Williams v. Western Electric Co.

429 A.2d 1063, 178 N.J. Super. 571
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 20, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 429 A.2d 1063 (Williams v. Western Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Western Electric Co., 429 A.2d 1063, 178 N.J. Super. 571 (N.J. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

178 N.J. Super. 571 (1981)
429 A.2d 1063

RAYMOND H. WILLIAMS, JR., PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,
v.
WESTERN ELECTRIC COMPANY, RESPONDENT-APPELLANT, AND COMMISSIONER OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY AS CUSTODIAN OF THE SECOND INJURY FUND, RESPONDENT-RESPONDENT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued October 15, 1980.
Decided March 20, 1981.

*573 Before Judges BOTTER, KING and McELROY.

Rosemary A. Hall and John F. Lynch, Jr. argued the case for appellant (Carpenter, Bennett & Morrissey, attorneys; Thomas L. Morrissey and Arthur M. Lizza of counsel; Ms. Hall and Linda B. Celauro on the brief).

Samuel E. Bass argued the cause for respondent (Freeman & Bass, attorneys).

John J. Degnan, Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney for respondent-respondent (Erminie L. Conley, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Allan L. Lockspeiser, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by McELROY, J.A.D.

This is a workers' compensation case. Petitioner was employed by appellant primarily as a packer of telephones on an assembly line and as a bench worker in telephone repair. Two petitions were filed in this matter, neither of which mentioned assembly line work stress nor work quota stress of any sort. The first, filed on November 14, 1972, alleged that while "working for respondent, petitioner was exposed to chemicals and fumes causing occupational disease." This paper alleged "disability to nervous system, internal organs, and complications arising therefrom." The second petition, filed November 28, 1972, asserted that petitioner "contracted an occupational disease," omitted reference to chemicals and fumes, and alleged "disability to chest, lungs, nose, throat, hearing and complications arising therefrom." By means of the alchemistic process *574 peculiar to the workers' compensation matters, these 1972 allegations were transmuted by 1975, when the first of 21 hearings began, into a claim primarily centered upon allegations that the exposure of petitioner to the stresses of assembly line work aggravated a preexisting and underlying schizophrenia, thereby giving that mental illness the character of an occupational disease under N.J.S.A. 34:15-31.[1] The judge of compensation, by oral opinion rendered November 3, 1978, adopted this view of the matter and awarded petitioner permanent total disability benefits. The ensuing order for judgment recited that such disability was occasioned because petitioner "was exposed to adverse environment, noise, stress, and tension resulting in an occupational exposure which resulted in occupational diseases in the nature of chronic bronchitis, binaural hearing loss, and schizophrenia with symptomatic alcoholism and anxiety as a result of his occupational exposure to stress and strain of attaining quotas and keeping up with the assembly line, his exposure to lacquer thinners, to fumes, dust, welding fumes and noise...." The employer does not appeal from this entire cluster of alleged exposure and ills, but rather from the major aspect of the award which concerns the question, novel to this State, as to whether mental illness exacerbated by alleged repetitive mental stress or stimuli is compensable. Necessarily, if the answer to this question be, yes, the accompanying inquiry is whether this case meets the applicable standards of proof. We have examined the opinion below and the record presented. Such consideration, guided by the principles which govern our power of review, obliges us to reverse the decision of the judge of compensation. Close v. Kordulak Bros., 44 N.J. 589, 598 (1965).

*575 This case involves application of N.J.S.A. 34:15-31 to its facts. That statute, as it existed in the time frame applicable to this case,[2] provided:

34:15-31. `Compensable occupational disease' defined
For the purposes of this article the phrase `compensable occupational disease' shall include all diseases arising out of and in the course of employment, which are due to causes and, conditions which are or were characteristic of or peculiar to a particular trade, occupation, process or employment, or which diseases are due to the exposure of any employee to a cause thereof arising out of and in the course of his employment.

Precedent to a recitation of the facts adduced below and a consideration of applicable legal principles we will recount some of the medical evidence which describes the nature of petitioner's schizophrenia. We do so because we feel that in order to obtain the substance and true form of this case and to gauge whether work stress was here, in realistic sense and material degree, an aggravating factor of petitioner's mental disease, one must view the evidence ever conscious that we are dealing with the reactions of a schizophrenic to normal job conditions. In short, if what we have is a man who, because he is a schizophrenic, has a purely subjective reaction to his job (as indeed, he *576 may react to all other aspects of life), we have a case of a diseased mind reacting to normal work demands. In such connotation this case is similar to Walck v. Johns-Manville Products Corp., 56 N.J. 533 (1970), where Justice Francis, speaking of a hypochondriac's subjective concern about loss of employment, said:

In other words, if the nature of an employee is such that he is a worrier, the mere fact that he becomes unnecessarily tense and nervous as to whether he is going to keep or lose his job, without more, would not make a heart attack compensable, even if the attack did result from that worry. That kind of anxiety or tension cannot be considered a risk arising out of the employer's work. If worry, about job security alone, which produces a heart seizure would establish compensability, the employer would become an insurer against such attacks. [at 557]

The psychiatric experts here agreed that plaintiff's schizophrenia preexisted the alleged employment exposure and was idiopathic in nature. Plaintiff's expert, Dr. Robert T. Latimer, defined schizophrenia as a mental disorder "which produces pronounced disorganization of the personality with defects in the areas of associated thinking...." Of importance to what we have just said in relation to the Walck case, Dr. Latimer stated that this disease "produces something called autism, which is the tendency to look at the world through one's own pathological conceptualization of it." The doctor suggested that we approach petitioner's reactions to reality with caution: "The man says many things. He is totally unreliable."

Appellant's expert, Dr. David Flicker, presented much the same view.

People irritate him. People on the job, people off the job. Of course, everybody irritated him, he was a schizophrenic. And he was a decompensating schizophrenic. Therefore, he blamed everything on the job and off the job. But particular [sic] on the job. The only thing that any lay mind can do is attribute his difficulties to the situation in which he is in. He therefore attributes it to his family, his friends, his job. Never to other factors such as possibly the use of alcohol, which he was using undoubtedly as a tranquilizer, was aggravating and had produced a vicious cycle in that the more he used alcohol, the less compensation he had. He attributes it to those things around him.

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