Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Kepford

786 P.2d 745, 100 Or. App. 410, 1990 Ore. App. LEXIS 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 14, 1990
Docket87-02846; CA A60272
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 786 P.2d 745 (Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Kepford) 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
Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Kepford, 786 P.2d 745, 100 Or. App. 410, 1990 Ore. App. LEXIS 111 (Or. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinions

[412]*412BUTTLER, J.

Employer seeks review of a Workers’ Compensation Board order requiring it to pay claimant temporary total disability benefits from February 20, 1981, the date of the onset of his disability.

Claimant, age 63 at the time of the hearing, has not worked since February 20, 1981, when he left his job because of back pain. He underwent surgery in October, 1981, and sought compensation for an aggravation of a 1974 compensable injury. Employer denied the claim, whereupon claimant filed a new claim based on an occupational disease theory. Employer also denied that claim. A referee and the Board upheld the denials. Claimant sought review in this court only on the occupational disease claim.

Meanwhile, in November, 1982, claimant began receiving Social Security disability benefits retroactive to August, 1981. In May, 1983, at the suggestion of employer, claimant applied for and received employer provided disability retirement benefits retroactively to 1981. In January, 1986, we held that the occupational disease claim was compensable and remanded the claim to the Board for a determination of the extent of disability. Kepford v. Weyerhaeuser Co., 77 Or App 363, 713 P2d 625, rev den 300 Or 722 (1986).

After our decision, employer submitted for closure the aggravation claim, rather than the occupational disease claim on which we had based our decision. It has not paid any benefits for time loss to this date, reasoning that claimant has been retired and, therefore, is not entitled to them. Claimant sought a hearing. At the time of the hearing in this proceeding, claimant had not been declared medically stationary and had not been released for work. He had, however, apparently withdrawn from the work force by May, 1983, at the latest, when he applied to employer for retirement benefits.

The Board, in affirming the referee, ordered employer to process the claim as an occupational disease claim and to pay claimant time loss from the date of the onset of disability until the claim is closed. It also assessed a penalty for employer’s refusal to pay benefits for temporary total disability. The question is whether claimant is entitled to benefits for temporary total disability for the time after he began [413]*413receiving Social Security disability and retirement benefits from employer.

In Cutright v. Weyerhaeuser Co., 299 Or 290, 702 P2d 403 (1985), the worker had voluntarily withdrawn from the work force for reasons unrelated to his compensable injury after the claim had been closed and before he filed an aggravation claim. The court stated that one who retires voluntarily from the work force is no longer to be compensated for time loss under the Workers’ Compensation Law. It went on to say that payment of temporary total disability compensation is intended to provide wage replacement and that one who has voluntarily retired from the labor market cannot lose wages and is not, therefore, entitled to benefits for temporary total disability.

After Outright, we decided several cases involving entitlement to benefits after retirement and, relying on Cut-right, held that a person who has retired is not entitled to temporary total disability benefits. Dawkins v. Pacific Motor Trucking, 91 Or App 562, 756 P2d 60 (1988), reconsideration granted and former opinion adhered to 93 Or App 349, 762 P2d 329, rev’d 308 Or 254, 778 P2d 497 (1989); Sykes v. Weyerhaeuser Company, 90 Or App 41, 750 P2d 1171 (1988); Karr v. SAIF, 79 Or App 250, 719 P2d 35, rev den 301 Or 765 (1986). However, in each of those cases, like Outright, the facts showed that the worker had retired after the initial closure of his claim and before the filing of an aggravation claim, but we did not rely on those facts, because Outright did not appear to focus on them. None presented the question of the effect of a worker’s retirement during the processing, and before closure, of a claim, i.e., during the time when the employer would otherwise be obligated to pay benefits for temporary total disability.

It was not until the Supreme Court, on review of Dawkins v. Pacific Motor Trucking, supra, that the court focused on the significance of the time of a claimant’s withdrawal from the work force on the claimant’s entitlement to temporary total disability benefits arising out of an aggravation.1 The court reiterated its holding in Cutright v.

[414]*414Weyerhaeuser Co., supra, and then considered the principal question presented: What constitutes a withdrawal from the work force that will preclude a claimant’s entitlement to temporary total disability benefits for an aggravation? It concluded:

“To receive temporary total disability upon aggravation of a work-related injury, the claimant must be in the work force at the time of the aggravation. Cutright v. Weyerhaeuser Co., supra. A claimant is deemed to be in the work force if:
“a. The claimant is engaged in regular gainful employment; or
“b. The claimant, although not employed at the time, is willing to work and is making reasonable efforts to obtain employment, Cutright v. Weyerhaeuser Co., supra, see ORS 656.206(3); or
“c. The claimant is willing to work, although not employed at the time and not making reasonable efforts to obtain employment because of a work-related injury, where such efforts would be futile. Cf. SAIF v. Stephen, 308 Or 41, 47-48, 774 P2d 1103 (1989).” 308 Or at 258. (Emphasis supplied.)

Dawkins makes it clear that the critical time for determining whether a claimant has withdrawn from the work force is at the time of his disability.2 It also makes it clear that, even though a claimant has applied for and received disability benefits from Social Security and disability retirement benefits from his union before his disability, he may be entitled to temporary total disability benefits if he can show that he fulfilled the requirements of criterion (c) at the time of his disability.3

Here, claimant was working and was, therefore, a member of the work force when he became disabled by his occupational disease. It matters not that he retired or had withdrawn from the work force after that time. Under [415]*415Dawkins, he need not show that he remained in the work force. Because he was entitled to receive benefits for temporary total disability at that time, he was entitled to continue to receive them until he became medically stationary and was released for work, ORS 656.325(5),4 Fazzolari v. United Beer Distributors, 91 Or App 592, 757 P2d 857, rev den 307 Or 236 (1988), at which time employer was entitled to close his claim. ORS 656.268.

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Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Kepford
786 P.2d 745 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
786 P.2d 745, 100 Or. App. 410, 1990 Ore. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weyerhaeuser-co-v-kepford-orctapp-1990.