KATHY HALL, )
)
Claimant-Respondent, )
)
vs. ) No. SD34140
)
MISSOURI STATE TREASURER, ) Filed: July 14, 2016
AS CUSTODIAN of the SECOND )
INJURY FUND, )
)
Respondent-Appellant. )
APPEAL FROM THE LABOR AND
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COMMISSION
AFFIRMED
The Treasurer of the State of Missouri as custodian of the Second Injury
Fund ("the Fund" or "Fund") appeals from a final award of workers'
compensation benefits issued to Kathy Hall ("Claimant") by the Labor and
Industrial Relations Commission ("the Commission"). On appeal, the Fund
brings two points, which, in substance, both argue the Commission "wholly
abandoned" the dictates of Section 287.190.6(2)1 in relying on subjective medical
1All references to Section 287.190 are to RSMo Cum. Supp. (2011). All other statutory references
are to RSMo (2000).
findings rather than objective medical findings. The Fund's arguments fail
because the objective test upon which the Fund relies does not measure the
impairment from which Claimant suffers and the objective test which does
measure the impairment from which Claimant suffers was not conducted here.
Consequently, we affirm the Commission's award.
Factual and Procedural Background
Claimant was employed by Solo Cup Company ("Solo") in Springfield from
1975 until March 2011 and frequently worked near loud and percussive
machinery. In 2012, Claimant filed an amended claim for compensation with the
Division of Workers' Compensation that alleged Claimant suffered from
"[h]earing loss and tinnitus" as a result of being "exposed to harmful noise" while
working at Solo. Claimant sought permanent partial disability benefits from Solo
based on her tinnitus and permanent total disability benefits from the Fund
based on the combination of her preexisting conditions and her tinnitus.
After Claimant settled her claim for permanent partial disability with Solo,
a hearing was held before an administrative law judge ("ALJ") to determine the
Fund's liability. By stipulation of the parties, the only issues to be decided at the
hearing were "the nature and extent of any permanent disabilities" and "the
liability of [the Fund] for permanent total disability or enhanced permanent
partial disability."
Claimant's evidence included, inter alia, her medical records, Doctor P.
Brent Koprivica's ("Dr. Koprivica") deposition, and Claimant's testimony.
Claimant testified that she had a "continuous buzzing" in her ears which impeded
her ability to understand normal conversation. Dr. Koprivica noted an
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abnormality in Claimant's audiograms which correlated with Claimant's
subjective symptoms of tinnitus and, based on her lack of understanding,
assigned a rating of 12.5 percent permanent partial disability.
The Fund presented the deposition of Doctor Allen Parmet ("Dr. Parmet").
Dr. Parmet described two hearing tests. Dr. Parmet noted the existence of a
speech discrimination test ("SDT") which would show if an impairment in
understanding had resulted from tinnitus but this test was not conducted on
Claimant. Instead, Dr. Parmet based his opinions on a 2012 speech reception
threshold test ("SRTT") where Claimant's results were found normal. Even
though the SRTT did not test the ability to understand speech, Dr. Parmet
concluded Claimant had no impairment from tinnitus.
After considering all of the evidence, the ALJ found that, based on the
testimony of Dr. Koprivica, Claimant was unable to compete in the open labor
market as a result of the combination of tinnitus with Claimant's preexisting
conditions. The ALJ found Claimant "to be permanently totally disabled as a
result of a combination of the 2010 injuries [tinnitus] and preexisting
[conditions] affecting the [Claimant's] heart, bilateral knees, and body as a
whole." The ALJ accordingly assessed liability against the Fund.
Thereafter, the Commission affirmed the ALJ's award and decision and
adopted her findings as its own. This timely appeal follows.
Discussion
On appeal, the Fund challenges us to ignore our role as a reviewing court,
by characterizing the issues on appeal in the following manner:
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Is this Court going to require ALJs and the Commission to adhere
to the hard, real-world application of § 287.190.6(2)? Missouri's
law, in workers' compensation claims, requires objective medical
findings to prevail over subjective medical findings; however, the
implementation of Missouri's law has been wholly abandoned by
the ALJ and the Commission in this claim.
Both of the Fund's points are based on this assertion. Point one argues it
was error to rely on Dr. Koprivica's testimony rather than Dr. Parmet's testimony
because Dr. Koprivica's testimony was based on subjective medical findings while
Dr. Parmet's testimony was based on objective medical findings. Point two
argues that, because of that misplaced reliance, the Commission should not have
found Claimant suffered a compensable injury. However, both of these points fail
for the same reason: the objective medical findings of the SRTT that the Fund
argues the Commission was required to apply simply do not address the
dispositive issue—Claimant's ability to understand speech as a result of her
tinnitus.
