Cehic v. Mack Molding, Inc.

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Cehic v. Mack Molding, Inc. (2004-353); 179 Vt. 602; 895 A.2d 167

2006 VT 12

[Filed 13-Jan-2006]

                                 ENTRY ORDER

                                 2006 VT 12

                      SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2004-353

                            SEPTEMBER TERM, 2005

  Ramiz Cehic	                     }		APPEALED FROM:
                                       }	
                                       }        Department of Labor and Industry	
  v.                                   }
                                       }	
  Mack Molding, Inc.	               }
                                       }	DOCKET NO. M-25723
  	
             In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

       ¶  1.  Mack Molding, Inc. appeals from the Commissioner of Labor and
  Industry's decision that it is responsible for paying workers' compensation
  benefits for its former employee, claimant Ramiz Cehic.  The Commissioner,
  after a contested hearing, concluded that a 1998 injury claimant incurred
  while employed at Mack Molding, rather than a more recent 2001 lifting
  incident at a subsequent employer, Pike Industries, was responsible for
  claimant's continued impairment and need for back surgery in 2002.  On
  appeal, Mack Molding argues that the Commissioner erred in considering the
  later lifting incident as a temporary flare-up of a preexisting condition,
  instead of analyzing the incident as an "aggravation" of a preexisting
  injury, for which the latest employer would be responsible, or a
  "recurrence" of an old injury, for which Mack Molding would remain liable. 
  Alternatively, Mack Molding argues that this Court should abandon the
  current aggravation-or-recurrence analysis and, instead, adopt a
  bright-line rule that the employer at the time of the last injurious
  exposure is always liable.  We affirm.

       ¶  2.  Claimant was employed by Mack Molding in 1998 when he injured
  his back in a lifting incident, suffering a herniated disc in his spine, an
  injured facet joint, and strained lower lumbar muscles.  In 1999, as a
  result of the injury, claimant had surgery on his spine, which removed part
  of the facet joint and large amounts of disc material.  After the surgery,
  claimant continued to experience pain, worked part-time for a while, and
  was gradually released by his doctor to work full-time, but with lifting
  restrictions.  In May 2000, while his workers' compensation claim against
  Mack Molding was still under adjustment, claimant began work at Pike
  Industries, a New Hampshire employer.  In November 2000, Mack Molding sent
  claimant to an orthopedic surgeon, who determined that claimant had reached
  a medical end result for the 1998 injury, with persistent back and leg pain
  and a permanent disability amounting to a ten-percent impairment of the
  whole person. 
   
       ¶  3.  Eight months later, on July 31, 2001, after lifting a pipe at
  Pike Industries, claimant experienced back pain and leg numbness and sought
  medical treatment.  Claimant missed some time from work, engaged in
  physical therapy, and returned to full-time work by September or October of
  2001.  Claimant was laid off from Pike Industries on January 4, 2002. 
  Shortly thereafter, claimant underwent a surgical fusion of his lower
  lumbar vertebrae.  Claimant first filed a workers' compensation claim with
  the New Hampshire Department of Labor, which determined that Pike
  Industries was not responsible.  

       ¶  4.  Claimant next filed for workers' compensation in Vermont
  against Mack Molding.  Mack Molding denied coverage, contending that it was
  not answerable for the pipe-lifting episode at Pike, since it was not a
  recurrence of the Mack Molding injury, but an aggravation of that injury
  while in Pike's employ.  At the time of the hearing in 2004, claimant had
  not resumed employment.  After a contested hearing, the Commissioner
  concluded that the back pain and numbness incurred in July 2001 at Pike was
  a "flare-up" for which Mack Molding was not responsible.  The Commissioner
  determined the flare-up prompted claimant to seek medical treatment, but
  did not alter claimant's underlying condition remaining from his earlier
  accident at Mack Molding.  The Commissioner further determined, however,
  that once claimant's condition returned to his pre-Pike- injury "baseline"
  in late September or October 2001, Mack Molding continued to be liable for
  benefits due on account of claimant's underlying condition.  See Pacher v.
  Fairdale Farms, 166 Vt. 626, 629, 699 A.2d 43, 47 (1997) (mem.) (describing
  "baseline" as achieved when a claimant reaches the condition he or she was
  in prior to the subsequent, distinct injury). 
   
       ¶  5.  The Commissioner based his conclusion on opinions from three
  medical experts, including one hired by Mack Molding, that the Pike
  incident changed nothing in claimant's underlying condition from his
  earlier injury at Mack Molding.  Two of the experts related the need for
  fusion surgery to the earlier Mack Molding injury.  Two of the experts
  opined that claimant returned to his pre-Pike-injury baseline four months
  before the 2002 surgery.  That claimant's condition never stabilized after
  the earlier injury was further supported by medical indications that he
  still had pain and could work only with lifting restrictions. 
  Notwithstanding an opinion to the contrary from a fourth medical expert,
  whose opinion was not supported by the MRI, the Commissioner's conclusion
  was amply supported by the medical evidence.

