combination of the two conditions resulted in no greater disability and being that the two conditions “overlapped” only one rating could be given to the extent of the overlap.
The Supreme Court in
Hegglin
noted that the back and the hepatitis were two distinct disabilities: “Here, it is clear that the injury to the back and the impairment of liver functions (caused by the hepatitis) were separate and individual physical abnormalities resulting from the single industrial accident. The record demonstrates that every witness treated the two factors separately. The injury to the spine and the destruction of liver cells and liver functions obviously involve impairment or abnormalities of separate portions of the anatomy. Furthermore, it is clear that the two factors impose separate limitations on petitioner’s capacity to work. The back injury caused a weakness which precluded him from lifting heavy objects at any time; but the impairment of liver functions limited his capacity to work only after several hours of exertion. Because of his back disability he can no longer perform work requiring strenuous use of
the back. In addition, due to his hepatitis condition, he can hold only those jobs which do not require sustained physical exertion of any kind ■and which allow him to take unpredictable absences averaging three weeks per year. In sum, the impaired function of the back and the impaired function of the liver, with their respective disabling consequences mentioned above, were separate and individual abnormalities and hence separate factors of disability.”
(Hegglin, supra, 4
Cal.3d 162, 171-172.)
The court held that “[s]ince the back condition and the hepatitis condition were independent factors of disability, each of them should have been described in the request to the rating bureau.”
(Hegglin, supra,
at p. 172.) The court rejected the application of
Hutchinson
since
Hutchinson
“dealt with the problem of overlapping disabilities caused by injuries sustained in two separate industrial accidents.”
(Hegglin, supra,
at pp. 172-173.) The court explained that
Hutchinson
was the result of
Labor Code section 4750 which does not pertain to cases involving a single injury. (Ibid.)
The court then stated: “We hold that in cases involving multiple factors of disability caused by a single industrial accident the Board must, in any instructions it may direct to the rating bureau, fully describe each separate factor of disability. Any overlap of the factors of disability thus described is adequately taken into account, and the pyramiding of disabilities is properly avoided, by application of the multiple disabilities rating schedule.”
(Hegglin, supra, 4
Cal.3d at p. 174.)
Following
Hegglin
came
Mercier
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1976) 16 Cal.3d 711 [129 Cal.Rptr. 161, 548 P.2d 361].
Mercier
involved
successive
industrial injuries. The question in
Mercier
was whether
Hegglin,
notwithstanding the express language therein to the contrary, invalidated the holding in
Hutchinson.
In
Mercier,
the Supreme Court affirmed an award apportioning a policeman’s 75 percent permanent disability resulting from an industrially related heart disability to a prior industrial back injury for which the employee had been awarded a 34.5 percent permanent disability. In so doing the court stated at pages 715-716:
“Here, the injuries arose out of separate industrial events. In such case, apportionment turns on whether the ,second injury decreases the employee’s earning capacity or his ability to compete in the open labor market in the same manner as the first. The fact that the injuries occur to two
different anatomical parts of the body while relevant, does not in itself preclude apportionment.
“The question of overlapping disabilities is one of fact—not of logic. The basic purpose of workers’ compensation is to compensate diminished ability to compete in the labor market (Lab. Code, § 4660, subd. (a)) rather than to compensate every injury. Proper computation of overlapping disabilities—either partial or total—calls for determining the percentage of combined disability and then subtracting the percentage of disability due to the prior injury.
(Dow Chemical Co.
v.
Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd.
(1967) 67 Cal.2d 483, 492 [62 Cal.Rptr. 757, 432 P.2d 365];
State Compensation Ins. Fund
v.
Industrial Acc. Com. (Hutchinson), supra,
59 Cal.2d 45, 53;
Subsequent Injuries Fund
v.
Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd. (Royster)
(1974) 40 Cal.App.3d 403, 409-410 [115 Cal.Rptr. 204].) When all factors of disability attributable to the first injury are included in the factors attributable to the second, there is total overlap. We must conclude the rating properly was based on the combined injury. It is clear in this case that the injuries overlapped, and petitioner has failed to show that any disability factor in the first injury was not included in the instructions to the rating specialist.” (Fn. omitted.)
The court in
Mercier
was very clear to point out that
Hutchinson
and
Hegglin
were both still the law but applied to different situations:
“Hegglin
v.
Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd.
