Vredenburg Ex Rel. Vredenburg v. Sedgwick CMS

188 P.3d 1084, 124 Nev. 553, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 53, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 65
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 2008
Docket49289
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 188 P.3d 1084 (Vredenburg Ex Rel. Vredenburg v. Sedgwick CMS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vredenburg Ex Rel. Vredenburg v. Sedgwick CMS, 188 P.3d 1084, 124 Nev. 553, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 53, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 65 (Neb. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Parraguirre, J.:

In this appeal, we address a single issue of first impression: whether and under what circumstances surviving family members may recover workers’ compensation death benefits if an injured employee commits suicide as the result of an industrial injury. While workers’ compensation benefits are generally available for accidental employee deaths, under NRS 616C.230(1), Nevada’s *555 willful self-injury exclusion, the employee’s surviving family members are precluded from recovering benefits if the employee’s death results from a “willful intention to injure himself.” Although we have not previously addressed the scope of this exclusion, we now conclude that suicides are not willful for purposes of NRS 616C.230(1) if a sufficient chain of causation has been established. Under this construct, a claimant must demonstrate that (1) the employee suffered an industrial injury, (2) the industrial injury caused some psychological condition severe enough to override the employee’s rational judgment, and (3) the psychological condition caused the employee to commit suicide. In light of this newly announced standard, we reverse the district court’s order denying judicial review and remand this matter so that the appeals officer may conduct further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

After undergoing extensive treatment for pain related to a back injury that he incurred when he slipped on a flight of stairs while working as a bartender for respondent Flamingo Hilton-Laughlin, Danny Vredenburg committed suicide. Before ending his own life, Danny recovered industrial insurance benefits for his back injury. The compensability of that injury is, therefore, undisputed.

Following his accident on the stairway, Danny began to experience neck and lower back pain and was diagnosed with internal disc derangement at several locations along his spine. Danny then underwent a 360-degree anterior-posterior fusion surgery. Despite his fusion surgery, Danny continued to experience pain.

When advised that additional surgical procedures could not offer him any further relief, Danny consulted a series of pain management specialists, who prescribed him pain medication and muscle relaxants. Still experiencing pain, however, Danny consulted Dr. Daniel Kim and was diagnosed with “failed back syndrome.” In his medical evaluation, Dr. Kim noted that Danny’s current regimen of care — consisting mainly of pain medication and pain management therapy — could not effectively address Danny’s clinical condition.

Pursuing a more aggressive approach, Dr. Kim recommended an anti-inflammatory agent, stronger pain medication, and an antidepressant to counteract Danny’s paradoxical reaction to his muscle relaxants, which kept him awake. Later, when the pain did not subside, Danny elected to surgically implant a morphine infusion pump in his spine and undergo a round of epidural steroid injections.

According to Dr. Kim, however, even with these additional procedures, Danny’s lower back pain was “intractable.” Moreover, because of the chronic nature of this pain, in Dr. Kim’s view, Danny had become “psychologically de-stabilized.” Recognizing *556 that, as a result, Danny was unfit to return to work, Dr. Kim recommended that Danny claim permanent disability status, and he informed the Flamingo of Danny’s condition. In the month that followed, Danny committed suicide by a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

Before ending his own life, Danny composed several suicide notes expressing his need to be at peace, and he called a longtime friend, telling him that ‘ ‘he could no longer take the pain and all of his pain medications.’ ’ According to the friend, Danny had become dependent on his pain medication, which tended to increase his mobility but “made [Danny] think funny.”

According to others who knew him, until his fusion surgery, Danny was sociable and extroverted. After his surgery, by contrast, Danny was a “different person,” as his life had become “dominated by the pain from his injury.” Furthermore, as recorded in the affidavits of coworkers and friends, Danny became increasingly humorless and withdrawn. He was unable to eat and lost weight, his self-esteem decreased, and his physical appearance deteriorated. Walking became difficult and painfiil, one coworker observed, and with each movement Danny noticeably suffered.

In Dr. Donovan Anderson’s medical opinion, Danny “committed suicide as a result of [ongoing] intractable pain that was unrelenting.” Based on Dr. Anderson’s opinion, appellant Sharon Vredenburg, Danny’s surviving spouse, filed a claim for death benefits, asserting that Danny “took his own life because he was in so much pain from his industrial injury.’ ’ Noting that Dr. Anderson’s opinion lacked a medical rationale linking Danny’s suicide to his industrial injury, the Flamingo’s insurance administrator denied the claim.

After a hearing officer affirmed the claim denial, Vredenburg appealed to an appeals officer, and the parties were directed to address the compensability of industrially related suicides in Nevada. Although at the time no controlling test existed, Vredenburg argued that Danny’s suicide was compensable under the chain-of-causation test outlined by the Arizona Supreme Court in Graver Tank & Manufacturing Co. v. Industrial Commission. 2

Disagreeing with Vredenburg, the appeals officer affirmed the claim denial, concluding that (1) the chain-of-causation test was not binding in Nevada; (2) even if it was, Graver Tank was distinguishable because Danny’s suicide was deliberate instead of the product of insanity; and (3) Vredenburg failed to present conclusive evidence that Danny was devoid of normal judgment and dominated by a disturbance of mind directly caused by his industrial injury. Vredenburg unsuccessfully petitioned for judicial review in the district court. This appeal followed.

*557 DISCUSSION

In this appeal, we consider whether NRS 616C.230(1), Nevada’s willful self-injury exclusion, precludes surviving family members from recovering death benefits for employee suicides that are causally connected to an industrial industry. Answering this question in the negative, we next consider how to determine when a suicide is sufficiently causally connected to an industrial injury to qualify an employee’s survivors for death benefits. For the reasons set forth below, we adopt the chain-of-causation test and thereby join the majority of states that have considered the compensability of suicides under willful self-injury exclusions analogous to our own.

Standard of review

Like the district court, we review an appeals officer’s decision in a workers’ compensation matter for clear error or an abuse of discretion. 3

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Bluebook (online)
188 P.3d 1084, 124 Nev. 553, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 53, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vredenburg-ex-rel-vredenburg-v-sedgwick-cms-nev-2008.