Slater v. SAIF Corp.

400 P.3d 969, 287 Or. App. 84, 2017 WL 3160778, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 929
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 26, 2017
Docket1203369, 1200682; A156512
StatusPublished

This text of 400 P.3d 969 (Slater v. SAIF Corp.) 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
Slater v. SAIF Corp., 400 P.3d 969, 287 Or. App. 84, 2017 WL 3160778, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 929 (Or. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FLYNN, J. pro tempore

Claimant seeks review of a Workers’ Compensation Board (board) order that upheld SAIF’s denial of claimant’s previously accepted combined condition of the left knee and upheld SAIF’s medical services denial of a diagnostic MRI for claimant’s left knee. Claimant contends that SAIF failed to meet its burden to prove that claimant suffers from a qualifying preexisting condition that became the major contributing cause of claimant’s combined condition. Claimant alternatively contends that the board applied the wrong legal standard when it required claimant to prove that the diagnostic MRI is a medical service directed to a condition caused in major part by claimant’s injury. We conclude that the board permissibly construed the medical evidence as proving that claimant’s osteoarthritis is a qualifying “preexisting condition” that became the major contributing cause of claimant’s left knee combined condition. However, we also conclude that the board erred in failing to consider whether the MRI is directed to claimant’s left knee strain and meniscal tear, which remain accepted conditions. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for the board to make that determination.

I. INTRODUCTION

We begin with an overview of the relevant law regarding a “combined condition,” because that law provides context for the pertinent facts and for our analysis of the arguments presented. Ordinarily, a claimant establishes compensability of a work injury by proving “that the work-related injury is a ‘material’ cause of the disability or the need for treatment.” Brown v. SAIF, 361 Or 241, 250, 391 P3d 773 (2017). However, when “an otherwise compensable injury” combines with a qualifying “preexisting condition to cause or prolong disability or a need for treatment,” the resulting condition is a “combined condition” and is

“compensable only if, so long as and to the extent that the otherwise compensable injury is the major contributing cause of the disability of the combined condition or the major contributing cause of the need for treatment of the combined condition.”

[87]*87Id. (quoting ORS 656.005(7)(a)(B)). After accepting a combined condition claim, an insurer may deny the condition “if the otherwise compensable injury ceases to be the major contributing cause.” ORS 656.262(6)(c).

When the claimant challenges the denial of a “combined condition,” it is the insurer’s burden to prove that the worker has a qualifying “preexisting condition and that the compensable injury is not the major contributing cause of the disability or need for treatment.” Hopkins v. SAIF, 349 Or 348, 352, 245 P3d 90 (2010) (citing ORS 656.266(2)(a) (footnote omitted)). In this context, the “otherwise compen-sable injury” refers to the “accepted medical condition” that combines with a “preexisting condition.” Brown, 361 Or at 272-73. A qualifying “preexisting condition” means that the worker “‘has been diagnosed with such condition, or has obtained medical services for the symptoms of the condition,’ or suffers from ‘arthritis or an arthritic condition.’”Hopkins, 349 Or at 352 (quoting ORS 656.005(24)(a)(A) (footnote omitted)). By “arthritis,” the legislature meant “the inflammation of one or more joints, due to infectious, metabolic, or constitutional causes, and resulting in breakdown, degeneration, or structural change.” Id. at 364. In addition, “because [ORS 656.262(6)(c)] provides that a combined condition that has been accepted may be denied when the otherwise com-pensable injury ‘ceases’ to be the major contributing cause of the combined condition, the statute necessarily requires that there be a change in the worker’s condition.” Oregon Drywall Systems, Inc. v. Bacon, 208 Or App 205, 208-09, 144 P3d 987 (2006).

II. BACKGROUND

Claimant injured his left knee in October 2005, while working for an employer insured by SAIF. He sought treatment from Dr. Di Paola, who diagnosed “medial compartment degenerative arthrosis” as well as a medial meniscal tear, for which he performed surgery. Following surgery, Di Paola described claimant’s condition as a work-related left medial meniscus tear and preexisting “diffuse chon-dromalacia” of the patellofemoral joint and medial compartment. When SAIF closed the claim it specified that claimant’s accepted conditions for the October 2005 injury [88]*88included medial collateral ligament strain of the left knee and left medial meniscus tear.

After SAIF closed the claim, claimant returned occasionally to Di Paola for recurring symptoms of his left knee condition, which Di Paola described as a combining of the meniscal tear with preexisting degenerative changes. In 2011, claimant again returned to Di Paola with ongoing problems in the left knee that had been worsening over time. Di Paola opined that claimant had experienced a “worsening of his preexisting degenerative arthritis that is not attributable to his interval meniscal tears and their surgical treatment.” When claimant asked SAIF to accept his medial compartment degenerative changes, SAIF denied that request but issued a modified notice of acceptance in which it specified that, “[i]n addition to” the previously accepted conditions, SAIF was accepting—“as of’ the date of the 2005 injury—a combined condition consisting of the previously accepted conditions “combined with pre-existing left knee osteoarthritis.”

A few months after issuing the modified notice of acceptance, SAIF issued a denial of claimant’s combined condition in which it specified that “as of July 22, 2011, [claimant’s] accepted injury is no longer the major contributing cause of [his] combined condition.” SAIF also refused to pay for a diagnostic MRI that two of claimant’s doctors recommended “to make sure [claimant’s] ACL is intact and to make sure [claimant] does not have a new injury.” Claimant challenged both denials and the disputes were consolidated for hearing.

At the hearing, SAIF relied on a concurrence report1 in which Di Paola did not use the term “osteoarthritis” but opined that claimant “has a classic case of arthritis in his left knee involving the inflammation of one or more joints, due to infectious, metabolic, or constitutional causes, and resulting in breakdown, degeneration, or structural change.” Claimant relied on the opinion of one of his other [89]*89doctors, who opined that “osteoarthritis is considered a noninflammatory condition.”

The administrative law judge (ALJ) set aside both denials, but the board reversed.

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Related

Hopkins v. SAIF Corp.
245 P.3d 90 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2010)
SAIF Corp. v. Sprague
217 P.3d 644 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2009)
Armstrong v. Asten-Hill Co.
752 P.2d 312 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1988)
Oregon Drywall Systems, Inc. v. Bacon
144 P.3d 987 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2006)
Brown v. SAIF Corp.
391 P.3d 773 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2017)
South Lane County School District 45-J3 v. Arms
62 P.3d 882 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2003)
SAIF Corp. v. Pruitt
108 P.3d 586 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2005)
Vigor Industrial, LLC v. Ayres
310 P.3d 674 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2013)
SAIF Corp. v. Carlos-Macias
325 P.3d 827 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2014)
Brown v. SAIF Corp.
325 P.3d 834 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2014)
Hutchings v. Americas Propane
365 P.3d 636 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2015)
SAIF Corp. v. Williams
381 P.3d 955 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
400 P.3d 969, 287 Or. App. 84, 2017 WL 3160778, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slater-v-saif-corp-orctapp-2017.