(1971) 4 Cal.3d 162 [93 Cal.Rptr. 15, 480 P.2d 967], [here] does not lead to a contrary result. . . . This court held that when the injuries arise out of the same accident section 4750 is inapplicable and apportionment is therefore not required. The court distinguished
Hutchinson
noting that its rule applies to an entirely different situation. . . .
“As
Hegglin
pointed out, the distinction drawn between single and multiple accident cases is well-founded. When the two injuries arise out of the same industrial accident the policy underlying
Hutchinson
of not discouraging employers from hiring disabled persons is inapplicable. In such situation, the employer properly is made to bear responsibility for all injuries caused by one accident. When there have been two or more accidents, the policy of encouraging the hiring and retaining of disabled persons is best effected by application of the rule of apportionment enunciated in
Hutchinson.” (Mercier, supra, 16
Cal.3d at p. 715.)
After
Mercier
the apparent rule was that
Hutchinson-Mercier
applied only in successive injuries to apportion “overlapping disabilities” and under
Hegglin
“overlapping factors of disability” involving disability from one injury was taken care of by the multiple disabilities table. Enter, however,
Mihesuah
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1976) 55 Cal.App.3d 720 [127 Cal.Rptr. 688],
Mihesuah
involved a single industrial injury involving respiratory and knee disability. The Board submitted to the permanent disability rating bureau the following factors of disability:
“ ‘Chest: Post traumatic deformity, susceptibility to infection and decrease in respiratory function which in and of itself would limit applicant [petitioner] to light work.
“ ‘Left Knee: Moderate to severe medial and lateral instability which requires wearing knee brace if applicant [petitioner] has to walk for any length of time and limits him to semi-sedentary work. He can do light lifting but little bending which involves the injured knee. He can do light work which involves some sitting or some standing but cannot place strains on knee such as those involved in lifting over 25 pounds, long periods of standing, and repetitive bending or stooping.’ ”
(Mihesuah, supra, 55
Cal.App.3d at p. 723.)
The rating specialist determined that the rating instructions resulted in a 70 standard rating which adjusted to 74 percent for age and occupation. The rater on cross-examination stated the chest disability separately would be a 50 standard which would adjust to 56 percent, the knee disability would alone be a 60 standard which would adjust to 69 percent, and using the multiple disabilities table the 56 percent rating “combined” with the 69 percent rating would be 92 percent. The rater, however, arrived at a 70 standard rating (i.e., the rating before adjustment for age and occupation) by considering the overall disability. The rater noted the factors of disability involved two separate areas of disability and the factors suggested a minimum 60 standard for the knee and additional disability for the respiratory/chest condition. The board followed the rater’s opinion on the matter.
The issue in
Mihesuah
was whether the rater was required to use the multiple disabilities table or could disregard it on the basis of his expert judgment. The court in
Mihesuah
noted that the multiple disabilities table
itself
stated it was only a “guide” and that
Hegglin
did
not require that the rating specialist’s expert opinion yield to the multiple disabilities table:
. . [I]t is clear that where ‘overlap’ exists between two factors of permanent disability caused by a single accident (which petitioner concedes to be the case here), and where a composite rating is requested of the Bureau, the rating which emerges rests upon the extent of ‘overlap’ as assessed by the rating specialist in the exercise of his expert judgment with the tabulated formula serving as a ‘guide.’ The
Hegglin
court did not mention this status of the multiple disability table as a ‘guide.’ Consequently, we do not read in its language as to ‘overlap’ (that ‘[a]ny overlap of the factors of disability thus [separately] described is adequately taken into account ... by application of the multiple disabilities rating schedule’) a statement that the specialist’s judgment was to yield to the composite rating tabulated.
“We interpret the language, rather, that a ‘factor of overlap is adequately taken into account’ when the specialist enters the table after having rated the separate factors of disability according to his judgment as to each. The composite rating shown in the table by the juxtaposition of the two separate threshold ratings (95 percent in this case, shown in the table by 56 percent vis-á-vis 69 percent) operates as a ceiling upon the final rating which he may reach. The final rating, however, is the product of his further judgment, exercised within the limit imposed by the table, according to his assessment of the presence and degree of ‘overlap’: it is not
necessarily,
as petitioner contends, the composite figure shown in the table. Any other interpretation would utterly refute the administratively pronounced status of the table as a ‘guide’ to a ‘final rating’ which ‘will be the result of consideration of the entire picture of disability and possibility of employability.’
“A more literal interpretation may be placed upon the
Hegglin
court’s conjunctive—but distinct—statement that ‘. . . the pyramiding of disabilities is properly avoided ... by application of the multiple disabilities rating schedule’ to separately described factors of permanent disability caused by a single industrial accident.
