Presby Homes & Services v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board

982 A.2d 1261, 2009 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1555, 2009 WL 3644402
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 5, 2009
Docket978 C.D. 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 982 A.2d 1261 (Presby Homes & Services 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
Presby Homes & Services v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, 982 A.2d 1261, 2009 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1555, 2009 WL 3644402 (Pa. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge LEAVITT.

Presby Homes and Services (Employer) petitions for review of an adjudication of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) granting a claim petition filed by its employee, Rachel Quiah (Claimant). In doing so, the Board affirmed the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ), who held that Claimant was entitled to full disability benefits because the modified-duty position Employer offered to Claimant was not actually available. In this case, we consider whether an employer’s job offer is a bona fide offer where the employer reserves the right to revise the duties of a job and offers the job on an “at will” basis, as opposed to a contract basis.

Claimant worked for Employer as a certified nursing assistant. On June 4, 2007, Claimant was bathing a non-ambulatory resident, who resisted being positioned on her side and fell backward onto Claimant’s left arm. Employer issued a notice of temporary compensation payable on June 13, 2007, describing Claimant’s injury as a lumbar sprain/strain. Thereafter, Claimant filed a claim petition on June 28, 2007, alleging that she suffered a lower back injury and a left wrist injury and was disabled from returning to work. On August 30, 2007, Employer issued a notice stopping temporary compensation and a *1263 medical-only notice of compensation payable (NCP). The NCP noted that Claimant’s disability benefits were suspended because she failed to return to the modified-duty position Employer had offered to her to begin on August 29, 2007. Reproduced Record at 69a (R.R. —). The claim petition was assigned to a WCJ.

Claimant testified on her own behalf, both by deposition and before the WCJ. Claimant acknowledged that Employer offered her a modified-duty position but stated that she did not accept it because of ongoing pain in her back and right leg.

Claimant presented the deposition testimony of her medical expert, Dr. Stephen F. Ficchi. Dr. Ficchi testified that Claimant was first seen in his office on July 2, 2007. He did not personally examine Claimant. Based upon his review of his colleagues’ records, Dr. Ficchi diagnosed Claimant with a herniated lumbar disc; a right L5 radiculopathy; a left wrist sprain/ strain and a left thumb sprain/strain. He opined that those conditions were directly related to the work incident on June 4, 2007. Dr. Ficchi further opined that Claimant was not physically capable of returning to her former position or to the modified-duty position.

Employer presented the deposition testimony of its independent medical examiner, Dr. Scott A. Rushton, a board-certified orthopedic surgeon who evaluated Claimant on August 6, 2007. Dr. Rushton diagnosed Claimant with a symptomatic L4-L5 herniated disc and resultant L5 radiculo-pathy on the right side. Dr. Rushton’s report restricted Claimant to lifting no more than 10 pounds and to only “occasional” bending, squatting, climbing, reaching above her shoulder, kneeling, crawling and using foot controls. R.R. 166a. Dr. Rushton concluded that Claimant was capable of returning to sedentary work on a full-time basis and that the modified-duty position offered by Employer fit within his restrictions.

Employer also offered the deposition testimony of its Staff Development Coordinator, Susan Harmon. Harmon testified that when she received Dr. Rushton’s report on Claimant’s physical capabilities, she prepared a modified-duty job description for Claimant’s position to accommodate her restrictions. As a “Temporary Modified Duty Certified Nursing Assistant,” Claimant would have been responsible for, inter alia, sitting in the dining room with residents; attending to residents’ needs with respect to feeding, grooming and communicating; protecting the personal belongings of the residents; assisting with the orientation of new residents and their families; and assisting her supervisor with administrative tasks and special projects within her physical limitations. R.R. 168a-169a.

The four-page job description ended with a “Receipt and Acknowledgment” section that contained the following relevant provisions:

I acknowledge and understand that ... receipt of the job description does not imply nor create a promise of employment, nor an employment contract of any kind, and that my employment is at-will.
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[J]ob duties, tasks, work hours and work requirements may be changed at any time.

R.R. 170a. Harmon sent a copy of the job description to Claimant on August 22, 2007, along with a notice of availability to return to work and a letter confirming that Claimant was expected to return to full-time work on August 29, 2007, at her pre-injury salary. Claimant did not respond to the job offer or report back to work.

*1264 The WCJ credited the testimony of Dr. Rushton in its entirety, including his clinical findings, his opinions regarding Claimant’s work restrictions and his opinion that Claimant could perform the duties of the modified-duty certified nursing assistant position. The WCJ rejected as not credible Claimant’s testimony that the physical restrictions resulting from her work injury exceeded those placed upon her by Dr. Rushton. Finally, the WCJ rejected Harmon’s testimony that a modified-duty position had been made available, reasoning, sua sponte, that because the modified-duty position was “at-will” and the duties could be revised by Employer, there had been no valid job offer.

Based on the foregoing findings, the WCJ held that Employer “failed to show that the alleged offered modified job actually existed ... and further failed to show that such was a bona fide job offer.” WCJ Opinion at 9. The WCJ also found that Claimant met her burden of proving that she sustained a disabling work-related injury on June 4, 2007. Accordingly, the WCJ granted Claimant’s claim petition for benefits effective June 5, 2007. Employer appealed to the Board, and the Board affirmed. Employer now petitions for this Court’s review. 1

Employer argues that the WCJ erred in finding that the modified-duty job it offered to Claimant was not available due to the qualifying language in the Receipt and Acknowledgment section of the job description. Employer contends that these insignificant and boilerplate provisions merely memorialized the at-will nature of every employment relationship and in no way limited the availability of the position. Employer maintains that it satisfied the well-settled standards for demonstrating that a modified-duty position was actually available to its partially disabled employee. We agree.

In a proceeding on a claim petition, the claimant bears the burden of establishing a work-related injury rendering the claimant incapable of performing the time-of-injury job. Vista International Hotel v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Daniels), 560 Pa. 12, 22, 742 A.2d 649, 654 (1999). If the employer asserts that the claimant can perform some work within her medical restrictions, the employer bears the burden of proving that suitable employment is available. Id. (citing Kachinski v.

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Bluebook (online)
982 A.2d 1261, 2009 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1555, 2009 WL 3644402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presby-homes-services-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-2009.