Whittaker v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services

668 A.2d 844, 1995 D.C. App. LEXIS 248, 1995 WL 744756
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 1995
Docket94-AA-749
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 668 A.2d 844 (Whittaker v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whittaker v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services, 668 A.2d 844, 1995 D.C. App. LEXIS 248, 1995 WL 744756 (D.C. 1995).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

As we have had to do from time to time in past cases, 1 we must remand this claim for workers’ compensation to the Department of Employment Services (DOES) because the hearing examiner, in denying petitioner benefits, misapprehended the statutory presumption favoring causation. See D.C.Code § 36-321(1) (1993). In concluding that the presumption “has no present applicability,” the examiner appears to have confused the compensability of petitioner’s injury to a knee cartilage (which the employer admitted was work-related, thereby persuading the examiner that a presumption of causation was no longer needed) with the compensability of petitioner’s disability resulting from arthritis in the knee which he claimed was aggravated by the work-related injury.

I. The Proceedings

Petitioner received temporary total disability benefits from the date of his injury, November 1, 1988, until their termination on July 4, 1991. After benefits were terminated, he filed a claim with DOES seeking a retroactive award of temporary total disabili *845 ty benefits, with interest, beginning with the date of their termination, as well the indefinite continuation of benefits and the resumption of vocational rehabilitation. 2 After an evidentiary hearing on February B, 1992, a hearing examiner denied petitioner’s claim in a Compensation Order dated January 14, 1994. Petitioner applied to the Director of DOES for review, but the Director failed to issue a final decision within forty-five days of the date of the application. The Compensation Order thus became a final decision for purposes of review by this court. D.C.Code § 36 — 322(b) (2) — (3).

II. The Facts

On November 1,1988, petitioner was stepping across a stack of pallet boards at a job site when his foot became caught in a piece of wire mesh, causing him to fall to the ground with his right leg buckled beneath him. The accident caused tears of the back portions of the medial and lateral menisci of petitioner’s right knee. 3 These tears were superimposed upon pre-existing (though non-symptomatic) degenerative arthritis in petitioner’s right knee. All of the damaged cartilage was successfully removed during two arthroscopic surgeries conducted in 1988 and 1989, but at the same time petitioner’s arthritis grew worse, to a point where the hearing examiner found, and the medical experts for the parties agreed, that petitioner was disabled from his usual employment as a crane operator. The examiner concluded, however, that “even though claimant’s symptoms remain, the superimposition of the effects of the work injury have been alleviated, and claimant’s present medical condition is the result of his degenerative arthritis rather than either the November 1, 1988 work injury or the surgery to correct the effects thereof.” In other words, petitioner had failed to “show that his continuing loss of wages [was] the result of the exacerbation of his pre-existent condition rather than ... a result of the natural progression of the [arthritic] condition” (emphasis in original).

III. Discussion

D.C.Code § 36-321(1) provides that “[i]n any proceeding for the enforcement of a claim for compensation under this chapter it shall be presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary: (1) That the claim comes within the provisions of this chapter-” As this court has explained, “The statutory presumption operates to establish a causal connection between the disability and the work-related event.” Baker, supra note 1, 611 A.2d at 550. In Ferreira, supra note 1, the court elaborated:

In order to benefit from the presumption, a claimant needs to make some “initial demonstration” of the employment-connection of the disability_ The initial demonstration consists in providing some evidence of the existence of two “basic facts”: a death or a disability and a work-related event, activity, or requirement which has the potential of resulting in or contributing to the death or disability_ The presumption then operates to establish a causal connection between the disability and the work-related event, activity, or requirement.

531 A.2d at 655 (citations omitted) (emphasis in original). Accord, Parodi v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 560 A.2d 524, 526 (D.C.1989). We further explained in Parodi:

Once the presumption is triggered, the burden of production shifts to the employer to set forth “substantial evidence” showing that the death or disability is not work-related.... Absent employer evidence “specific and comprehensive enough to sever the potential connection between a particular injury and a job-related event,” the compensation claim will be deemed to fall within the purview of the statute.

*846 Id. at 526 (quoting Ferreira, supra note 1, 531 A.2d at 655 & n. 5).

At the evidentiary hearing, petitioner submitted the deposition testimony of his treating physician and medical expert, Dr. Michael Cassidy, to support a finding that the torn cartilage in his right knee, conceded to have been caused by the work-related fall, had aggravated a pre-existing arthritic condition in his knee. 4 In considering this evidence, the hearing examiner acknowledged and applied the well-settled principle that “[t]he aggravation of a pre-existing condition may justify compensation.” Baker, supra note 1, 611 A.2d at 550; accord, Wheatley v. Adler, 132 U.S.App.D.C. 177, 182, 407 F.2d 307, 312 (1968) (en banc) (construing predecessor statute). But, importantly, the examiner declined to give petitioner the benefit of the statutory presumption of causation in answering the “dispositive” question of “the medical relationship, if any, between claimant’s present symptomology [sic] and the conceded work-related injury of November 1, 1988.” The examiner did so for the sole reason that “the compensability of claimant’s November 1, 1988 injury has been neither raised nor challenged.” That is, apparently because the employer never disputed that the tom knee cartilage stemmed from the employment, the examiner thought that this removed from the analysis the presumption of a causal link between the disability — arthritis aggravated by the injury — and the accident. It did not. Our decision in Baker, supra note 1, made that point sufficiently clear.

In Baker,

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Bluebook (online)
668 A.2d 844, 1995 D.C. App. LEXIS 248, 1995 WL 744756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittaker-v-district-of-columbia-department-of-employment-services-dc-1995.