Pressley v. Southwestern Freight Lines

551 S.E.2d 118, 144 N.C. App. 342, 2001 N.C. App. LEXIS 438
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 19, 2001
DocketCOA00-750
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 551 S.E.2d 118 (Pressley v. Southwestern Freight Lines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pressley v. Southwestern Freight Lines, 551 S.E.2d 118, 144 N.C. App. 342, 2001 N.C. App. LEXIS 438 (N.C. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

Defendants appeal from an opinion of the North Carolina Industrial Commission awarding plaintiff workers’ compensation benefits for an occupational disease. Plaintiff, a long distance truck driver, initiated this action by filing a Form 18, Notice of Accident to Employer, alleging that he contracted coccidioidomycosis in October 1991 while carrying goods for defendant Southwestern Freight Lines between Los Angeles and Bakersfield, California. He alleged that he contracted the disease by exposure to dust-bom fungus or mold. Defendants denied liability on the grounds plaintiff “does not suffer from a compensable occupational disease.” Following a hearing, the *344 deputy commissioner filed an opinion and award on 30 March 1998 concluding plaintiff “has not sustained an occupational disease within the meaning of the Workers’ Compensation Act” because he failed to prove that the “disease was characteristic of and peculiar to his employment as a truck driver, and was not an ordinary disease of life to which the general public would be equally exposed.”

The Full Commission reversed on appeal, finding in pertinent part:

5. ... A biopsy performed on a lymph node removed from plaintiffs chest showed the presence of a coccidioidomycosis fungus organism. This organism lives in the soil and sand found in the southwestern United States, including Arizona, New Mexico, and southern California. It does not grow in North Carolina or in any state east of the Mississippi River. The organism can become airborne and inhaled, leading to infection in humans.
7. Plaintiff contracted coccidioidomycosis due to exposure to the organism which causes the disease while traveling in the southwestern United States. It is most likely that plaintiff inhaled the organism while in the course of his truck driving for defendant-employer. Plaintiff faced no real risk of exposure to this disease in North Carolina.
10. Plaintiffs work as a truck driver, which required him to travel to an area of the country where he could be exposed to the coc-cidioidomycosis fungus, placed him at an increased risk of contracting the disease when compared to the general public not so employed.

The Commission concluded, inter alia:

1. Plaintiff has sustained an occupational disease within the meaning of the Workers’ Compensation Act. Plaintiff contracted the disease of coccidioidomycosis due to exposure to fungus spores in the southwestern United States while traveling in the course of his employment with defendant-employer. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-53(13).
2. In determining whether plaintiff’s occupation placed him at an increased risk over that of the general public of contracting a dis *345 ease, it need not be shown that the disease originates exclusively from the occupation in question. Rather it must be demonstrated that the conditions of the employment resulted in a hazard which is not present in employment generally. Booker v. Duke Medical Center, 297 N.C. 458, 256 S.E.2d 189 (1979). In this case, but for the employment-related requirement of travelling [sic] through an area where he was exposed to the fungus, plaintiff would not have contracted the disease. Members of the general public who do not face a like requirement in their occupations are not subject to the same risk; therefore plaintiff faced an increased risk of contracting coccidioidomycosis than that of the general population in North Carolina.
3. Proof of causal connection between a disease and an employee’s occupation may consist of the following: (1) the extent of exposure to the disease or disease-causing agents during employment, (2) the extent of exposure outside employment, and (3) absence of the disease prior to the work-related exposure as shown by the employee’s medical history. Id. In the instant case, plaintiff’s sole avenue of exposure came while driving through the infested area of the southwest as required by his employment. Persons whose employment does not require them to travel to the infested areas of the country are not so exposed. Accordingly, there is essentially no exposure to the general public as a result of their jobs outside of such employment. Lastly, there is no history of the disease in plaintiff’s medical records prior to the work-related exposure. For these reasons, the causal connection between plaintiff’s employment and the disease has been adequately established, and plaintiff is entitled to compensation under the Act.

The Commission awarded plaintiff benefits for temporary total disability, temporary partial disability and for on-going medical care.

Our review of the Full Commission’s opinion and award is limited to whether the findings of fact are supported by any competent evidence in the record and whether those findings support the Commission’s conclusions of law. Goff v. Foster Forbes Glass Div., 140 N.C. App. 130, 535 S.E.2d 602 (2000). Defendants argue there was not competent evidence in the record to support the Commission’s findings of fact, and that the findings do not support the conclusion of law that plaintiff sustained a compensable occupational disease within the meaning of the Workers’ Compensation Act.

*346 G.S. § 97-53 enumerates the compensable occupational diseases under the Act. The Section specifically enumerates twenty-seven diseases; coccidioidomycosis is not among those diseases. However G.S. § 97-53(13) additionally provides compensability for:

Any disease, other than hearing loss covered in another subdivision of this section, which is proven to be due to causes and conditions which are characteristic of and peculiar to a particular trade, occupation or employment, but excluding all ordinary diseases of life to which the general public is equally exposed outside of the employment.

At issue in the case before us is whether plaintiffs contraction of coccidioidomycosis fits within this provision as a compensable occupational disease.

The burden is on the plaintiff to show that he suffered a com-pensable occupational disease under G.S. § 97-53(13). Norris v. Drexel Heritage Furnishings, Inc./Masco, 139 N.C. App. 620, 534 S.E.2d 259 (2000), cert. denied, 353 N.C. 378, 547 S.E.2d 15 (2001). Our courts have held the plaintiff must prove the following elements: (1) the disease is characteristic of and peculiar to persons engaged in a particular trade or occupation in which the plaintiff is engaged; (2) “the disease is not an ordinary disease of life to which the public is equally exposed;” and (3) there is a causal connection between the disease and the plaintiff’s employment. Hansel v. Sherman Textiles, 304 N.C. 44, 52, 283 S.E.2d 101, 106 (1981).

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551 S.E.2d 118, 144 N.C. App. 342, 2001 N.C. App. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pressley-v-southwestern-freight-lines-ncctapp-2001.