Nathan Cooper v. Department Of Labor And Industries

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 14, 2015
Docket45793-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nathan Cooper v. Department Of Labor And Industries (Nathan Cooper v. Department Of Labor And Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nathan Cooper v. Department Of Labor And Industries, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION 11 201511P 14 f19 :53

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHi

DIVISION II

NATHAN M. COOPER, No. 45793 -8 -II

Appellant,

v.

STATE OF WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT UNPUBLISHED OPINION OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES,

Respondent.

WORSWICK, J. — Nathan Cooper appeals a judgment affirming an order of the Board of

Industrial Insurance Appeals denying his application to reopen his claim for worker' s

compensation benefits. He argues that ( 1) the trial court erred by not giving Cooper' s requested

jury instruction on preexisting conditions affecting an industrial injury, and ( 2) the trial court

erred by awarding to the Department of Labor & Industries the cost of a perpetuation deposition.

We disagree and affirm the judgment.

FACTS

Nathan Cooper worked for many years in the kitchen of a country club. In 2006, he

slipped and. fell on a wet floor at work, injuring his back. He did not file a worker' s

compensation claim with the Department of Labor & Industries ( Department) for that injury. He

had surgery in September of 2006 to fuse his lower lumbar spine. By January of 2007, Cooper

was well enough to return to work to a limited extent. No. 45793 -8 -II

On March 1, 2007, a large metal cutting board fell off a counter in the country club

kitchen, striking Cooper in the back of the knees. Cooper fell backwards, hurting his lower back.

Cooper filed a claim with the Department for this injury, which claim the Department approved.

The Department closed Cooper' s worker' s compensation claim on January 22, 2008, with

a preexisting category 3 impairment.' Cooper returned to work in January of 2008, and

continued to work until April of 2010, during which time he resumed his full work duties. On

April 22, 2010, Cooper reported bending over at work and feeling something " snap" in his lower

lumbar spine. Dep. of Fossier at 21. 2 Cooper filed a claim to reopen his previous worker' s

compensation claim stemming from the 2007 injury, and the Department denied the request.

Cooper appealed, and the Department affirmed its order denying Cooper' s application to

reopen the claim. Cooper then appealed to the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals ( Board),

and the Board granted review. The Board' s review sought to establish whether Cooper' s back

condition proximately caused by the 2007 injury had objectively worsened between the January

22, 2008 closure of his claim, and the July 7, 2011 order denying his application to reopen that

claim.3

1" Category 3" refers to a classification of the amount of Cooper' s disability under the Industrial Insurance Act regulations. See WAC 296 -20 -680.

2 The appellant submitted one volume containing the certified board record, transcripts of testimony and depositions, and other documents. We cite to each separately.

3 Under the Industrial Insurance Act, a worker is eligible for worker' s compensation where there is evidence of objective worsening of a condition proximately caused by an industrial injury, as shown by a comparison between the two dates relevant to this question. Phillips v. Dep' t of Labor & Indus., 49 Wn.2d 195, 197, 298 P. 2d 1117 ( 1956). These dates are known as the terminal dates." In this case, January 22, 2008 and July 7, 2011 are the terminal dates. Phillips, 49 Wn.2d at 197.

2 No. 45793 -8 -II

Evidence before the Board consisted of testimony from Cooper, a deposition from

Cooper' s examining physician Dr. Gritzka, and a perpetuation deposition from the Department' s

examining physician Dr. Fossier. Cooper testified that his back condition had worsened slowly

after the claim closure. He testified that the pain was worse on some days than others, but did

not provide other details about the worsening.

Dr. Gritzka, who examined Cooper in October of 2011, testified that Cooper' s condition

had " probably worsened" between the terminal dates of January 22, 2008 and July 7, 2011. Dep.

of Gritzka at 39. Dr. Gritzka objectively found that Cooper had fixed muscle spasms, swelling

along the lumbar spine near the site of his 2006 spinal fusion, and deformity in his vertebrae.

But Dr. Gritzka did not testify about any dates relevant to these conditions. Dr. Gritzka had not

examined Cooper before 2011, and did not testify about Cooper' s condition in 2007 ( after the

industrial injury), 2008 ( after the claim closure), or 2010 ( after the most recent reported injury).

Dr. Gritzka rated Cooper' s impairment a category 3.

By contrast, the Department' s medical examiner, Dr. Fossier, testified that Cooper' s

condition had not objectively worsened between the terminal dates. Dr. Fossier had examined

Cooper on October 11, 2010. Dr. Fossier also reviewed Cooper' s previous x -rays and medical

records. He testified that Cooper' s back condition could be expected to worsen slowly over time

due to his 2006 spinal fusion. Dr. Fossier compared x -rays of Cooper' s back from March 2007

and April 2009, which revealed some worsening which " would be expected just because of age,

change, the passage of time." Dep. of Fossier at 14. Dr. Fossier also reviewed an independent

medical examination from January of 2008 ( just prior to the claim closure), which revealed " no

increase" in impairment since the 2007 injury. Dep. of Fossier at 18. That independent medical No. 45793 -8 -II

examination concluded that the 2007 injury " caused only temporary aggravation of [Cooper' s]

condition." Dep. of Fossier at 18. The independent examination physician rated Cooper' s

impairment as a category 3. During Dr. Fossier' s examination of Cooper, Cooper reported pain

and very limited range of motion. Cooper reported pain in response to some of Dr. Fossier' s

tests that should not have been painful, indicating a psychological, not a physical, reaction.

Based on this examination and his review of the' previous examinations, Dr. Fossier concluded

that Cooper' s condition had not objectively worsened. He categorized Cooper' s impairment at a

category 3.

The Board denied Cooper' s appeal, and made findings of fact. It found no objective

worsening between the terminal dates. It found, " Neither the sole lay witness (Mr. Cooper), nor

the lone medical witness ( Dr. Gritzka), tied their generalized discussions of worsening to the

terminal dates as required by law." Certified Bd. R. ( CBR) at 22. The Board found that many of

Dr. Gritzka' s diagnoses predated the 2007 injury. The Board therefore found that, even if

Cooper' s condition had worsened, it was not caused by the 2007 injury and did not warrant

reopening that claim. The Board concluded that Dr. Fossier' s testimony was " substantially

better founded and more clearly and persuasively presented" than Dr. Gritzka' s testimony. CBR

at 31.

Cooper petitioned for review of this decision, which the Board denied. Cooper appealed

to the superior court. The superior court conducted a jury trial. Cooper proposed a jury

instruction reading:

If an industrial injury lights up, or makes disabling, a latent or preexisting infirmity, or weakened condition, then the resulting disability is to be attributed to the industrial injury. If the industrial injury is a proximate cause of the condition

4 No. 45793 -8 -II

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