Rodolfo Apostol v. State of Wa Dept. of Labor & Industries

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 14, 2024
Docket58072-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rodolfo Apostol v. State of Wa Dept. of Labor & Industries (Rodolfo Apostol v. State of Wa Dept. of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Rodolfo Apostol v. State of Wa Dept. of Labor & Industries, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

May 14, 2024

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II RODOLFO M. APOSTOL, No. 58072-1-II

Appellant,

v.

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF UNPUBLISHED OPINION LABOR AND INDUSTRIES,

Respondent.

CRUSER, C.J. — Rodolfo Apostol suffered a workplace injury while breaking concrete with

a sledgehammer in 2005. The Department of Labor and Industries closed Apostol’s industrial

injury claim in 2006. Apostol appealed and sought to reopen his claim. The Department’s decision

to close Apostol’s claim was affirmed by an industrial appeals judge (IAJ) and later by the Board

of Industrial Insurance Appeals (the Board). Apostol appealed to the superior court and his case

was heard by a jury in 2023. Apostol now appeals from the jury’s finding that each of the Board’s

determinations were correct. Apostol is appearing pro se and argues that the trial court erred in

declining to give a number of his proposed jury instructions. However, Apostol did not provide

the transcript from the 2023 trial. Because of the insufficient record, without knowing the trial

court’s reasoning and whether sufficient evidence supported it, and without knowing the objections

made below, we are unable to reach the merits of Apostol’s claims. Moreover, Apostol has failed

to show that he was prejudiced by the jury instructions. Accordingly, we affirm. No. 58072-1-II

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

This worker’s compensation appeal follows an industrial injury from August 2005, in

which Apostol injured his wrist while working as a maintenance technician at the Ronald

Wastewater District.1 The injury occurred while Apostol was breaking concrete with a

sledgehammer. Dr. David Kim treated Apostol for a stress fracture in his left wrist in January 2006.

In October 2006, the Department allowed Apostol’s claim for his industrial injury and

found that he was “entitled to receive medical treatment and other benefits.” Sealed Administrative

Record at 1155. In the same month, the Department closed the claim, finding that medical

treatment was no longer necessary and no permanent partial disability existed.

Apostol applied to reopen his claim in February 2017, asking the Department to accept

responsibility for his depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and neck sprain, among a

variety of other new physical and psychological conditions. After his application to reopen his

claim was denied, Apostol appealed the Department’s decision to the Board in 2017. The Board

reversed and remanded the claim to the Department for further consideration and investigation.

The Department again ordered the claim to remain closed, after finding that the conditions caused

by the industrial injury had not worsened after the final claim closure, based on the medical record.

Apostol appealed again and the Board granted review in August 2018, sending the case to an IAJ.

1 Separate from the industrial injury claim regarding his wrist fracture, Apostol filed a different worker’s compensation claim in September 2005 regarding stress and anxiety caused by his employment. Apostol argues that his psychiatric conditions and symptoms were aggravated and proximately caused by the wrist fracture, meaning that the industrial injury caused permanent disability.

2 No. 58072-1-II

The first hearing in front of the IAJ was in January 2019. The purpose of this hearing was

to address Apostol’s argument that the closure of his claim never became final under RCW

51.32.160 because the closing order was not communicated to his treating provider at the time that

the claim closed in 2006.2 The case remained with the IAJ from January 2019 through June 2020.

In March 2019, a hearing was held to address whether Apostol’s condition that was proximately

caused by his industrial injury objectively worsened between the closure of his claim in October

2006 and the Department’s order affirming its denial of Apostol’s application to reopen in July

2018. Five related hearings were held from April 2019 to March 2020, for the parties to present

additional evidence and testimony.

In June 2020, the IAJ affirmed the Department’s denial of Apostol’s request to reopen the

claim. The judge found that the conditions caused by Apostol’s wrist injury had not worsened in

the time between the closure of the claim in 2006 and the Department’s decision in July 2018 for

the claim to remain closed. Moreover, the judge found that the psychological symptoms that

Apostol attributed to his wrist injury, including PTSD, depression, insomnia, and anxiety, among

others, “were not the result of a natural progression of his initial injury or its residuals.” Id. at 150.

Apostol again appealed to the Board, which granted review but ultimately affirmed the

Department’s decision.

2 While Apostol contends that his treating provider never received notice of the closure of his claim because Dr. Kenneth Mayeda (his primary care physician), never received it, notice of the Department’s decision was sent to the orthopedic surgery unit at the Virginia Mason Medical Center (where Apostol was treated by Dr. Kim for his wrist condition).

3 No. 58072-1-II

II. JURY TRIAL & PROPOSED INSTRUCTIONS

Apostol appealed to the superior court and his case went to trial in 2023. The jury agreed

with the Board regarding every determination at issue in the case. The jury found that (1) the Board

communicated the closure of Apostol’s claim to his treating physician; (2) when the Department

closed Apostol’s claim in 2006, he “had no objective findings proximately caused by his industrial

injury;” (3) the same was true in 2018 when the Department denied Apostol’s application to

reopen; (4) Apostol’s other diagnoses and psychological symptoms were not “proximately caused

or aggravated by his industrial injury,” and; (5) Apostol’s wrist injury did not objectively worsen

between the closure of his claim and the Department’s denial of his application to reopen his claim

in 2018. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 504-05.

At issue in this appeal are a number of Apostol’s proposed jury instructions which the trial

court declined to give to the jury. The first instruction was about “lighting up of [a] pre-existing

asymptomatic condition.” Id. at 33. The proposed instruction stated that if the jury found that

Apostol “had a mental condition that was not disabling or required treatment” prior to injuring his

wrist, and that his injury caused his mental condition to “light[ ] up or [become] active,” then

Apostol would be eligible for benefits. Id.

The second instruction would have told the jury that definitive medical findings were

unnecessary in order to find that his psychological condition worsened. This proposed instruction

stated that the jury may consider lay testimony in evaluating Apostol’s disability, and that medical

testimony containing words and phrases such as “ ‘probably,’ ” “ ‘causally-related,’ ” “ ‘attributed

to,’ ” and “ ‘likelihood,’ ” were “acceptable in lieu of aggravation or worsening of a condition

from the statute.” Id. at 64.

4 No. 58072-1-II

While Apostol’s arguments and assignments of error lack clarity, it appears that he

challenges the trial court’s failure to give a third proposed jury instruction, stating that objective

medical findings are unnecessary to establish psychological injuries. This proposed instruction

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