TriMet v. Wilkinson

304 P.3d 46, 257 Or. App. 80
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 12, 2013
Docket0806396; A149776
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 304 P.3d 46 (TriMet v. Wilkinson) 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
TriMet v. Wilkinson, 304 P.3d 46, 257 Or. App. 80 (Or. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

SERCOMBE, J.

Petitioner TriMet (employer) seeks judicial review of a final order of the Workers’ Compensation Board (the board) that set aside its denial of claimant’s combined condition claim involving her left hip and lower back. Employer argues that the board erred in concluding that its September 2008 denial of claimant’s combined condition was “procedurally invalid because it denied a combined condition in the absence of an acceptance of such a condition.” See Croman Corp. v. Serrano, 163 Or App 136, 140-41, 986 P2d 1253 (1999) (under ORS 656.005(7)(a)(B) and ORS 656.262(6)(c), a combined condition “must have been accepted before it may be denied”). More specifically, employer asserts that its September 2008 denial letter functioned as both an acceptance and a denial, see Stockdale v. SAIF, 192 Or App 289, 291, 294-95, 84 P3d 1120 (2004) (stating that “an employer or insurer may issue a single letter to notify a claimant that it is both accepting and denying compensation for a combined condition”), and argues that the board erred in requiring that the letter include so-called “magic words” such as “accept a combined condition.” On review for substantial evidence and errors of law, ORS 656.298(7); ORS 183.482(8), we conclude that the board correctly determined that employer failed to accept claimant’s combined condition before denying it and, accordingly, affirm.

The relevant facts are as follows. On August 29, 2007, while working as a bus driver for employer, claimant suffered injuries to her lower back and left hip when her “seat lost air out of it and went to the floor” and the replacement bus provided by employer was ill-suited to her short stature, causing further injury by forcing her to stretch unnaturally to reach the pedals and controls. She subsequently sought and received medical treatment and underwent an independent medical examination (IME) performed by Dr. Carr. On January 29, 2008, after reviewing Carr’s IME report, employer accepted claimant’s injury claims for “lumbar/sacroiliac strains and left trochanteric bursitis.”1 [83]*83However, claimant had “a significant history of preexisting low back and hip problems [,]” having been treated just nine days prior to the work-related accident for “low back and hip pain extending into her leg[.]” She had not fully disclosed that information to Carr and, thus, employer accepted claimant’s above-mentioned injury claims with limited knowledge regarding the extent of her history of similar symptoms.

Upon learning more about claimant’s preexisting conditions after obtaining additional medical information and facilitating another IME, employer sent claimant a letter dated September 24, 2008. That letter stated, in pertinent part:

“Dear [claimant]:
“Your injury of August 29, 2007 has been accepted as a disabling lumbar/sacroiliac strains [sic] and left trochanteric bursitis.
“Medical evidence indicates that you had pre-existing conditions relating-to these body parts and that your injury of August 29, 2007 combined with these pre-existing conditions to require treatment and cause disability. The medical evidence also establishes that the original accepted injury has resolved and is no longer the major contributing cause of any claimed need for treatment or disability. The report issued by Dr. John Swanson as the result of the independent medical examination of September 3, 2008 supports this statement and your attending physician Lori Gross, MD has concurred with the report.
“We are therefore denying the compensability of your current conditions involving the left hip and low back as not being compensably related to your accepted injury and not arising out of and in the course of employment with [employer].”

Claimant requested a hearing, which was conducted on July 31, 2009, before an administrative law judge (ALJ). At the conclusion of that hearing, the ALJ set aside employer’s denial of claimant’s combined condition, reasoning that employer’s denial included neither “a statement that it accepted a combined condition” nor any language sufficient “to establish a combined condition acceptance.” The ALJ therefore determined that “employer did not accept a combined condition [84]*84prior to denying the combined condition. Consequently, the denial is invalid and will be set aside.”

Employer requested review by the board, which, on September 21, 2011, issued a final order affirming the ALJ — -likewise concluding that “employer’s denial [was] procedurally invalid because [employer] had not first issued a written acceptance of a combined condition.” The board acknowledged employer’s argument that “its [September 2008] ‘denial’ letter also contained an implied acceptance of a combined condition.” (Footnote omitted.) However, the board reasoned:

“With respect to a combined condition, the letter does not contain the term ‘accept’ or other like-terms that would establish such a combined condition acceptance. Rather, [employer’s September 2008] letter indicates the acceptance of an initial injury, the existence of a ‘combined condition,’ and the denial of a combined condition. Acknowledging the existence of a ‘combined condition,’ however, is not equivalent to accepting such a condition [.]”

(Emphases in original.) Employer sought judicial review.

On review, employer reprises its argument that its September 2008 denial letter to claimant functioned as both an acceptance and denial of the combined condition claim. As noted, employer primarily asserts that the board improperly required that it “embellish its [purported] acceptance with specific words, such as ‘accept a combined condition.’” In advancing that argument, employer relies on Columbia Forest Products v. Woolner, 177 Or App 639, 645-47, 34 P3d 1203 (2001), in which we stated that “specific words” (i.e., so-called “magic words”) are not necessary “to signify the acceptance of a combined condition” and that “[t]here is no statute that prescribes a particular manner for acceptance of a combined condition.” Claimant responds by noting that, although “specific words” are not required, “the law requires that an injured worker be notified in some manner of an acceptance!.]” Echoing the board’s reasoning, she contends that employer’s September 2008 denial letter merely acknowledged employer’s prior acceptance of claimant’s initial injury claims, acknowledged the existence of a combined condition that arose at some unspecified time, [85]*85and then denied compensability of that vaguely defined combined condition — ultimately failing to “provide notice of any acceptance” of the combined condition.

We first clarify the applicable standard of review. Employer raises two assignments of error; however, they are effectively identical aside from the standards of review invoked. In employer’s first assignment of error, it challenges the board’s conclusion as a matter of law on the basis of the board’s purported requirement that employer use “specific” or “magic” words.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
304 P.3d 46, 257 Or. App. 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimet-v-wilkinson-orctapp-2013.