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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 PAMELA K. DENNING,
3 Worker-Appellant,
4 v. NO. 32,566
5 KALLONI, LLC, d/b/a TOMASITA’S,
6 and REPUBLIC UNDERWRITERS
7 INSURANCE COMPANY,
8 Employer/Insurer-Appellees.
9 APPEAL FROM THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION ADMINISTRATION
10 David L. Skinner, Workers’ Compensation Judge
11 Gerald A. Hanrahan
12 Albuquerque, NM
13 for Appellant
14 Miller Stratvert P.A.
15 Nathan A. Cobb
16 Dan A. Akenhead
17 Albuquerque, NM
18 for Appellees
1 MEMORANDUM OPINION
2 KENNEDY, Chief Judge.
3 {1} Pamela Denning (Worker) appeals from the compensation order and the order
4 denying Worker’s motion for reconsideration entered by the Workers’ Compensation
5 Judge (WCJ) in favor of Kalloni, LLC, d/b/a Tomasita’s (Employer), and Republic
6 Underwriters Insurance Company (Insurer).
7 I. BACKGROUND
8 {2} Worker was injured at work on September 16, 2009. She sustained injuries to
9 her head, cervical spine, thoracic spine, lumbar spine, and right hip. Worker became
10 physically unable to work as a result of these injuries, and she has not earned any
11 wages since the accident. She received Worker’s Compensation benefits until the
12 WCJ found that she reached maximum medical improvement (MMI) from her
13 physical injuries. Worker was terminated from work on October 30, 2010, for reasons
14 unrelated to her accident. In 2011, nearly two years after the original accident,
15 Worker was diagnosed with psychological injuries, including depression, anxiety
16 disorder, and pain disorder. The WCJ denied benefits for her psychological injuries,
17 finding that they were not a result of her physical injury at work, but rather were the
18 direct consequence of her termination. Worker filed a motion for reconsideration on
19 the issue of the WCJ’s denial of benefits for her mental injuries on October 12, 2012
20 that was denied. Worker raises three issues on appeal: (1) whether the WCJ erred by
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1 failing to find a causal connection between Worker’s psychological injuries and the
2 work accident; (2) whether the WCJ erred by finding an exception to the
3 uncontradicted medical evidence rule; and (3) whether the WCJ erred by finding that
4 Worker was at MMI for her physical injuries and by not awarding continuing
5 temporary total disability (TTD) benefits for her mental injuries. II. DISCUSSI
6 ON
7 A. The WCJ’s Finding That There Is No Causal Connection Between
8 Worker’s Accident and Her Mental Injuries Is Affirmed
9 {3} Worker argues that the WCJ erred in its determination that there was no causal
10 connection between the accident she sustained at work and her psychological injuries.
11 Employer/Insurer argued, and the WCJ agreed, that Worker’s psychological problems
12 were triggered by her termination from employment and not by her accident at work.
13 For the reasons that follow, the WCJ’s ruling on this issue is affirmed. Factual
14 findings of a WCJ are subject to “[w]hole record review” that contemplates “a canvass
15 by the reviewing court of all the evidence bearing on a finding or decision, favorable
16 and unfavorable, in order to determine if there is substantial evidence to support the
17 result.” Tallman v. ABF (Arkansas Best Freight), 1988-NMCA-091, ¶ 9, 108 N.M.
18 124, 767 P.2d 363. “Substantial evidence on the whole record is such evidence that
19 demonstrates the reasonableness of the administrative decision. . . . We will not . . .
