Newcomer Products v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board

826 A.2d 69, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 436
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 17, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 826 A.2d 69 (Newcomer Products v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newcomer Products v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, 826 A.2d 69, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 436 (Pa. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Senior Judge McCLOSKEY.

Newcomer Products and Zurich North America (hereafter collectively referred to as Employer) petition for review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board), affirming the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ), granting the claim petition filed on behalf of William Irvin (Claimant). We now affirm.

Employer employed Claimant for approximately thirty-five years. 1 For the last five to seven years, Claimant was steadily employed as a furnace operator. In this position, Claimant was exposed to a constant humming noise from a pump on a scrubber system attached to the furnace as well as noise from an overhead exhaust fan and the discharging of the furnace. However, over the course of his employment, Claimant worked at various positions in Employer’s facility, at or around noisy hydraulic presses and ballmills. 2 Although Claimant had worn ear protection over the last ten years of his employment, he indicated that he began experiencing ringing in his ears at the end of every shift.

Claimant visited with Dr. Michael Bell, a Board-certified otolaryngologist, in September of 1999. One month later, Claimant filed a claim petition against Employer alleging that he suffered hearing loss in excess of ten percent due to continuous exposure to hazardous occupational noise. 3 Claimant indicated a date of injury of September 22,1999, the same date that he saw Dr. Bell. Employer filed an answer denying the material allegations of Claimant’s petition and specifically raising as additional defenses that Claimant was not exposed to hazardous occupational noise, that Claimant had no long-term exposure and *71 that the claim petition was barred by the three-year statute of limitations. The case was assigned to the WCJ and proceeded with hearings.

At these hearings, Claimant testified on his own behalf, relating a history of his employment with Employer and his ongoing hearing problems. Claimant also presented the September 22, 1999, medical report of Dr. Bell. In this report, Dr. Bell noted that Claimant had suffered a progressively worsening hearing loss over the last four years with occasional tinnitus. Dr. Bell indicated that an audiometric evaluation performed at this examination revealed bilateral, symmetrical moderate to severe sensorineural hearing loss.

Dr. Bell thereafter calculated Claimant’s binaural hearing loss, using the American Medical Association’s Guides to Evaluation of Permanent Impairment (AMA Guides), to be 11.563%. Based upon Claimant’s history, physical examination and the audiom-etric test results, Dr. Bell opined that Claimant was exposed to sufficient industrial noise to constitute an occupational noise hazard. Dr. Bell further opined that Claimant’s binaural hearing loss was secondary to his cumulative exposure to loud noises during the course of his employment with Employer.

In opposition to Claimant’s petition, Employer presented the medical report of Dr. Douglas Chen, who performed an otologic evaluation of Claimant on April 13, 2000, at the request of Employer. At this examination, Claimant provided Dr. Chen with a history consistent with the facts detañed above. Dr. Chen noted a history of büat-eral progressive hearing loss and büateral tinnitus over the previous two years. Dr. Chen also noted a report of dosimetry testing at Employer’s facility in November of 1991 which revealed 74 decibel levels in the furnace region and regions surrounding the balhmll, the hammer and the separating area in excess of 90 decibels. 4

Dr. Chen indicated that Claimant’s oto-laryngologic examination was normal, i.e., his tympanic membranes and ear canals were normal. 5 Dr. Chen indicated that Claimant underwent audiometric testing at his office which did reveal “a müd sloping to moderate sensorineural hearing loss bilaterally.” (R.R. at 167a). Using the AMA Guides, Dr. Chen calculated Claimant’s binaural hearing impairment to be only 5.63%. Dr. Chen noted that Claimant’s hearing loss did not possess a 4,000 Hz notch and went on to conclude that Claimant’s condition did not have the characteristics of noise-induced hearing loss.

Employer also presented the testimony and report of Dr. Dietrich Weyel, who is Board-certified in industrial hygiene. Dr. Weyel performed sound level testing at Employer’s faeüity on May 3, 2000, and June 6, 2000. Dr. Weyel indicated that he used both a personal dosimeter and a sound pressure level meter to assess noise and noise exposure. Specifically, Dr. Wey-el indicated that he attached the personal dosimeter to one of Claimant’s co-workers in the furnace department and used another as a furnace area monitor. Dr. Weyel noted that the personal dosimeter revealed a 67.5 decibel level whereas the area monitor revealed a 65.3 decibel level.

Dr. Weyel also measured areas outside of the furnace department which tested mostly at levels below 90 decibels, with the *72 exception of the ballmill area, which tested between 93 and 97 decibels. Based upon these readings, Dr. Weyel opined that Claimant was not exposed to any noise at or above 90 decibels in the furnace department. On cross-examination, Dr. Weyel acknowledged that Claimant worked for Employer for more than the seven years he spent as a furnace operator and that he worked in various positions all over Employer’s facility, including maintenance.

Dr. Weyel also acknowledged that he took no measurements from someone performing a maintenance position and that some areas did test in excess of 90 decibels. Additionally, Dr. Weyel admitted that he had not reviewed any prior noise studies conducted at Employer’s facility. Further, Dr. Weyel admitted that Claimant suffered high frequency hearing loss, which is generally characteristic of noise-induced hearing loss. Moreover, Dr. Wey-el indicated that he spent a total of approximately six hours at Employer’s facility on the aforementioned dates and that said time would be indicative of Claimant’s noise exposure in the prior three years. 6

Furthermore, Employer presented the testimony of David Berenbrok, Claimant’s direct supervisor in the furnace department. Mr. Berenbrok worked at Employer’s facility for approximately twenty-six years, the last fifteen of which he has been supervisor. Mr. Berenbrok indicated that the machinery in the furnace department, including two furnaces, had not changed in the time he has been there and that the coworker utilized in Dr. Weyel’s testing does the exact job that Claimant regularly performs. Mr. Berenbrok noted that the noise where Claimant works comes from a scrubber system, which consists of a pump run by an electric motor.

Mr. Berenbrok noted that Claimant worked two shifts, first and second, which he alternated every other week. 7 However, during second shift weeks, Mr. Beren-brok indicated that Claimant was exposed to less noise as the furnaces usually begin a shut down process around 4:30 p.m. each day. Regarding the ballmills and hydraulic presses, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
826 A.2d 69, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcomer-products-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-2003.