       ¶  6.  Our review in a direct appeal from a decision by the
  Commissioner of Labor and Industry is limited to questions of law certified
  by the Commissioner.  21 V.S.A. § 672.  We are bound by the Commissioner's
  findings so long as they are supported by the evidence.  Wroten v.
  Lamphere, 147 Vt. 606, 611, 523 A.2d 1236, 1239 (1987).  The sufficiency of
  the findings are considered from a point of view favorable to the award. 
  Coburn v. Frank Dodge & Sons, 165 Vt. 529, 533, 687 A.2d 465, 467 (1996). 
  "[W]e will overrule only where those findings have no evidentiary support
  in the record or where the decision is based on 'evidence so slight as to
  be an irrational basis for the result reached.' "  Id. at 533, 687 A.2d  at
  467-68 (quoting Kenney v. Rockingham Sch. Dist., 123 Vt. 344, 348, 190 A.2d 702, 705 (1963)).  Where the Commissioner's conclusions are "rationally
  derived from the findings and based on a correct interpretation of the
  law," we will affirm.  Pacher, 166 Vt. at 627, 699 A.2d  at 46.
        
       ¶  7.  The question certified by the Commissioner was whether "a
  lifting incident at Pike Industries in 2001 or an injury at Mack Molding in
  1998 [was] responsible for claimant's current condition, his January 2002
  surgery and lost time from work."  Mack Molding argues that application of
  the traditional aggravation-or-recurrence analysis would conclusively
  result in a determination that claimant's current condition and need for
  surgery in 2002 resulted from an aggravation at Pike of his preexisting
  condition.  We disagree with Mack Molding's contention that the
  aggravation-or-recurrence standard was the only applicable theory of
  liability for categorizing the Pike lifting injury, or that the
  Commissioner erred by relying on another theory, which was supported by the
  evidence, in analyzing that injury.  

       ¶  8.  We have stated that where a dispute concerns a compensation
  claim involving successive employers and successive injuries, liability
  will remain with the first employer if the second injury is a recurrence of
  the first.  Farris v. Byrant Grinder Corp., 2005 VT 5, ¶ 4, 177 Vt. 456,
  869 A.2d 131.  "If, however, the second incident aggravated, accelerated,
  or combined with a preexisting impairment or injury to produce a disability
  greater than would have resulted from the second injury alone, the second
  incident is an 'aggravation,' and the second employer becomes solely
  responsible for the entire disability at that point."  Pacher, 166 Vt. at
  627-28, 699 A.2d  at 46.  We have also observed, as in Pacher, that at least
  a third option exists where an incident is neither an aggravation nor a
  recurrence but causes "a new injury distinct from claimant's prior
  injuries."  Id. at 628, 699 A.2d  at 46.  The Commissioner, relying on
  Pacher, determined that the injury claimant incurred at Pike fell within
  this third option as "a so-called flare-up." 

       ¶  9.  The Commissioner's melding of a distinctly new injury and
  condition, as discussed in Pacher, with a flare-up may lend more confusion
  than clarity to the issue.  Pacher acknowledged that just because a
  claimant incurs a subsequent injury does not mandate a finding that the
  injury is either a recurrence or an aggravation; alternatively, a
  subsequent incident may be an entirely new injury.  See Pacher, 166 Vt. at
  628, 699 A.2d  at 46-47 (upholding the Commissioner's conclusion that a
  later injury during subsequent employment to right lower back was new and
  distinct from earlier injury, from prior employment, to left lower back and
  left leg).  "Flare-up" most appropriately connotes a temporary worsening of
  a preexisting disability caused by a new trauma for which the new "employer
  is responsible for paying compensation benefits until the worker's
  condition returns to the baseline, and not thereafter."  See Wood v.
  Fletcher Allen Health Care, 169 Vt. 419, 424, 739 A.2d 1201, 1206 (1999)
  (summarizing the Commissioner's use of the temporary flare-up doctrine, but
  finding it inapplicable to the facts of the case).  Regardless of the terms
  employed, the crux of the Commissioner's inquiry in the instant case was
  whether there was a distinction between the two incidents and their
  respective effects on claimant's overall condition so as to fairly
  apportion liability between the successive employers.      
        
       ¶  10.  The temporary flare-up doctrine, like the
  aggravation-or-recurrence analysis, rationally serves the Commissioner's
  obligation to determine, if possible, the relative liability of multiple
  employers for different and distinct injuries to a worker.  See Pacher, 166
  Vt. at 629 n.2, 699 A.2d  at 47 n.2 (noting  Commissioner's ability to
  fairly define and apportion liability of different employers where
  different accidents produce distinct injuries and obligation to do so
  pursuant to 21 V.S.A. § 662(c)); see also Stannard v. Stannard Co., 2003 VT
  52, ¶ 11, 175 Vt. 549, 830 A.2d 66 (mem.) ("As Pacher established, in
  workers' compensation cases involving successive injuries, the
  employer/carrier at the time of the first injury remains liable unless the
  medical evidence establishes that the second injury 'causally contribute[d]
  to the claimant's disability.' " (quoting Pacher, 166 Vt. at 627, 699 A.2d
  at 46)).  "Mere continuation or even exacerbation of symptoms, without a
  worsening of the underlying disability, does not meet the causation
  requirement."  Id.  The flare-up rule is not, as urged by Mack Molding,
  inconsistent with either theory of aggravation or recurrence.  In a
  flare-up, the finding of a distinct new injury, as here, precludes a
  conclusion that the injury is a recurrence; and, while that new injury
  temporarily worsens a preexisting condition, the finding of a return to
  baseline, as here, precludes a conclusion of aggravation because the
  injury, once resolved, did not "causally contribute" to any increased
  disability. 