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1 substitute our judgment for that of the agency[.]” Herman v. Miners’ Hosp., 1991-
2 NMSC-021, ¶ 6, 111 N.M. 550, 807 P.2d 734.
3 {4} Worker was terminated from her employment on October 30, 2010. The WCJ
4 found that she was a long-term employee of Employer, who rightly considered herself
5 to be a trusted and important member of the very successful restaurant and bar’s
6 management team. Her sense of self-worth was, in no small part, a product of her
7 work ethic and her long-term position. The WCJ also found that Worker’s sense of
8 self-worth was dependent on her employment. The undisputed reason for her
9 termination from employment was a change in management. When this employment
10 was terminated, her depression became debilitating. It hurt her feelings that, despite
11 the new owner of the restaurant being someone whom she had known since he was
12 twelve years old, he did not want Worker to continue as an employee after a nearly
13 thirty-year employment relationship. She told her psychiatrist, Dr. Karl Ray, that her
14 release from work was “like being kicked to the curb.” She cried about the “perceived
15 . . . ill treatment she had received by her former [E]mployer.” On September 28,
16 2011, Worker reported to Dr. Ray that she thought of suicide daily. Dr. Ray noted
17 that Worker “hadn’t said that she thought of [suicide] daily before then[.]”
18 {5} In the time period between Worker’s injury and her termination by Employer,
19 Worker did not need or seek mental health treatment and did not have a mental
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1 impairment. In her deposition, she admits that her depression was manageable up
2 until the point that Employer terminated her employment. Worker’s treatment for
3 psychological problems began at the recommendation of Dr. Belyn Schwartz on
4 February 28, 2011, nearly two years after her accident on September 16, 2009, but
5 only four months after her termination from employment. Worker states that the
6 reason Dr. Schwartz referred her to a psychiatrist was because she “was . . . coming
7 unglued about [her] body being bad, and it didn’t start getting bad until after
8 [Employer] told [her] that another person was coming in with their own people and
9 [she] wouldn’t have a job there anymore.” This visit on February 28, 2011 was the
10 first time in the medical record that Worker complained of suicidal ideation. On her
11 next visit to Dr. Schwartz, Worker was referred to Dr. Ray for psychiatric evaluation
12 and care. Worker states that she felt “betrayed.” She further stated that from the time
13 of the accident, September 2009, to the time of her termination, October 2010, she had
14 been a “little depressed” because her “body was not working right,” but she had come
15 to terms with the fact that it was just an accident, and she had to deal with it. Even
16 more, she admitted that, but for her termination by Employer, “[she] would [not] feel
17 like [she does], as far as mentally[.]” She believes her mental state would be better
18 had it not been for her termination from employment.
19 {6} The WCJ found that “Worker’s mental illness and mental impairment are not
20 the natural and direct result of the accident[,] but rather are the natural and direct result
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1 of the termination of her employment.” The WCJ also concluded that “[t]he
2 termination of employment was for reasons unrelated to the accident or the physical
3 injuries suffered in the accident.” The WCJ stated: “But for the termination of
4 employment in October of [2010,] Worker would not presently be suffering from a
5 mental illness, would not presently have a mental impairment[,] and would not require
6 treatment from a mental health professional.” In a whole record review, we give
7 deference to the WCJ as the fact finder. Herman, 1991-NMSC-021, ¶ 6. The WCJ
8 concluded that Worker’s mental health problems did not derive from her original
9 injury. Given the clear course of Worker’s injury, termination, and the onset of her
10 depression, we conclude that substantial evidence does support the WCJ’s findings
11 on this issue, we therefore affirm his decision.
12 B. The WCJ’s Finding That an Exception to the Uncontradicted Medical
13 Evidence Rule Applies Was Correct
14 {7} The uncontradicted medical evidence rule is an exception to the general rule
15 that a trial court can accept or reject expert opinion as it sees fit. Lucero v. Los
16 Alamos Constructors, Inc., 1969-NMCA-005, ¶ 12, 79 N.M. 789, 450 P.2d 198. The
17 rule is found in NMSA 1978, Section 52-1-28(B) (1987), which requires a worker to
18 prove a causal connection between a disability and an accident by expert testimony.
19 Uncontradicted evidence by expert testimony is binding on the trial court. This rule
20 has four exceptions, however, one of which “occurs when the testimony is
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1 contradicted, or subject to reasonable doubt as to its truth or veracity, by legitimate
2 inferences drawn from the facts and circumstances of the case.” The rule does not
3 require the fact finder to accept the version of facts upon which an expert’s conclusion
4 is based. Nunez v. Smith’s Mgmt. Corp., 1988-NMCA-109, ¶ 15, 108 N.M. 186, 769
5 P.2d 99. For example, if an expert misunderstands the facts of a case, the fact finder
6 need not adopt the expert’s opinion that is based on that misunderstanding of the facts.