(Hegglin
v.
Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd., supra,
4 Cal.3d 162 at p. 174.) It is arithmetically possible that the sum of the factors’ separate ratings might ‘pyramid’ beyond 100 percent, which is obviously impermissible where they have been caused by one accident. (Lab. Code, § 4658; CEB, § 15.25. See, and compare,
Pacific Gas & Elec. Co.
v.
Ind. Acc. Com.
(1954) 126 Cal.App.2d 554, 556-557 [272 P.2d 818] [successive accidents producing a cumulative ‘rating’ of
102½ percent]. See also
Smith
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.
(1955) 44 Cal.2d 364, 367-368 [282 P.2d 64].) This possibility is ‘avoided ... by application of the multiple disabilities rating schedule’ because the table thereof does not permit a composite rating in excess of 100 percent.”
(Mihesuah, supra,
55 Cal.App.3d 720, 729-730.)
The court in
Mihesuah
affirmed the rating adopted by the board since the rater had “found ‘overlap’ and assessed its degree.”
(Mihesuah, supra,
55 Cal.App.3d at p. 731.)
B.
The Application of Hegglin and Mihesuah to Morgan
Morgan, in reality, contends that here the rater violated
Hegglin
in that she incorrectly applied
Hutchinson
and
Mercier.
State Fund argues that
Hegglin
is distinguishable and in any event
Mihesuah
permits the rater to do what she did here.
To distinguish
Hegglin,
State Fund argues: “Petitioner argues that the hypertension and the hernia should each be evaluated at 50% and then the Multiple Disability Tables applied. This application, however, results in an overlapping disability, as was pointed out by the Judge. Furthermore, nowhere in
Hegglin
is this rule applied.
Hegglin
stands for the principle that every disability must be fully described and that the Board’s failure to follow its own rules will result in a reversal.
Hegglin
involved two disabilities, one to the back and another from hepatitis. The back disability resulted in a work preclusion, however, the hepatitis condition resulted in an impaired function of the liver which produced a disability quite distinct from a work preclusion. When the Board described both disabilities in terms of a work preclusion, the Court stated that they were not following their own rules. Nowhere does
Hegglin
advance the argument that is set forth by petitioner.”
State Fund is correct that under
Hegglin
the board must fully describe the factors of disability but not correct in tiying to argue that the back and hepatitis did not involve similar work restrictions. The above
discussion of
Hegglin
demonstrates that in
Hegglin
the back and hepatitis involved similar (though not identical) work restrictions.
The problem here is trying to reconcile
Hegglin,
which disapproved the use of
Hutchinson
in the single injury case, with
Mihesuah,
which would perhaps allow what the rater did here.
As this court noted in
Franklin
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1978) 79 Cal.App.3d 224 [145 Cal.Rptr. 22], part of the problem is that the term “overlapping disabilities” has been used in both the apportionment of successive injuries and the rating of multiple disabilities stemming from the same single industrial injury. “As one commentator has pointed out, using ‘overlap’ as being synonymous with ‘pyramiding’ has led to confusion. (See Mastoris, Survey of the Developments in the Law of Workers’ Compensation in 1977 (printed materials prepared in conjunction with the educational seminar of Current Problem in Workers’ Compensation presented by the Compensation Insurance Attorneys Association on December 3, 1977, in Los Angeles (Century City), California) p. 48.) For purposes of clarity, the term ‘overlap’ should only be used in the apportionment of successive injuries (the situation presented in
State Compensation Ins. Fund
v.
Industrial Acc. Com. (Hutchinson), supra,
59 Cal.2d 45;
Mercier
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd., supra,
16 Cal.3d 711;
State Comp. Ins. Fund
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (Gaba)
(1977) 72 Cal.App.3d 13 [139 Cal.Rptr. 802]), and the term ‘pyramiding’ or ‘duplication’ should be used to describe the situation of multiple disabilities flowing from a single industrial injury (the situation presented by
Hegglin, Mihesuah, State Compensation Ins. Fund
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (Hurley)
(1977) 70 Cal.App.3d 599 [139 Cal.Rptr. 41], and here).
(Mastoris, supra.)” (Franklin, supra,
79 Cal.App.3d at p. 249, fn. 10.) Accordingly, we view the situation not as one of “overlap” but of “duplication” of the factors of disability.
