Vermiglio v. Condor Manufacturing, Inc

282 N.W.2d 815, 91 Mich. App. 8, 1979 Mich. App. LEXIS 2220
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1979
DocketDocket 78-1725
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 282 N.W.2d 815 (Vermiglio v. Condor Manufacturing, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermiglio v. Condor Manufacturing, Inc, 282 N.W.2d 815, 91 Mich. App. 8, 1979 Mich. App. LEXIS 2220 (Mich. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

M. J. Kelly, J.

Plaintiff, Andrew Vermiglio, appeals a March 13, 1978, determination of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (WCAB) modifying the decision of the hearing referee that defendant Condor Manufacturing, Inc., plaintiff’s second employer, and its insurer, were liable for payment of continuing disability benefits, and holding that defendants’ liability ceased on the last day of plaintiff’s employment with Tubular Sales, plaintiff’s third employer.

Testimony taken before the hearing referee on September 2, 1975, indicated the following: Plain *11 tiff originally suffered a severe leg injury while employed by Triad Construction Company in 1965. Plaintiff was hospitalized several times before he was able to work again; but, as a result of the accident, he has suffered from recurrent osteomyelitis (infection of the bone).

In September of 1969, plaintiff began work with defendant Condor Manufacturing, Inc. His job as a "chucker”, according to plaintiff, required him to stand for 10 hours a day, 58 hours a week, feeding a machine. During the second year of his employment with Condor, plaintiff began to experience severe discomfort because his left leg would drain and swell. In November of 1970, he was hospitalized and underwent further surgery. As a result of plaintiff’s original injury and various hospitalizations, his left leg is two inches shorter than his right leg and he is unable to bend his left knee. After the 1970 hospitalization, plaintiff returned to Condor; however, the pain persisted and, according to plaintiff, he was laid off in 1972.

After having his brother take his preemployment physical, plaintiff began working for Tubular Sales as a warehouseman in August, 1972. This employment required that plaintiff load and unload trucks as well as cut steel tubing on a saw. Plaintiff was again hospitalized in August, 1973. Upon being discharged from the hospital, plaintiff was laid off by Tubular Sales, apparently because the company became aware of plaintiff’s leg condition. Plaintiff has not worked since.

On November 5, 1973, plaintiff filed a complaint with the Workmen’s Compensation Bureau alleging total disability and requesting compensation from Triad Container Corporation and Tubular Sales Company and their respective insurance carriers. On April 29, 1974, plaintiff amended his *12 complaint to include defendants, Condor Manufacturing, Inc. and its insurance carrier, National Ben Franklin Insurance Company. Subsequently, with the approval of the referee, plaintiff and two of the defendants, Triad Container and Tubular Sales, and their insurance carriers, entered into an agreement to redeem liability. Plaintiff agreed to settle all his claims against these defendants in exchange for $35,000; however, plaintiff preserved his claim against Condor Manufacturing and its insurance carrier.

The medical testimony introduced at the September 2, 1975, hearing before the referee was contradictory. Although all five doctors agreed that plaintiff’s osteomyelitis was caused by his original injury in 1965, there was disagreement as to whether employment involving excessive standing, bending and lifting could exacerbate the condition. The hearing referee found that plaintiff was partially disabled since May 3, 1972 (the last day worked at defendant Condor), and that defendant should pay continuing compensation to plaintiff at the rate of two-thirds of the difference between his average weekly wage and his weekly earnings thereafter, not to exceed $101 per week.

On appeal to the WCAB, the defendants contended that plaintiff’s original injury had not been aggravated by his employment at Condor. Alternatively, it was asserted that any compensation for subsequent aggravation should be assessed solely against Tubular Sales, since plaintiff was. last subjected to the conditions resulting in his disability when he was employed there. MCL 418.435; MSA 17.237(435).

The appeal board found that stresses and strains during plaintiff’s employment at Condor aggravated and reactivated his chronic bone infection. *13 However, the board altered the referee’s scheduled compensation benefits; it awarded benefits to plaintiff in the amount of $86 per week for any weekly wages lost from the time of his 1970 hospitalization until May 3, 1972, and $95 per week thereafter until increased to $101 per week on September 6, 1972 (when his son Thomas was born), and for two-thirds of the difference in any wage loss while employed by Tubular Sales not to exceed $101 weekly. In addition, the board also modified the referee’s award of continuing benefits, holding that benefits paid by defendant were to cease as of the day plaintiff ended his employment at Tubular Sales, August 13, 1973. The board further found that plaintiff’s subsequent employment at Tubular Sales had aggravated his condition and produced a last-day-of-work disability. According to the board, had it not been for a redemption of Tubular Sales’ liability, it would now be wholly responsible as the last employer.

It is this modification of the award which frames the issue on appeal: after finding that plaintiff had aggravated his disability while employed by defendant, did the appeal board err in holding defendant to be a "prior” employer, liable only until a subsequent aggravating exposure occurred, rather than a "last” employer and liable for the payment of continuing benefits?

In essence, plaintiff seeks to have Condor, his second employer, treated as his last employer under MCL 418.435; MSA 17.237(435), and therefore, liable for the payment of continuing disability benefits. The hearing referee adopted this position; however, the appeal board did not and ordered compensation to cease at the moment the subsequent employer’s liability accrued, that is, August 13, 1973. In attacking the appeal board’s *14 modification of the compensation award, plaintiff asserts that the board’s opinion is internally inconsistent because it found, in effect, two "total” disabilities: the first occurring in November of 1970 while plaintiff was employed by Condor, the second occurring on August 13, 1973, when plaintiff’s employment with Tubular Sales ended. Proceeding from that premise, plaintiff argues that because the board never found that plaintiff had recovered from his first "total” disability, his subsequent employment and any subsequent aggravation is irrelevant, and thus, the board erred in ordering the cessation of disability benefits as of August 13, 1973.

Defendant counters with a two-step defense. Focusing on the cornerstone of plaintiff’s position, defendant argues that the board’s opinion did not find two "total” disabilities; rather, the compensation awarded from Condor represents only a finding of a "temporary” total disability which did not become "permanent” until plaintiff left Tubular Sales on August 13, 1973. Moreover, defendant asserts that, because liability for an aggravated injury rests with the employer whose work last subjected plaintiff to the disabling conditions, the board’s finding that Tubular Sales was plaintiff’s last employer precludes an award of continuing benefits from Condor.

Initially, we reiterate the applicable standard of review.

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300 N.W.2d 461 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
282 N.W.2d 815, 91 Mich. App. 8, 1979 Mich. App. LEXIS 2220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermiglio-v-condor-manufacturing-inc-michctapp-1979.