Stanek v. Worker's Compensation Appeal Board

756 A.2d 661, 562 Pa. 411, 2000 Pa. LEXIS 1683
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 14, 2000
DocketSupreme Court, 3 W.D. Appeal Dkt. 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 756 A.2d 661 (Stanek v. Worker's Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanek v. Worker's Compensation Appeal Board, 756 A.2d 661, 562 Pa. 411, 2000 Pa. LEXIS 1683 (Pa. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

SAYLOR, Justice.

In this appeal, the Court is asked to assess a workers’ compensation claimant’s burden in seeking total disability benefits, having previously exhausted entitlement to compensation for partial disability.

After working for forty-three years in the coal mining industry for Appellee Greenwich Collieries (“Employer”), Appellant Francis B. Stanek (“Claimant”) ceased work, sought compensation for disability resulting from coal workers’ pneumoconiosis and was awarded partial disability benefits on such basis, effective November 10, 1981. Thereafter, he received $257.38 per week for a period of 500 weeks, following which, *415 by operation of law, Employer’s obligations relative to the partial disability ceased. See 77 P.S. § 512. On January 29, 1993, at seventy-two years of age, Claimant filed a reinstatement petition contending that his pulmonary condition had worsened to such an extent that he had become totally disabled. 1 At hearing, Claimant testified in support of the petition and offered testimony from an examining physician, Dr. Gordon A. Gress, to the effect that Claimant’s pulmonary condition had deteriorated progressively and substantially. 2 Dr. Gress testified to his review of the report of Claimant’s treating physician (containing the opinion that Claimant was totally disabled) and indicated that Claimant’s condition precluded him from performing most jobs. Dr. Gress conceded, however, that there were some forms of sedentary employment Claimant could perform consistent with his physical limitations. 3 The WCJ awarded benefits; however, the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (the “Board”) reversed, holding that Employee had not met his burden of proof under Meden v. WCAB (Bethenergy Mines, Inc.), 167 Pa.Cmwlth. 68, 71, 647 A.2d 620, 622 (1994)(en banc), appeal denied, 540 Pa. 624, 657 A.2d 494 (1995), and the Commonwealth Court affirmed the Board’s decision, also relying upon Meden. We allowed appeal to determine whether Meden articulates an appropriate standard in circumstances involving a post-500week claim for total disability benefits.

*416 The relevant statutory provisions are Sections 306(b) and 413(a) of the Workers’ Compensation Act. 4 Section 306(b) establishes a- general rule setting compensation for partial disability at sixty-six and two-thirds percent of the difference between pre-injury wages and post-injury earning power. 77 P.S. § 512(1). Compensation is available throughout the period during which the employee’s earnings capacity is affected, “but for not more than five hundred weeks,” 77 P.S. § 512(1)(emphasis added); thus, the period during which partial disability benefits are available is capped at approximately nine and one-half years. Section 413(a) provides for, among other things, modification of benefits “at any time” upon proof that a claimant’s disability has increased, 77 P.S. § 772, for example from a partial to a total loss. Increased benefits generally are available as of the date on which the change is demonstrated to have occurred; however, Section 413(a) generally limits the availability of review, modification or reinstatement to claims filed within three years after the date of the most recent payment of compensation, and further provides that, where compensation has been suspended because the claimant has returned to work with earnings equal to or greater than his pre-injury wages, benefits may be resumed at any time during the 500-week period of eligibility for partial disability benefits. 77 P.S. § 772.

In Stewart v. WCAB (Pa Glass Sand/US Silica), 562 Pa. 401, 756 A.2d 655 (2000), we considered these statutory provisions in light of an employer’s argument that the final proviso of Section 413(a) operates as an absolute bar to a post-500week claim on the part of a claimant who has received a full measure of partial disability benefits available under Section 302(b). While we rejected this argument, we did not assess the burden that must be borne by a claimant seeking total disability benefits under these circumstances. Claimant contends that the Commonwealth Court, in Meden and its progeny, has overstated the applicable burden by essentially requiring a showing that a claimant is totally disabled in a pure *417 medical sense. He urges this Court to reject such interpretation, asserting that a claimant in his circumstance should be required to demonstrate only that his work-related condition has worsened — according to Claimant, core principles of workers’ compensation jurisprudence require allocation of the burden to establish job availability to the employer. 5

In Meden, an en banc Commonwealth Court examined a workers’ compensation referee’s decision to deny a claim similar to that asserted in the present appeal, in which a retirement-age claimant, suffering from coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, sought compensation for total disability after having exhausted his entitlement to partial disability benefits. The claimant testified to and presented medical evidence regarding the deterioration of his physical condition; the medical testimony included the concession that the claimant had the ability to perform some forms of sedentary work; and no vocational or other evidence was offered to further demonstrate the effect of the deterioration of his physical condition upon his earning ability. The Commonwealth Court found that such evidence was insufficient to meet Section 413(a)’s requirement of increased disability (or loss of earning power), reasoning that the assessment of disability has a physical component (physical capacity to work) and a vocational one (availability of suitable employment), and mere deterioration of a claimant’s medical condition addresses only the first of these. See Meden, 167 Pa.Cmwlth. at 72-73, 647 A.2d at 623 (stating that “simply arguing that a claimant’s physical condition has changed without presenting evidence of its effect on his ability to work at his light duty job cannot satisfy a claimant’s burden of proof’). Thus, the Commonwealth Court determined that it was necessary for a claimant in such circumstances to present evidence that he could no longer perform work that was within *418 his physical limitations at the time of the original award. Id. at 73, 647 A.2d at 623.

As the centerpiece of its analysis, the Meden court equated the burden upon a claimant seeking modification to obtain total disability benefits subsequent to the expiration of the statutory period of eligibility for partial disability benefits with the standard announced in Dillon v. WCAB (Greenwich Collieries), 536 Pa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
756 A.2d 661, 562 Pa. 411, 2000 Pa. LEXIS 1683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanek-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pa-2000.