Verte v. Mearthane Products Corp.

583 A.2d 524, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 180, 1990 WL 194327
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 7, 1990
Docket89-437-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 583 A.2d 524 (Verte v. Mearthane Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Verte v. Mearthane Products Corp., 583 A.2d 524, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 180, 1990 WL 194327 (R.I. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

WEISBERGER, Justice.

This case is before the court on the petition for certiorari of Mearthane Products Corporation to review a final decree of the Workers’ Compensation Commission Appellate Commission (Appellate Commission). The Appellate Commission reversed the finding of the trial commissioner and awarded the plaintiff, Lucia Verte, disability benefits for kidney disease, crescentic glomerulonephritis, that it determined arose out of and in the course of her employment. We sustain the finding of the Appellate Commission and deny the petition for certiorari. The facts are essentially undisputed and are as follows.

Lucia Verte (Verte) began working as a machine-parts cleaner at Mearthane Products Corporation (employer) in 1974. She typically worked ten to twelve hours per day, five to six days per week. Verte’s job required cleaning metal typewriter and computer parts with a cloth and a chemical cleaning solvent. This task was accomplished by wrapping the cloth around her finger, dipping her finger into a small can containing the chemical methylene chloride, and then rubbing the cloth over the surface of metal machine parts to remove built-up residue. A similar method was used to clean plastic machine parts, except the cleaning solvent in that instance was alcohol.

On September 19,1984, Verte was admitted into Kent County Hospital where she was treated for swelling in her chest and neck area and also for congestion. Verte was diagnosed as suffering from acute kidney failure. She remained at Kent County Hospital for approximately one month before being transferred to the New England Medical Center in Boston where she underwent treatment for another one-month period.

Verte’s attending physician a.t Kent County Hospital was Dr. Owen B. Gilman, a board certified specialist in internal medicine and nephrology. Doctor Gilman testified via deposition that he diagnosed Verte as suffering from irreversible kidney disease and thereafter recommended a biopsy. The biopsy was performed at the New England Medical Center, and Verte’s condition was identified as crescentic glomerulone- *526 phritis. 1 Doctor Gilman thereafter determined that Verte was totally disabled and prescribed ongoing dialysis treatment, which she is presently receiving in three three-hour sessions per week.

The evidence presented at the hearing before the trial commissioner consisted of Verte’s testimony, the deposition of her supervisor, Olga Pesaturo, and three items of medical evidence: (1) the deposition of Verte’s present treating physician, Dr. Owen Gilman; (2) the affidavit and report of Dr. Frank Racioppi, who treated Verte during her two pregnancies; and (3) the deposition of employer’s expert, Dr. David Yoburn.

Verte’s work supervisor, Olga Pesaturo, confirmed the job description given by Verte at the hearing. Pesaturo’s testimony revealed that during the first nine years of her employment, Verte used methylene chloride as a cleaning agent for approximately 50 percent of each work day. Pesa-turo also testified that for most of 1984, Verte used “some methylene” for cleaning but that she used “mostly alcohol” because the typewriter parts that she was required to clean were plastic.

Verte’s treating physician, Dr. Gilman, testified that methylene chloride is a type of hydrocarbon that is absorbed by the human body both by inhalation and by skin contact and that this type of systemic absorption can lead to kidney damage. Further, Dr. Gilman stated that hydrocarbon is a well-known etiologic agent in causing rapidly progressive or crescentic glomeru-lonephritis. Accordingly, Dr. Gilman was of the opinion that although the onset of crescentic glomerulonephritis can be related to various definable and indefinable causes, he believed that employee’s cres-centic glomerulonephritis had its onset in 1984 and that to a reasonable degree of medical certainty the methylene chloride with which she worked was the etiologic agent that caused her kidney failure.

Doctor Gilman also testified that although he did not have Verte’s medical records prior to 1984, he did inquire into her medical history, which revealed that in March 1984, Verte had an episode of hema-turia (blood in the urine). Doctor Gilman stated that he was of the opinion that any prior history of hematuria or diminished urinary output was without significance in regard to his determination that Verte’s 1984 kidney failure was a result of her occupational exposure to methylene chloride. Doctor Gilman based his opinion on the theory that pathologic examination suggested Verte’s crescentic glomerulonephri-tis to be of “relatively recent” origin.

The employer presented the deposition testimony and report of Dr. David Yoburn, a board-certified specialist in nephrology who had conducted a physical examination of Verte. Doctor Yoburn reviewed the medical records regarding Verte that were furnished by Dr. Frank Racioppi, the Kent County Medical Center, and the New England Medical Center. Doctor Yoburn also reviewed the deposition testimony of Olga Pesaturo, as well as the deposition testimony and medical records supplied by Dr. Gilman. Doctor Yoburn testified in his deposition that in his medical opinion, a review of Verte’s medical records indicated that she may have had crescentic glomeru-lonephritis as far back as 1977 and that this condition was somehow exacerbated in 1984. Doctor Yoburn based his opinion on the results of urinalysis tests that showed traces of blood in the urine and abnormal traces of protein as early as 1977. However, Dr. Yoburn also conceded that Verte’s abnormal urinalysis results in 1977 could have been related to her pregnancy at the time rather than kidney disease. Doctor Yoburn further testified that the finding of blood and protein in the urine, although often indicative of kidney disease, may also be associated with urinary-tract infections. Further, Dr. Yoburn acknowledged that a test used to diagnose structur *527 al abnormalities of the kidney was performed in 1979 and the results were normal. When asked whether he could give an opinion, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, about a causal relationship between Verte’s occupational exposure to methylene chloride and the onset of her kidney disease, Dr. Yoburn stated that he could not form any opinion about causation.

After reviewing the medical evidence submitted at the hearing, the trial commissioner concluded that Dr. Gilman’s testimony, although informative, was lacking in that Dr. Gilman had no knowledge of Verte’s medical history prior to March 1984. The trial commissioner was instead persuaded by the testimony of Dr. Yoburn, which he found to be more “practical and illuminating,” to the extent that Dr. Yo-burn based his opinion on physical examination of Verte, as well as on her past medical history.- In so relying, the trial commissioner found that Verte failed to prove that her kidney disease arose out of and in the course of her employment.

After carefully reviewing the evidence presented at the hearing before the trial commissioner, the Appellate Commission reversed the decision of the trial commissioner, finding that since Dr. Yoburn had no opinion on the critical issue of causation, his medical testimony was neither legally competent nor probative and therefore, the trial commissioner’s reliance on that testimony was in error.

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Bluebook (online)
583 A.2d 524, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 180, 1990 WL 194327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verte-v-mearthane-products-corp-ri-1990.