Kealoha v. Office of Workers Comp. Programs, No. 11-71194 (9th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CaseIn 2001, petitioner fell from a barge to a dry dock while working as a ship laborer. He then filed a workers' compensation claim under the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. 901-950, for the injuries from his fall. In 2003, petitioner shot himself in the head, causing severe injuries. Petitioner also sought compensation for these injuries under the Act, alleging that his suicide attempt resulted from his 2001 fall and the litigation over that claim. The Benefits Review Board subsequently affirmed the ALJ's denial of benefits. The court held, however, that evidence that a claimant planned his suicide did not necessarily preclude compensation under the Act because the proper inquiry was whether the claimant's work-related injury caused him to attempt suicide. In this case, the ALJ erroneously applied the irresistible impulse test instead of the chain of causation test. Therefore, the court granted the petition for review and remanded for further proceedings. On remand, the question was whether there was a direct and unbroken chain of causation between petitioner's work-related injury and his suicide attempt.
Court Description: Longshore Act. The panel granted a petition for review of a decision of the Benefits Review Board that denied benefits under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act. The panel held that a suicide, or injuries from a suicide attempt, are compensable under the Longshore Act when there is a direct and unbroken chain of causation between a compensable work-related injury and the suicide attempt. The panel held that the claimant need not demonstrate that the suicide, or attempt, stemmed from an irresistible suicidal impulse. The panel concluded that the administrative law judge (ALJ) erroneously applied the irresistible impulse test, and remanded for the Benefits Review Board to apply the chain of causation test or to remand to the ALJ so that the ALJ may have the first opportunity to do so.
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