Section 287.495.1, outlines the scope of our review and provides in
pertinent part that:
Upon appeal no additional evidence shall be heard and, in the
absence of fraud, the findings of fact made by the commission
within its powers shall be conclusive and binding. The court, on
appeal, shall review only questions of law and may modify, reverse,
remand for rehearing, or set aside the award upon any of the
following grounds and no other:
(1) That the commission acted without or in excess of its powers;
(2) That the award was procured by fraud;
(3) That the facts found by the commission do not support the award;
(4) That there was not sufficient competent evidence in the record to
warrant the making of the award.
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§ 287.495.1.
"Where, as here, the Commission incorporates the ALJ's findings and
conclusions, we review those findings as adopted by the Commission." Dorris
v. Stoddard Cnty., 436 S.W.3d 586, 588 (Mo. App. S.D. 2014). "We defer to
the Commission's findings as to weight and credibility of testimony and are
bound by its factual determinations." Patterson v. Cent. Freight Lines, 452
S.W.3d 759, 764 (Mo. App. E.D. 2015).
"The purpose of the [F]und is to encourage the employment of individuals
who are already disabled from a preexisting injury, regardless of the type or cause
of that injury." Pierson v. Treasurer of State, 126 S.W.3d 386, 389-90 (Mo.
banc 2004). To that end, the Missouri Workers' Compensation Law provides for
compensation from the Fund if an employee with a preexisting permanent partial
disability which is a hindrance or obstacle to employment and meets certain
prescribed thresholds of severity suffers a second compensable injury and if the
combination of the preexisting disability and the disability from the second
compensable injury is greater than the disability from the second compensable
injury alone. § 287.220.2. Under such circumstances, the employer must
compensate the employee for the disability caused by the second injury alone,
while the Fund provides compensation for the increase in disability caused by the
combination of the effects of the second injury with effects of the preexisting
disabilities. Id.
Here, the Fund did not dispute the existence of Claimant's preexisting
disabilities, and the parties stipulated that Claimant suffered an occupational
disease arising out of and in the course of her employment, so the only sub-issue
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was the extent of any disability arising from that occupational disease. Here, the
Fund challenges Claimant's proof on that issue by claiming § 287.190.6(2)
prohibited the Commission from crediting Dr. Koprivica's expert medical
opinion, allegedly based on Claimant's subjective complaints, rather than Dr.
Parmet's expert medical opinion, allegedly based on the objective SRTT. Section
287.190.6(2) provides:
Permanent partial disability or permanent total disability shall be
demonstrated and certified by a physician. Medical opinions
addressing compensability and disability shall be stated within a
reasonable degree of medical certainty. In determining
compensability and disability, where inconsistent or conflicting
medical opinions exist, objective medical findings shall prevail over
subjective medical findings. Objective medical findings are those
findings demonstrable on physical examination or by appropriate
tests or diagnostic procedures.
§ 287.190.6(2).
The Fund's argument based on this statute is flawed because the SRTT did
not test for Claimant's specific disability—an inability to understand speech.
Claimant testified that she had a "continuous buzzing" in her ears (tinnitus). As a
result, she could not understand what was said on television and could not
understand normal conversation on the telephone. Claimant also testified that it
was hard for her to understand speech if more than one person was talking and
that she frequently had to read lips in order to understand conversation. The ALJ
found her to be a "very credible witness."
In reaching his conclusions regarding the extent of Claimant's disability,
Dr. Koprivica relied on a review of Claimant's audiograms which showed a high-
frequency hearing loss abnormality. According to Dr. Koprivica, that
abnormality correlated with Claimant's subjective symptoms of tinnitus. Dr.
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Koprivica opined that these audiogram abnormalities provided an objective basis
for his opinions regarding Claimant's tinnitus. Dr. Koprivica also reviewed
Claimant's medical records and issued a report concluding that Claimant
"shouldn't work in an area that requires speech discrimination[.]" "[I]f it is
essential in the job that [Claimant] have the ability to understand speech well to
be accurate, that's a job she couldn't do." Based on this restriction, Dr. Koprivica
assigned a rating of 12.5 percent permanent partial disability.