From the record it clearly appears that the rater incorrectly utilized the principles of
Mercier
in arriving at the rating herein. The rater testified that she considered that the work restrictions for the hypertension and the hernia as totally “overlapping” under Mercier,
The rater thus arrived at
the rating by applying an incorrect “legal” principle. Accordingly, the present rating must be annulled.
The question then becomes how the board and the rater should evaluate the rating instructions on remand.
The rater should first determine if the rating instructions treat the hernia and hypertension as “separate and independent” disabilities. (Whether the disabilities are in fact separate and independent is a matter for the appeals board as trier of fact to determine.)
(Hegglin, supra,
4 Cal.3d 162, 171-172.) The hernia and hypertension appear to be separate and independent disabilities as each separately restricts Morgan to light work independently of the other and involve impairment or abnormalities of separate portions of the anatomy.
(Ibid.)
The rater must then determine if the multiple disabilities table can apply to disabilities from hernia and hypertension. “The ‘multiple disabilities table’ applies only to ‘disabilities involving
different members or organs
of the body (for instance disability in an arm, the back, and a leg.)’ (Schedule for Rating Permanent Disabilities,
supra,
p. 81; see also Welch,
supra,
p. 43;
Mihesuah, supra,
55 Cal.App.3d 720.) The table does not apply to ‘multiple disability factors in a single extremity nor to bilateral disabilities (such as disability in both legs)’ for which other procedures are followed to prevent ‘duplication’ or ‘pyramiding’ of the factors of the disability. (Schedule for Rating Permanent Disabilities,
supra,
p. 81; Welch,
supra,
pp. 13-14, 21-22, 28-29, 31.)”
(Franklin, supra,
79 Cal.App.3d 224, 249-250.)
The rater then determines whether the multiple disabilities table in fact should be applied to eliminate the “duplication” of the factors of disability.
As
Mihesuah
points out, the multiple disabilities table itself states it is only a “guide” and hence is not conclusive in determining the permanent disability rating in a case.
(Mihesuah, supra,
55 Cal.App.3d
720, 728-730; see also
Franklin, supra,
79 Cal.App.3d 224, 249-250.) Consequently, the rater is not bound by the multiple disabilities table and may vary from the computation achieved by use of the multiple disabilities table and achieve a final rating as a result of “consideration of the entire picture of disability and possibility of employability.”
(Mihesuah, supra;
Rating Schedule, p. 81; see fn. 8,
ante.)
In our view the rater may not disregard the rating achieved by the multiple disabilities table unless she utilizes her expert opinion in so rating the disabilities. As indicated above, the following of inapplicable legal, as opposed to rating, principles does not permit departure from the multiple disabilities table. Thus, in order to justify the present rating the rater must be able to testify that based upon her expert opinion one who is restricted to light work because of hypertension and also restricted to light work because of a hernia is in fact no more disabled than if that individual (Morgan) had just one of the disabilities. The rater need not follow the multiple disabilities table if based upon “the entire picture of disability and possibility of employability” she finds the ultimate rating should differ. However, there must be some
factual
basis for departure from the multiple disabilities table rather than an arbitrary
Of course, the rater only computes percentage of disability based upon the factors of disability stated by the board in the rating instructions.
(Pence
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.
(1965) 63 Cal.2d 48, 51 [45 Cal.Rptr. 12, 403 P.2d 140];
Allied Comp. Ins. Co.
v.
Ind. Acc. Com.
(1961) 57 Cal.2d 115 [17 Cal.Rptr. 817, 367 P.2d 409].) Accordingly, the board may find it necessary to make findings of fact based upon the evidence presented by the parties on the effect of the multiple work restrictions on Morgan and include them in the rating instructions so that the rater may be able to correctly evaluate the problem of “duplication” of the factors of disability.
We do not view our opinion herein as conflicting with
Mihesuah.
In
Mihesuah
the issue was whether the rater can disregard the multiple disabilities table and recommend a rating based upon his or her judgment;
Mihesuah
held that the rater could do so and we fully agree. Our decision reaches the question of how the rater can properly exercise her “independent judgment”—an issue which the court in
Mihesuah
did not reach in detail.
We wish to emphasize that we deal here with problems in the rating of multiple factors of disability stemming from a
single
injury and
not
successive injuries. The discussion of the procedure for rating Morgan’s disability herein has no direct application to apportionment of successive injuries.
III
Disposition
The present permanent disability rating and the permanent disability award based thereon are annulled. The cause is remanded to the board for such further proceedings as are indicated and consistent with the views expressed herein.
Cobey, Acting P. J., and Potter, J., concurred.