Seabolt v. Police & Firemen's Retirement & Relief Board

413 A.2d 908, 1980 D.C. App. LEXIS 266
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1980
Docket14181
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 413 A.2d 908 (Seabolt v. Police & Firemen's Retirement & Relief Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seabolt v. Police & Firemen's Retirement & Relief Board, 413 A.2d 908, 1980 D.C. App. LEXIS 266 (D.C. 1980).

Opinions

KELLY, Associate Judge:

Petitioner Eugene Seabolt seeks review of a Police and Firemen’s Retirement and Relief Board decision denying him disability retirement. The Retirement Board found that petitioner was injured in the performance of duty under D.C.Code 1973, § 4-527, but concluded that he was not “disabled for useful and efficient [service] in the grade or class of position last occupied,” under D.C. Code 1973, § 4-521(2). We affirm.

On appeal, petitioner claims that “[t]he threshold issue presented ... is whether [he] is permanently disabled for the performance of his fire fighting duties.” That contention is inaccurate for several reasons. First, this court may not indulge in a de novo factual determination of petitioner’s disability. Instead, the standard of review is whether there is substantial evidence in the record to support the Retirement Board’s unanimous finding that he was not disabled. D.C.Code 1978 Supp., § 1-1510(3)(E). See discussion and cases cited in Citizens Association of Georgetown, Inc. v. District of Columbia Zoning Commission, D.C.App., 402 A.2d 36, 41-42 (1979). Second, the permanence of petitioner’s disability is not at issue here, since the Retirement Board did not articulate it as grounds for its finding of nondisability. Finally, as we hold here, disability from performing the “fire fighting duties” associated with petitioner’s latest position with the depart[909]*909ment does not, per se, constitute disability. Under D.C.Code 1973, § 4-521(2), petitioner must also be incapable of performing any “useful and efficient service” for the department in a position of the same “grade or class of position” as that he last occupied.

The record shows that petitioner, a sergeant in the District of Columbia Fire Department, was appointed in 1967. He injured his knee while playing a game at the firehouse basketball court on April 17, 1977. On April 22, surgery was performed to correct a torn meniscus and a rupture of the collateral ligaments in his knee.1 The prognosis for recovery from such surgery is fairly good; the Police and Surgeons Board representative at the hearing, Dr. Albert E. Rolle, testified that, upon removal of the meniscus, “the individual can go back . [and] can function at least reasonably well. Probably not 100 percent, but close enough that he can engage in any occupation.”

After his leg cast was removed on June 7, petitioner began a program of physical therapy. He returned to work, on light duty status, on September 10, and performed this work without apparent difficulty until October 26, when he unexpectedly requested sick leave.2 Petitioner claimed his request was the result of his physician, Dr. Robert E. Collins, telling him, earlier that day, that he “would not ever go back to fire fighting.” There was also evidence that petitioner was scheduled to report that day to a new light duty assignment in the Apparatus Division, where a permanent, full-time sergeant’s position had become vacant.

On October 30, Dr. Collins wrote the Police and Fire Clinic that, although petitioner “was handling light duty OK,” he recommended petitioner be retired because “he won’t be able to handle regular duty.” The Board of Police and Fire Surgeons recommended that petitioner be found “permanently disabled for duty, not in the performance of duty.”3

Both Dr. Collins and Dr. Rolle testified that petitioner was disabled from performing active fire fighting duties.4 Dr. Collins testified that petitioner “does not have a competent left knee from the standpoint of what would be required in fire fighting duties,” and that his knee might be taxed by carrying heavy equipment or climbing ladders.

Dr. Rolle, on the other hand, testified that petitioner’s surgery “does not necessarily portend a disability,” saying: “We have many active policemen who have had men-iscectomies. We certainly see many athletes who have had meniscectomies try to bounce back and can certainly perform as though nothing had ever happened.” He also testified that petitioner’s post-operative chondromalacia,5 although permanent, did not preclude “any type of muscle building rehabilitative exercise.”6

[910]*910The only objective evidence of petitioner’s disability (chondromalacia), other than the surgical scar, was noticeable crepitation (a phenomenon that Dr. Rolle said “does not necessarily produce . . pain”), chronic swelling of “a very mild degree,” and a slight reduction in the knee’s range of flexion (petitioner’s 105 degree motion was “almost normal — maybe a few degrees off . the normal knee should flex to about 115 degrees, and most of us don’t use the full degree of flexion.”). Dr. Rolle also testified that the medical record “doesn’t indicate that an examination was performed at [the] time [petitioner was placed on sick leave] so that I would conclude it was because the patient said that he had pain. Subjective.”

Petitioner testified that he had no trouble walking, driving, or mowing the lawn and said, “I have never taken anything for pain other than Aspirin or Bufferin.” He also said he could physically handle the work he did on light duty status and could have continued performing those duties. Dr. Collins concurred, testifying that petitioner “absolutely” could do office work: “There are many physical tasks that he can perform. He will have pain in the knee, but he will have that whether he works or not.”

There was, in short, ample evidence before the Board that, whatever disability petitioner suffered, it did not preclude light duty work. The question, then, is whether the ability to perform some limited duty position in the department prevents a disability finding under D.C.Code 1973, § 4-521(2).

Under Coakley v. Police and Firemen's Retirement and Relief Board, D.C.App., 370 A.2d 1345, 1349-50 (1977), the answer was clear. We held there, on similar facts to these, that petitioner’s ability to perform a “non-fire fighting” position in the department precluded him from disability retirement, upholding the Retirement Board’s interpretation of “grade or class of position” in § 4-521(2) as a “category defined by rank or salary, or both, e. g., Private . . .” Id. at 1348. We gave great weight to the Board’s rejection of petitioner’s argument that the phrase referred to “an occupational category defined by duties and responsibilities, e. g., fire fighter . . .,” id., stating that “where an administrative agency’s construction ... is reasonable and does not contravene the language or legislative history of the statute, it should be followed.” Id. at 1349 (quoting Harrison v. J. H. Marshall & Associates, Inc., D.C.App., 271 A.2d 404 (1970)). We also refused to adopt the gloss that federal courts have given identical language in the Federal Civil Service Retirement Act of 1926, on which our Police and Firemen’s Retirement and Disability Act Amendments of 19577 were expressly modelled,8 in the absence of any legislative history inconsistent with the Board’s interpretation of the plain language in § 4-521(2). Coakley v.

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Seabolt v. Police & Firemen's Retirement & Relief Board
413 A.2d 908 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
413 A.2d 908, 1980 D.C. App. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seabolt-v-police-firemens-retirement-relief-board-dc-1980.