Safeway, Inc. v. MacKey

965 P.2d 22, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 152, 1998 WL 699764
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1998
DocketS-7991
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 965 P.2d 22 (Safeway, Inc. v. MacKey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safeway, Inc. v. MacKey, 965 P.2d 22, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 152, 1998 WL 699764 (Ala. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Cynthia Mackey sought workers’ compensation benefits for her fibromyalgia, claiming that it was caused by her employment with Safeway, Inc., and by her work-related tendinitis and knee injuries. The Workers’ Compensation Board denied Mackey benefits after the date that she was diagnosed with fibromyalgia, holding that Safeway had rebutted the presumption of compensability by providing substantial evidence that Mackey’s fibromyalgia was not work-related, and that Mackey had failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that it was work-related. The Board also denied Mackey continuing benefits for her tendinitis after the date that she was diagnosed with fibromyalgia, holding that Mackey had failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that her continuing condition was caused by work-related tendinitis rather than by fibromyalgia.

The superior court reversed the Board’s denial of benefits for Mackey’s fibromyalgia, holding that Safeway had not rebutted the presumption of compensability. It held that the medical testimony tending to rebut the presumption was speculative and could not be substantial evidence because the doctors had testified that the causes of fibromyalgia are unknown. Since the court held that Mackey should be compensated for her fibro-myalgia based on the presumption, it did not reach the issues of whether Mackey had proved by a preponderance of the evidence that her fibromyalgia was work-related, or alternatively, whether her continuing condition was caused by work-related tendinitis.

We granted Safeway’s petition for review from the superior court’s decision and now reverse. We hold that Safeway presented *25 substantial evidence to rebut the presumption of compensability, and further hold that the Board’s decisions that Mackey had failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that her fibromyalgia was work-related or that her continuing condition was work-related tendinitis are supported by substantial evidence.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Cynthia Mackey worked for Safeway from August 1977 through August 1991 as a checker and a stocker. During that time, she injured her right knee twice and also developed tendinitis in her shoulders. She received workers’ compensation benefits for these injuries.

After she stopped working, Mackey was diagnosed with fibromyalgia. 1 She sought workers’ compensation benefits for her fibro-myalgia, claiming that it was caused by her employment with Safeway and by her previous work-related injuries. A summary of Mackey’s injuries is necessary to understand her claim that her fibromyalgia was work-related.

In 1981 Mackey tore the cartilage in her right knee while working and had surgery to remove the cartilage. She missed work for about four months, and Safeway paid her temporary total disability (TTD) and permanent partial disability (PPD) benefits.

In 1986 Mackey was treated for pain in her right knee and pain in her left shoulder, which she claimed hurt when she stocked items at work. She was diagnosed with osteoarthritis in her knee, and rotator cuff and bicipital tendinitis in her left shoulder. Mackey again missed work for about four months, and Safeway paid her TTD benefits.

In May 1990 Mackey again injured her right knee at work. In June she was diagnosed with post-traumatic arthritis in her right knee and again had knee surgery. Safeway considered this to be a new injury and awarded Mackey TTD benefits from May through July. Mackey returned to work in August, but only worked about twenty-five hours per week, performing mainly sedentary office work and some cheeking.

In April 1991 an Employer’s Medical Evaluation (EME) was performed on Mackey’s right knee. The doctors diagnosed Mackey with severe degenerative arthritis of the right knee, which had been caused primarily by the 1981 accident and temporarily aggravated by the 1990 accident.

Mackey then began having additional problems with her shoulders. In June 1991 she was treated in an emergency room for shoulder pain. In July she was treated for left hip pain, which had begun when she twisted away.from the checkout stand. She also complained of pain in her right shoulder and generalized soreness throughout her body.

In August Mackey first saw Dr. Armstrong, a rheumatologist. He diagnosed her with tendinitis in both shoulders, and advised her not to return to work. She stopped working, and Safeway began paying TTD benefits for her tendinitis that month.

At the time she stopped working, Mackey complained of pain in her hips and shoulders; within six months of leaving Safeway she began to experience pain in various joints and muscles all over her body. This included pain in her left hip, shoulders, neck, face, and back. She described her pain as traveling throughout her body and hitting without warning.

Dr. Armstrong referred Mackey to Dr. Fu, who diagnosed her with myofascial pain syndrome in January 1992. She also continued to see Dr. Armstrong. On March 28, 1992, Dr. Armstrong first diagnosed Mackey with fibromyalgia. He found her to be medically stable in May,

In June Dr. Staver, an orthopedist, performed an EME on Mackey. He diagnosed her with bilateral impingement syndrome and tendinitis, and found her to be medically stable. He felt her shoulder problems were related to her work. Safeway continued paying TTD benefits for Mackey’s tendinitis through June 10, 1992, and paid benefits *26 under AS 23.30.041(k) from October 1992 to June 1993.

In December 1992 Dr. Armstrong informed Safeway that in his opinion, Mackey’s shoulder condition was a “dominant contributing factor to the development of fibromyal-gia which is preventing her from returning to gainful employment.”

In April 1993 Safeway arranged an EME in San Francisco to evaluate Mackey’s current condition. The panel consisted of Dr. Weber, a rheumatologist; Dr. Gunderson, an orthopedic specialist; Dr. Petrakis, a psychiatrist; and Dr. Wilson, a specialist in physical medicine. Dr. Weber diagnosed Mackey with fibromyalgia, but stated to a reasonable medical certainty that it was not related to her employment. Dr. Petrakis agreed that it was more probable than not that Mackey’s employment was not a cause of her fibro-myalgia.

Based on this evaluation, Safeway controverted Mackey’s claim for fibromyalgia in June 1993, on the ground that it was not a work-related injury. 2 The Workers’ Compensation Board sent Mackey for a Second Independent Medical Examination (SIME) with a panel consisting of Dr. Krengel, an orthopedic surgeon; Dr. Carlin, a rheumatol-ogist; Dr. Chinn, a psychiatrist; and Dr. Worsham, a specialist in physical medicine and rehabilitation. Dr. Carlin and Dr. Wors-ham stated that on a more-probable-than-not basis, Mackey’s fibromyalgia was not related to her employment or to any injury that she received at work.

The Board held that Mackey had raised the presumption of compensability based on Dr. Armstrong’s testimony that Mackey’s tendinitis had metastasized into fibromyalgia; however, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
965 P.2d 22, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 152, 1998 WL 699764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safeway-inc-v-mackey-alaska-1998.