Roseburg Forest Products v. Clemons

9 P.3d 123, 169 Or. App. 231, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 26, 2000
Docket97-00968; CA A101296
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 P.3d 123 (Roseburg Forest Products v. Clemons) 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
Roseburg Forest Products v. Clemons, 9 P.3d 123, 169 Or. App. 231, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1169 (Or. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*233 KISTLER, J.

Employer Roseburg Forest Products (employer) seeks review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Board affirming an administrative law judge’s (ALJ) award of scheduled and unscheduled disability for claimant’s accepted claim of “left-sided sciatica.” We reverse and remand.

In May 1996, claimant experienced pain and numbness along the left posterior lateral thigh, calf, and foot while driving a forklift at work. Dr. Brazer examined claimant and diagnosed left-sided sciatica. Brazer prescribed rest and antiinflammatories, and the condition improved within a few days. Brazer recommended that claimant have an MRI to rule out a herniated disc. The MRI showed no significant disc bulging or herniation, and an x-ray showed mild degenerative changes in claimant’s back. After the MRI, Brazer diagnosed “left sciatica with no evidence of disk herniation.”

On June 5,1996, claimant saw Dr. Keizer, an orthopedist, and reported a continuation of leg symptoms and pain in his low back. Keizer diagnosed “mild degenerative osteoarthritis of the lumbar spine, symptomatic.” Claimant had some physical therapy, and his condition began to improve. Claimant also underwent an independent medical examination, and the diagnosis was sciatica and mild degenerative disc disease. On June 18, 1996, Dr. Bert, claimant’s attending physician, examined claimant and diagnosed “mild sciatica, resolving.” Bert released claimant for work on June 24,1996.

On October 14, 1996, employer accepted a claim for “left-sided sciatica,” and also closed the claim with an award for temporary total disability but without an award of permanent disability. Claimant sought reconsideration, objecting to the impairment findings used to rate his disability. Dr. Smith, a medical arbiter, was asked to describe “any objective findings of permanent impairment resulting from the accepted injury” including ranges of motion and muscle strength. (Boldface and underscoring in original.) In his report, the arbiter noted “slight loss of strength of inversion and eversion of the left ankle and foot estimated at 4+/5. The *234 nerve root involved is L5.” The arbiter also noted that range-of-motion measurements did not meet the American Medical Association’s (AMA) validity requirements but concluded that “the measurements themselves are accurate and could be used to determine impairment.”

Based on the arbiter’s report, the Department of Consumer and Business Services awarded scheduled disability for claimant’s loss of foot strength and unscheduled disability for his loss of range of motion. On review by the hearings division, the ALJ affirmed the award of scheduled disability, reasoning that the foot disability was a “medical sequel[a]” to the original accepted condition of “left-sided sciatica” and was therefore compensable under ORS 656.268(16) (1997). 1 In affirming the award of unscheduled disability, the ALJ relied on the opinion of the medical arbiter as to loss of range of motion. The Board affirmed the ALJ, accepting with supplementation the ALJ’s order.

Employer contends initially that because claimant did not specifically assert an entitlement to scheduled permanent partial disability for loss of left foot strength in his request for reconsideration, the Department lacked jurisdiction to consider the matter. We reject that contention. The Board has long held that, in the reconsideration process, the Department is not limited to deciding only those issues raised by the parties but must make its award based on the evidence before it. Darlene K. Bentley, 45 Van Natta 1719, 1799 (1993). That view reflects a correct understanding of the Department’s obligation under ORS 656.268(5) and (6) (1997), 2 to examine the medical and vocational reports and *235 award further compensation, if appropriate. Unlike ORS 656.268(8), relating to the hearing process, ORS 656.268(5) and (6) (1997) contain no restriction on the Department’s authority to consider issues not raised by the parties. The Board did not err in determining that the Department could consider and award benefits for claimant’s scheduled disability.

On the merits, employer asserts, among other issues, that its acceptance did not encompass the conditions for which the Board awarded scheduled and unscheduled permanent disability. The scope of employer’s acceptance is a question of fact. See Granner v. Fairview Center, 147 Or App 406, 935 P2d 1252 (1997). We discuss first the scheduled disability award for the left foot. The foot weakness was first measured and noted by the medical arbiter, who also was of the opinion that the cause of claimant’s left foot weakness is the nerve root involvement at L5. The ALJ said that, in the absence of a specific denial of L5-S1 nerve root injury, the question was whether the foot weakness was a direct medical sequela of the accepted sciatica. Relying on the explanation provided by the independent medical examiners, the ALJ said that sciatica

“is a syndrome characterized by pain radiating from the back into the buttock and into the lower extremity along its posterior or lateral aspect. The term also refers to pain anywhere along the course of the sciatic nerve. Dorland’s Medical Dictionary (27th ed 1988). The sciatic nerve is a bundle of nerves which travels through the buttock and down the back of the thigh before splitting at the knee.”

*236 The ALJ found that, although only the medical arbiter had measured the foot weakness, there was other medical evidence of a neurological disturbance in the lower leg. She concluded that employer had failed to carry its burden of proof under ORS 656.283(7) 3 to negate a relationship between the accepted sciatica and the neurological symptoms in the foot.

The same medical report on which the ALJ relied for the definition of sciatica explains that a diagnosis of sciatica can, but need not, involve the nerve root, i.e., the place of origin of the sciatic nerve in the low back. As that medical report explained, symptoms of sciatica can occur at any point along the nerve, including in the foot after the nerve splits at the knee. Employer’s acceptance is for “left-sided sciatica.” The scope of an acceptance is an issue of fact, which we review for substantial evidence. ORS 183.482(8).

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.3d 123, 169 Or. App. 231, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roseburg-forest-products-v-clemons-orctapp-2000.