Ventre v. CPC INTERN./CF MUELLER
This text of 667 A.2d 1083 (Ventre v. CPC INTERN./CF MUELLER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
VITO VENTRE, PETITIONER-APPELLEE,
v.
CPC INTERNATIONAL, INC./C.F. MUELLER CO., RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*568 Before Judges KING, LANDAU and KLEINER.
Bressler, Amery & Ross, attorneys for appellant (Richard V. Jones, of counsel, Mr. Jones and Donna Michael-Ziereis, on the brief).
No brief was filed on behalf of appellee.
The opinion of the court was delivered by LANDAU, J.A.D.
Petitioner-appellee Vito Ventre was injured in an industrial accident while employed by respondent-appellant CPC International/C.F. Mueller Co. (CPC) and instituted a proceeding in the Division of Workers' Compensation. Jurisdiction and occurrence of the accident arising out of and in the course of his employment was stipulated, subject to determination of the nature and extent of any permanent disability.
Ventre was injured when a piece of plexiglass he was cutting "caught" on the table saw, forcibly striking him on the chin, upper neck and wrist. He was hospitalized for two days, receiving stitches in his chin and a wrist cast. Ventre suffered a mandibular fracture for which no treatment was rendered. He also lost two teeth. He was out of work for eighteen months, returning to carpenter duties with the same employer.
Pursuant to practice in the Division, the matter proceeded on medical reports filed by the parties' respective experts. Cross-examination *569 of the experts was waived. The parties agreed that the sole issue for determination was the nature and extent of any permanent disability.
The judge of compensation credited Ventre's complaints in "all of the areas of which he complains," finding impaired function in "all of the same areas," a lessening to a material degree of his working ability and his ability to engage in the activities of daily living, and that "his disabilities are multiple and encompass orthopedic, otological and cosmetic problems."
The judge agreed with the assessment made by Ventre's orthopedic expert that Ventre exhibited a twenty-five percent disability in his right hand, but not for reasons articulated by the expert who, he found, "missed the boat." The judge concluded that "as a result of the combination of the ununited carpal naricular fracture and the laceration of his wrist ... a permanent orthopedic disability of 25 percent of the right hand" had been caused by the accident.
Fifteen percent of partial total was attributed to "the fracture of the mandible," upon this finding:
I am satisfied that as a result of this blow the petitioner suffered a fracture of the mid portion of the mandible which was sufficient for the purpose would not only affect his jaw but his temporomandibular joints as well as his binaural ear canals.
Ten percent of partial total, otological in nature, was awarded "for residual effects of the TMJ syndrome, the bilateral [ear] canal fracture and the tinnitus which accompanies the injury."
Another ten percent of total was attributed to a cosmetically disfiguring chin and lip scar.
The judge found a twenty-five percent binaural hearing loss, not solely related to the accident, and apportioned twelve percent of that loss as "chargeable to the effects of the trauma which Dr. Freifeld has concluded resulted in a fracture of the ear canals and Dr. West has concluded result[ed] from a cochlear injury." The apportionment assertedly was made under authority of Baijnath v. Eagle Plywood & Door Mfrs., 261 N.J. Super. 309, 618 A.2d 902 (App.Div. 1993), which discussed methods of apportioning the respective *570 impact of separate traumatic injuries occurring in different employments.
In addition, the judge awarded Ventre statutory benefits for the loss of two teeth.
The statutory entitlements for these awards were then totalled, resulting in a judgment for 303 1/4 weeks of compensation at $283 per week, or $85,890.50, plus allocations of expert and counsel fees.
CPC argues persuasively that some of the judge's findings were unsupported by credible evidence in the record because they were based upon surmise and conjecture in the submitted medical reports. More specifically, the judge made a definitive finding of bilateral ear canal fractures, resting it upon the report of CPC's expert, Dr. Freifeld, who said that although Ventre "may have had a fracture through that area as a result of the injury to his jaw, he has not compromised the ear canals sufficiently that any surgical intervention appears to be necessary." In a conclusory fashion, Dr. Freifeld's report also referred to a "probable" anterior ear canal fracture. No treating records were introduced respecting ear canal fractures. The reports of other experts, including those submitted by petitioner, showed either that external auditory canals were within normal limits, or made no mention thereof.
CPC also complains that there was no basis in the record to support the arbitrary allocation of roughly half of Ventre's hearing loss to the traumatic injury caused by the plexiglass. One expert concluded, without amplification of objective basis for the conclusion, that Ventre's hearing loss was attributable to both industrial noise (an occupational exposure) and the trauma. CPC's expert, whose report speculated on some traumatic ear canal fracture, nonetheless clearly discounted this as contributing to any material hearing loss.
We agree that the submitted expert reports fall short of providing an objective and rational evidential predicate for making an *571 apportionment as to the cause of hearing loss in this case. See, e.g., Calabro v. Campbell Soup Co., 244 N.J. Super. 149, 164, 581 A.2d 1318 (App.Div. 1990) (discussing N.J.S.A. 34:15-35.13a and N.J.S.A. 34:15-12d), affd, 126 N.J. 278, 597 A.2d 83 (1991). We do not interpret Baijnath, supra, as affording authority for simply adopting a speculative allocation of cause in the absence of adequate evidence. To the contrary, we observed in Baijnath that while proofs respecting traumatic injury causation may not permit of certainty, "an understanding of the need to present better allocation proofs may obviate the theoretical difficulties in traumatic injury situations." Baijnath, supra, 261 N.J. Super. at 316, 618 A.2d 902. After reviewing the medical reports, we see no objective basis for a finding of roughly equal causative contribution as to Ventre's hearing loss. Neither do we believe that an accurate assessment of relative causation was shown to be so unascertainable that a Quinn[1]-type equal allocation was warranted.
In other respects we believe that the several separate findings of trauma-induced injury would find sufficient, though not abundant, support in the record to warrant affirmance under Close v. Kordulak Bros., 44 N.J. 589, 210 A.2d 753 (1965).
We are concerned, however, with whether the compensation judge gave sufficient consideration to the real possibility of overlap, particularly in the two otologically related awards and the separate TMJ and mandible awards, or to the need to ascertain the true cumulative extent of impairment resulting from the various injuries he found.
CPC points to the "stacking" problem considered in Poswiatowski v. Standard Chlorine Chem. Co., 96 N.J. 321, 475 A.
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667 A.2d 1083, 285 N.J. Super. 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ventre-v-cpc-interncf-mueller-njsuperctappdiv-1995.