7 Id. (noting that an expert’s opinion is only as good as the factual basis for that
8 opinion). Dr. Ray and Dr. Gabriela Munoz, a psychologist, linked the termination of
9 Worker’s employment to her original injury. However, the WCJ determined that “the
10 termination of employment was not in any way, shape[,] or form linked to the work
11 accident.” He found “Worker’s testimony concerning the state of her mental health
12 after the . . . accident and before the termination of her employment as compared with
13 the state of her mental health after termination of her employment to be credible and
14 determinative as to the course of her mental illness.” {8} The psychiatric and
15 psychological evidence in this case is not uncontradicted because it is “subject to
16 reasonable doubt as to its truth or veracity, by legitimate inferences drawn from the
17 facts and circumstances of the case.” Dr. Ray’s opinion as to the source of Worker’s
18 psychological conditions was based upon the oral history provided by Worker. Dr.
19 Munoz was never deposed, and the factual basis for her opinions was not presented
20 at trial. However, the WCJ found that, “[i]n this case[,] the mental health
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1 professionals appear to link the termination of employment back to the . . . accident.”
2 This observation is given further credence by Dr. Ray’s deposition. On direct
3 examination by Worker, Dr. Ray causally related Worker’s psychological issues to the
4 workplace accident on September 16, 2009. However, on cross-examination, it
5 became apparent that Dr. Ray mistakenly believed that Worker was terminated as a
6 result of her workplace accident, and he based his causation opinions upon this
7 mistaken belief. He specified that Worker’s fall at work was not the immediate cause
8 of her depression and mental health concerns. Dr. Ray stated: “[I]t is an antecedent
9 cause. If she hadn’t fallen, the termination of employment wouldn’t have occurred.”
10 However, the undisputed fact that the termination was a result of nothing more than
11 a change in management breaks the causal chain that Dr. Ray relied upon in forming
12 that opinion.
13 {9} The evidence and testimony as to the causal link between Worker’s injury and
14 her subsequent mental health problems is not uncontradicted and is subject to
15 reasonable doubt as to its veracity. This evidence is dubious because both doctors
16 relied solely on Worker’s oral testimony to form their conclusion about causation.
17 What is more, Dr. Ray admitted to misunderstanding the facts of the case in his
18 deposition. The WCJ’s conclusion that the uncontradicted medical evidence rule does
19 not apply is affirmed.
20 C. The WCJ’s Finding That Worker Has Obtained MMI and Its Denial of
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1 Continued Benefits Is Affirmed
2 {10} The WCJ found that Worker reached MMI for her physical injuries suffered
3 with a nine percent whole person impairment rating and sedentary work restrictions.
4 The WCJ also found that Worker is not entitled to additional indemnity benefits as a
5 result of her mental illness or mental impairment. Worker filed a motion for
6 reconsideration on October 12, 2012, asking that the WCJ reconsider his findings in
7 regard to whether Worker suffered a mental impairment as a result of her work injury.
8 In denying the Worker’s motion, the WCJ noted that “the expert opinions concerning
9 causation were based on a presumed causal link between the . . . accident and the
10 termination of employment that [the WCJ found] simply did not exist.” Because we
11 agree with the WCJ in regard to the first two issues, we must affirm on this issue. The
12 Worker has reached MMI for her physical injuries, which are the only injuries arising
13 from the accident. The denial of continued benefits for her mental injuries is also
14 affirmed.
15 II. CONCLUSION
16 {11} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the WCJ’s decision.
17 {12} IT IS SO ORDERED.
18 _________________________________
19 RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Chief Judge
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1 WE CONCUR:
2 ___________________________
3 LINDA M. VANZI, Judge
4 ___________________________
5 M. MONICA ZAMORA, Judge
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