Preston v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board
This text of 507 A.2d 922 (Preston v. Workmen's 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.
Opinion
Opinion by
Martin Dale Preston appeals from an order of the Workmens Compensation Appeal Board which affirmed a referees decision dismissing Prestons petition hr reinstatement. We reverse and remand.
Preston was employed by the Department of Transportation as a maintenance manager. On January 2, 1981, Preston filed a claim petition alleging an aggravation of his hypertension condition, and that the aggravation was related to the stress of his employment. After a [385]*385hearing, a referee found that Prestons hypertension was aggravated by the stress of his employment, and awarded total disability benefits from January 3, 1981 to March 5, 1981. Neither party appealed from the referees decision.
After the benefits period under that award had expired, claimant Preston filed a petition for reinstatement of total disability benefits for the period of August 28, 1981 through December 31, 1981, alleging a recurrence of the aggravation of his hypertension. After a hearing, a referee found that Prestons disability was not related to his employment. The board affirmed and this appeal followed.
Preston contends that the decision is in error because the referee is precluded by collateral estoppel from rejecting the causative factor that he found in the earlier case.
This court, in Tanski v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board, 95 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 556, 505 A.2d 1370 (1986), acknowledged that where a referee had found that an injury was work-related, he was precluded from later finding that the original injury was not work-related. The issue in Tanski, as in this case, was whether there had been a recurrence of the original injury.1 In Tanski, according to the referees findings, the original injury was an episode of mental stress, which was disabling; the findings in that case did not [386]*386identify any antecedent condition or predisposition out of which the disabling injury arose. In the present case, by contrast, the referees Finding of Fact No. 1 refers back to the original injury by stating that the
Referee found that the claimants hypertension was aggravated by his employment....
Thus that finding clearly establishes that the claimant suffered from an antecedent condition of hypertension, and that the precise nature of the original injury was an aggravation of that condition.
The facts in this case are also distinguishable from those in Cambria County Commissioners v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board, 57 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 409, 426 A.2d 249 (1981) where the original injury was a herniated disk back injury suffered in the course of employment. There, when the claimant later stumbled while walking, entirely apart from his employment, that non-job related stumbling triggered a conpensable recurrence of the underlying back injury condition, itself attributable to causes on the job.
Thus, in deciding whether or not there has been a compensable “recurrence” of an injury, the court must recognize at least three possible alternative factual situations:
1. An original injury resulting from the job, which neither stems from, nor initiates, an underlying medical condition, so that a subsequent injury, although similar in nature, can be factually disassociated from the original injury and attributed to a new origin. Tanski;
2. A job-related injury which initiates a continuing medical condition, such as a back injury, constituting the foundation for a recurrence of disability, triggered by an event unrelated to the job. Cambria County Commissioners; and [387]*387job injury, so that the original injury consists of an aggravation of that condition, such as the aggravation of hypertension in this case.
In the third category — which is this case — testimony concerning the antecedent causation of the underlying condition obviously is not conclusive with respect to identifying a compensable recurrence.
Here, the referees Findings Nos. 5 and 6 reveal that the referee may have focused on the cause of the antecedent underlying condition, rather than upon whether there had been a recurrence of the original (aggravation) injury. Those findings read:
(5) The Defendant presented the testimony of Charles A. Joy, M.D., Board certified in internal medicine. Dr. Joy examined the Claimant on February 21, 1983. He was of the opinion that the Claimants condition was not caused by his employment. Your Referee accepts his testimony as fact.
(6) Taking into consideration all the testimony in the record, including the Claimants, your Referee finds that the period of disability claimed by Claimant was not caused or related to his employment, (emphasis supplied.)
Dr. Joy testified concerning claimant Prestons “condition” as follows:
Q. Now, Doctor, can you say with a reasonable degree of medical certainty whether or not Mr. Prestons condition was caused by his work?
A. I can say that I would say that it was not. Examination of the context of that testimony clearly establishes that the “condition” referred to was the underlying hypertension or high blood pressure condition itself, not the aggravation. The doctor testified that his tests and diagnosis “showed a condition that was consis[388]*388tent with high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries.” He then testified concerning the causes for high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries. He listed “an unknown kidney condition,” and with respect to “hypertension” in particular, he referred to “some kidney condition which has happened in the past and left scar tissue....” He attributed hardening of the arteries to a number of factors, including “a family history of it,” as well as being overweight and smoking cigarettes.
Thus, that part of Dr. Joys testimony related to the cause of the pre-existing, underlying condition, without any reference to the occurrence of any new aggravation — the claimed recurrence which was at issue. In feet, another portion of his testimony was directed to the matter of recurrence, rather than to the antecedent condition, and that portion of the testimony went as follows:
Q. Now, Doctor, when Martin went back to work in August — until August of 1981, do you know what capacity of what kind of work he was doing?
A. No, I don’t.
Q. Do you know what brought on the additional problem in August of ‘81?
A. I think it was more stress at work.
Q. Okay, now, did you discuss with him the particulars of any stress as to what specifically it included?
A. (No response.)
Q. Doctor, if I told you that in August of 1981,
Mr. Preston was assigned to another location which required him traveling 65 miles one way, would that in itself cause a stress problem?
A. Yes.
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507 A.2d 922, 96 Pa. Commw. 383, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-v-workmens-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-1986.