Phillips v. Liberty Mutual

679 P.2d 884, 67 Or. App. 692, 1984 Ore. App. LEXIS 2967
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 11, 1984
Docket80-06429; CA A27964
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 679 P.2d 884 (Phillips v. Liberty Mutual) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Liberty Mutual, 679 P.2d 884, 67 Or. App. 692, 1984 Ore. App. LEXIS 2967 (Or. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinions

NEWMAN, J.

Claimant appeals an order of the Workers’ Compensation Board that reversed the order of the referee and denied claimant permanent total disability. The Board awarded claimant 80 percent loss of his right leg and 60 percent loss of his left leg. We find that claimant is permanently and totally disabled.

Claimant was 60 at the time of the hearing. He is a high school graduate and attended a business school for six months. He has been a dishwasher, cook’s helper, waiter, welder and truck driver. He is deaf in his right ear and wears a hearing aide in his left ear. Because of a previously broken jaw and denture problems, his speech is very difficult to understand. Since 1966, he was employed by the county as a janitor and by a daily newspaper as a route carrier delivering newspapers to distributors and to pay boxes.

He suffered compensable injuries to both knees when he fell while working for the newspaper on March 15,1978. On June 25, 1978, he had surgery for a total right knee replacement. On November 22, 1978, he received a partial replacement of the left knee. On March 17, 1979, Dr. Chester, the surgeon, wrote that claimant “still has significant incapacities for protracted walking, standing, lifting, climbing stairs, squatting and the like. * * * [H]e will have limited function in terms of his work capacity and at best he will be able to perform work in a sedentary capacity.” Claimant was examined by three doctors at Orthopaedic Consultants on May 9, 1979, who wrote that claimant “would not be able to return to any of his former occupations and is only capable of doing sedentary activities because of both knees.”

In August, 1979, a vocational counselor wrote that while a “return to County employment as a Day Porter or Night Light Janitorial duties is possible,” claimant has “no skills transferable to sedentary work and his age and other disabilities would be significant impairments to new unskilled entry level jobs.” He found that claimant could not use a telephone. The counselor was “certain that nobody would hire him as a cook, truck driver, or security guard with his many disabilities.” On October 5,1979, Dr. Chester concluded that, although “gainful employment” was feasible “if he could find relatively sendentary work commensurate with his age and training,” a return to his previous work was not possible.

[695]*695The employer offered claimant work as an “inserter,” an employe who places inserts into newspapers. An inserter must stand 85 percent of the work time. Dr. Chester wrote that he was unsure if claimant could do the job and recommended a trial period to see “if he is symptomatically able to do this.” Claimant did not attempt the job but turned it down because of the requirement of standing. Later, in March, 1980, Dr. Chester wrote that “patient has effected a full adjustment to retirement.” He added that “I really feel this is probably the best course of events for him.”

The employer then considered offering claimant a job as a night watchman. On June 4,1981, Dr. Chester wrote:

“Assuming this to be a quite sedentary activity, I can see no reason why Keith Phillips would not be able to do this, as long as it did not involve significant stair climbing, or walking over protracted distances or that type of thing. It could be just the occupation for him. Hopefully he will see it that way, too.”

On August 21, 1981, the employer created a new full-time position of night watchman and offered claimant the job. At the time of the hearing, the employer had not offered the job to anyone else. Although the majority of the night watchman’s time would be spent sitting, the job required that he walk through the two floors of the employer’s plant every 30 or 45 minutes during an 8-hour work shift, five days a week. Claimant could use the freight elevator to go between floors with minimal use of the stairs. The walking circuit of the building is 1167 feet, or 2-1/2 city blocks. Claimant’s uncontradicted testimony was that he could walk only two blocks at a time. He would also be required to use a telephone to report to the night management any unusual observations.

Claimant refused the night watchman’s job. He told the business manager, “I don’t think I can do it. I can’t hear.” The referee found:

“* * * [Claimant would be required to communicate with others, both face to face and by telephone, in the performance of his job duties. Because of his hearing and speech impediments he would have extreme difficulty doing so. As many of the reports in evidence indicate, claimant is very hard of hearing and is almost as difficult to understand. Having observed him carefully during the hearing I dare say it would be virtually impossible for him to communicate by telephone or CB radio.”

[696]*696Claimant asserts that he is permanently and totally disabled, even though he suffers from less than total physical incapacity, because of non-medical conditions including “age, training, aptitude, adaptability to nonphysical labor, mental capacity, emotional condition, as well as conditions of the labor market.” See Wilson v. Weyerhaeuser, 30 Or App 403, 409, 567 P2d 567 (1977). The Board, with one member dissenting, believed that claimant had not met the burden of proof described in ORS 656.206(3).1 The Board stated:

“From this evidence we cannot affirmatively conclude either that claimant has the physical capacity to perform the offered night watchman job or that claimant lacks the physical capacity to perform that job. The Court of Appeals addressed a very similar situation in Shaw v. Portland Laundry/Dry Cleaning, 47 Or App 1041, 1044 (1980):
“ ‘At the hearing before the referee, the employer for whom claimant was working when she became disabled stated that a seamstress position was available in his plant and in effect offered the job to claimant. Claimant had prior experience as a seamstress. She never clearly answered, we find, questions about whether she thought she was able to do that work. There is some indication in the medical evidence that working as a seamstress may involve more sitting than claimant is capable of doing and may involve more manipulation of sewing machine controls with her feet and knees than claimant is capable of doing. Like so many other parts of this record, however, the evidence about claimant’s ability to work as a seamstress is inconclusive.
“ ‘In sum, the medical evidence does not show total disability, and claimant was offered a job that she may or may not be capable of doing. Under these circumstances, we conclude that claimant’s failure at least to attempt working as a seamstress is the most telling fact that forecloses a finding of total disability.’ (Emphasis added.)
“Likewise, in this case, we find that claimant was offered a job that he may or may not be capable of doing and conclude that claimant’s failure at least to try working as a night watchman forecloses a finding of total disability under ORS 656.206(3).”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
679 P.2d 884, 67 Or. App. 692, 1984 Ore. App. LEXIS 2967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-liberty-mutual-orctapp-1984.