       ¶  11.  The Commissioner's expression of the analysis may be inexact,
  but we find no error in its application here.  Nor do we find unsupported
  the Commissioner's ultimate conclusion that Mack Molding was not
  responsible for lost work or medical treatment associated with the 2001
  back strain suffered at Pike, but was responsible for claimant's underlying
  condition incurred at Mack Molding, which continued, unchanged and
  unstable, before and after the Pike incident.  Although the Commissioner's
  findings do not indicate that the fusion surgery was specifically
  prescribed prior to the Pike incident, the opinions of three medical
  experts support the conclusion that it was the same underlying condition
  that claimant had prior to the Pike incident that led to the need for the
  spinal fusion, not the temporary back strain claimant experienced from the
  Pike injury.

       ¶  12.  Mack Molding argues that other facts in the record favor a
  finding of aggravation, but it is not our role to weigh the evidence in the
  record.  Mack Molding was free to seek a new trial on the facts in the
  superior court and declined to do so. As we previously observed in Kenney
  v. Rockingham School District, in denying the employer's motion for
  reargument, "[i]f the weight of the evidence seems to a defendant to
  preponderate in his favor, and the commissioner has decided against him,
  the defendant's remedy is by appeal to county court pursuant to 21 V.S.A. §
  670."  123 Vt. at 348, 190 A.2d  at 705.  In this direct appeal limited to
  questions of law, we conclude that the Commissioner's findings and
  conclusions are supported by evidence, despite some evidence to the
  contrary, and therefore are not clearly erroneous.  See Stannard,  2003 VT
  52, ¶ 13 (refusing to find error despite some evidence that cut against
  trial court's findings). 

       ¶  13.  Finally, Mack Molding argues that we should abandon
  aggravation-or-recurrence analysis in Vermont, together with its flare-up
  cousin, in favor of the last-injurious-exposure rule to limit liability of
  a previous employer when a former employee is re-injured while working for
  a later employer.  Mack Molding argues that the aggravation and recurrence
  standards yield inconsistent, unpredictable, and unfair results, citing
  more than thirty decisions by the Commissioner with divergent results that
  are not subject to review in this appeal.  Mack Molding contends that the
  last- injurious-exposure rule is warranted in cases involving complex
  issues of causation and multiple employers.  
    
       ¶  14.  As an initial matter, it does not appear from the record
  provided that Mack Molding requested that the Commissioner apply the
  last-injurious-exposure rule in this case.  Instead, Mack Molding submitted
  proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law urging a finding of
  aggravation.  We need not address the propriety of Mack Molding's request
  that this Court adopt a determinative rule of law where it declined to give
  the Commissioner the opportunity to consider the matter in the first
  instance.  Even if raised below, the last-injurious-exposure rule would not
  apply, given the Commissioner's findings of fact. 
        
       ¶  15.  We have previously recognized that the
  last-injurious-exposure rule may be appropriate "only where separate
  injuries all causally contribute to the total disability so that it becomes
  difficult or impossible to allocate liability among several potentially
  liable employers."  Pacher,  166 Vt. at 628 n.2, 699 A.2d  at 47 n.2
  (emphasis supplied).   Although the evidence here may have been conflicting
  and complex, this is not a case where the Commissioner was unable to find
  what incident caused claimant's condition.  Here it was determined from the
  medical evidence that the Pike lifting incident did not contribute to the
  disability that required the 2002 surgery.  See 9 A. Larson et al.,
  Larson's Workers' Compensation Law § 153.02[7][a], at 153-18 (2004) ("It
  goes without saying that, before the last-injurious-exposure rule can be
  applied, there must have been some exposure of a kind contributing to the
  condition." (second emphasis supplied)).

       ¶  16.  To the extent that Mack Molding wants to remove the element
  of causation in determining multiple employer liability-in the interest of
  avoiding litigation in cases involving complex and conflicting medical
  evidence-these are public policy concerns best brought to the attention of
  the Legislature, or possibly to the regulatory authority of the 
  Commissioner.

       ¶  17.  For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Commissioner's
  decision ordering Mack Molding to adjust the claim for benefits.

       Affirmed.       


                                       BY THE COURT:



                                       _______________________________________
                                       Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice

                                       _______________________________________
                                       John A. Dooley, Associate Justice
     
                                       _______________________________________
                                       Denise R. Johnson, Associate Justice

                                       _______________________________________
                                       Marilyn S. Skoglund, Associate Justice

                                       _______________________________________
                                       Brian L. Burgess, Associate Justice



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