Silsby v. State Accident Insurance Fund

592 P.2d 1074, 39 Or. App. 555, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2173
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 2, 1979
DocketWCB 77-5353, SAIF Claim WD 32814, CA 11827
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 592 P.2d 1074 (Silsby v. State Accident Insurance Fund) 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
Silsby v. State Accident Insurance Fund, 592 P.2d 1074, 39 Or. App. 555, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2173 (Or. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

*557 GILLETTE, J.

This is a worker’s compensation proceeding involving a claim for aggravation. Claimant appeals from an order of the Workers’ Compensation Board ("Board”) modifying the referee’s award in the following respects: (1) changing the beginning date of compensation from May 19, 1977, to October 26, 1977; (2) denying claimant penalties awarded by the referee for SAIF’s allegedly unreasonable denial of the claim and unreasonable refusal to pay compensation; and (3) reducing the amount of attorney’s fees awarded by the referee from $1000 to $500. Respondent also appeals, arguing that the Board’s allowance of the aggravation claim was improper. We modify the Board’s order concerning the date upon which compensation was first due and concerning temporary total disability, but otherwise affirm.

A. Compensability of claimant’s aggravation claim.

ORS 656.273(1) establishes the statutory standard for claims of aggravation as follows:

"After the last award or arrangement of compensation, an injured worker is entitled to additional comnpensation, including medical services, for worsened conditions resulting from the original injury. ” Emphasis added.

See Johnson Lbr. Co. v. SAIF, 20 Or App 419, 423, 532 P2d 38 (1975).

A comparison of the claimant’s records immediately following his compensable injury of July 15, 1974, with his most recent medical records indicates that claimant’s pain has substantially worsened. This worsening is corroborated by the physical deterioration shown by objective findings. Dr. Robertson’s July 16, 1974, medical report diagnosed "Degenerative disc diseas, especially at the L3-L4 level” and "Acute lumbar sprain.” Claimant’s symptoms were "low back pain with radiation to the left thigh” and "muscle spasm and rigid lumbar lordosis.” Subsequent to this *558 report, the Board closed the claim by a November 4, 1974, Determination Order awarding claimant temporary total disability from July 15, 1974, through August 11, 1974. A medical report dated August 7,1975, by Dr. Serbu stated that claimant had developed "some right hip discomfort,” but that "He claims he does not hurt too overly much.” Dr. Serbu added that "His leg pain really has been rather minimal.” The doctor’s impression was that "it was possible this man may have a very mildly bulging lumbar disc.” He also noted, "The x-rays do show considerable narrowing at L3-4. There is anterior osteophyte formation and this is obviously rather longstanding.” Dr. Serbu noted that it was questionable whether claimant was in sufficient pain to warrant myelography, since "diagnostic tests on his back should only be done if the patient were hurting enough to proceed with further therapeutic measures, should the diagnostic tests be positive.” This report indicates that claimant’s condition had deteriorated slightly.

Later reports by Dr. Fellows and Dr. Hayne indicate substantial deterioration in claimant’s condition. Dr. Fellows’ report, dated March 16, 1977, states that claimant was suffering from "radiation of pain around the right groin into the right scrotum and testicle,” and "had some cramping sensations in the back of the right knee and throughout the right knee.” A lumbar myelogram revealed "a small central midline disc at L4-5 without much lateral compresssion.” This was the first mention in the medical reports of any of these problems. Dr. Hayne corroborated Dr. Fellows’s report, and added the diagnosis, "Herniated lumbar disc, 4th lumbar, midline, suspected but not proven.” Neither report, however, indicated whether claimant’s new condition was related to his previous injury.

Claimant’s most persuasive evidence supporting his aggravation claim is the October 26, 1977, report of Dr. Stainsby. After reciting claimant’s medical history and the increased pain suffered by claimant, corroborating the reports of Dr. Fellows and Dr. Hayne, the doctor stated:

*559 "I do feel that this present complaints are a result of his injury which occurred in July of 1974. The patient had no difficulty prior to that time. An injury to the lumbar back may set off a chain of events when the patient already has some degeneration of his lumbar discs. This is not an unusual occurance [sic]. The patient’s present symptoms are on the basis of an aggravation of his degenerative disc disease and this aggravation was and is due to the injuries of July 1974. '(Emphasis added).

The quoted statement supplied the theretofore-missing express medical opinion that the later symptoms were causally related to the compensable industrial injury.

Respondent argues that several items in the record demonstrate that claimant’s deteriorated medical condition is due to an intervening injury and thus does not meet the legal standard for aggravation.

A medical report by Dr. Robertson dated August 18, 1975, stated the following:

"Mr. Silsby reinjured his back in April of 1975. He states that he had a flare up of his back pain and was unable to work the Tuesday prior to my examination of April 25, 1975. He stated the pain was quite similar to that experienced last year and was brought on by using a Tommy bar and a long wrench on a stubborn bolt at work.”

Claimant testified that he did not feel he had an "accident” on that particular occasion. He had been seeing Dr. Robertson periodically, and testified that "when my back got to the point that it was giving me a lot of trouble I would go see him.” The referee expressly found claimant to be a credible witness. Dr. Robertson also ascribed no independent significance to this event, stating, "It is my feeling that Mr. Silsby’s problem at the present time is a reaggravation of his present injury, which was also work-related.” The referee and Board properly rejected respondent’s argument on this point.

*560 Respondent also argues that claimant’s work on his farm should be considered "microtraumas” amounting to separate intervening injuries. Claimant testified to shoveling 10-to-15 pound shovelfuls of silage into a pickup, rolling bales of hay down off the top of a stack onto the pickup, cutting wood with the aid of a friend using a buzz saw, feeding and watering cattle, and other farm activities, all of which tend to make his back sore for a period of time. The referee’s characterization of these effects as "transitory adverse physical response” not of independent significance is appropriate.

We agree with the referee and the Board that claimant has demonstrated that his worsened condition and his medical expenses were a result of his prior compensable injury.

B. From what date was the claim compensable?

The referee held that the claim of aggravation was compensable during the period starting May 19, 1977, the date of claimant’s letter to SAIF requesting the reopening of his claim for aggravation. The Board held that the period of compensation began October 26, 1977, the date Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
592 P.2d 1074, 39 Or. App. 555, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silsby-v-state-accident-insurance-fund-orctapp-1979.