The Fund's expert, Dr. Parmet, concluded that Claimant suffered no
disability from tinnitus. He based his opinions on a 2012 SRTT where Claimant's
results were normal. Dr. Parmet testified that "if you want to test the effect of
tinnitus in impeding someone's ability about [sic] to appreciate the spoken word,
you do [a SRTT]." Dr. Parmet proceeded to explain that during a SRTT the
patient listens to a series of recorded spondees, a two-syllable word where both
syllables are equally weighted, at normal speech frequencies in increasing levels
of sound. The examiner determines the threshold level where the patient can
understand at least 50 percent of the spondees. A normal threshold level is 25
decibels, and implies no impairment from the tinnitus. In other words, to pass
the threshold, the person must hear at least half of what is being said.
Dr. Parmet also described a separate test, the SDT, which had not been
performed on Claimant. Using a process similar to the SRTT, the SDT indicates
a person's perception and understanding of words. Dr. Parmet further
explained that "[the SRTT and the SDT] are the tests that would indicate if there
is impairment in understanding speech due to tinnitus[,]" and the fact that no
SDT had been performed on Claimant was "extremely" important. Dr. Parmet
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also reported a "lack of complete audiologic testing" necessary to determine
Claimant's disability from tinnitus.
Here, the Fund argues that because a SRTT was performed, and showed
no impairment from Claimant's tinnitus, Section 287.190.6(2) required the
Commission to deny Claimant's claim. While the SRTT may be an objective test,
the resulting findings from that test did not refute Claimant's alleged disability
which was of understanding. The SRTT, as described by Dr. Parmet, determines
the sound level where a patient can understand 50 percent of the spondees
played for them. However, Claimant did not complain of an inability to hear,
but an inability to understand conversation. A finding that Claimant can
understand half of the words spoken to her does not equate with an ability to
understand conversation. Moreover, Dr. Parmet specifically limited his findings
to "a quiet normal environment[,]" but Claimant's condition was exacerbated in
group settings and in the presence of background noise. Quiet environments
lessened the effects of Claimant's tinnitus in understanding speech.
Claimant and Dr. Koprivica both testified that, due to Claimant's tinnitus,
she could not understand what people were saying to her. Based on the
corresponding restriction assigned by Dr. Koprivica, the Commission assessed
liability against the Fund. Section 287.190.6(2) does not require the Commission
to credit any objective medical finding over relevant subjective findings; rather,
the objective finding must address the particular question of compensability or
disability in dispute. Here, that question was whether Claimant's tinnitus
resulted in an inability to understand speech. The SRTT did not result in a
finding that specifically refuted Claimant and Dr. Koprivica on that issue, and the
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test that possibly could have disputed the finding (the SDT) was not performed.
Thus, Section 287.190.6(2) did not require the SRTT-related findings to control
the Commission's decision. Accordingly, the Fund's points are denied.
Decision
The Commission's final award is affirmed.
MARY W. SHEFFIELD, C.J. – OPINION AUTHOR
DANIEL E. SCOTT, P.J. – CONCURS IN RESULT IN SEPARATE OPINION
JEFFREY W. BATES, J. – CONCURS
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KATHY HALL, )
)
Claimant-Respondent, )
)
vs. ) No. SD34140
)
MISSOURI STATE TREASURER, )
AS CUSTODIAN of the SECOND )
INJURY FUND, )
)
Respondent-Appellant. )
APPEAL FROM THE LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COMMISSION
OPINION CONCURRING IN RESULT
What the Fund insists is “a question of law” is more accurately a complaint that
Dr. Parmet was the more credible expert. When Claimant points this out, the Fund
replies that:
Dr. Koprivica is not as educated in, nor as experienced in, the area of
medicine dealing with hearing loss and tinnitus. Dr. Koprivica is just
not as familiar with hearing loss and tinnitus ….
If that’s not a credibility argument, I don’t know one, and it goes nowhere because we
are bound by the Commission’s decision on which medical expert it believes.
Pennewell v. Hannibal Reg’l Hosp., 390 S.W.3d 919, 924 (Mo.App. 2013).
Although usually less blatant than quoted above, the tenor of the Fund’s
argument throughout is that the Commission should have given more weight to the
opinions of Dr. Parmet (who never saw Claimant or himself performed any tests,
objective or otherwise) than those of Dr. Koprivica. Such “against the weight”
challenges should address four steps as outlined in cases like Jordan v. USF
Holland Motor Freight, Inc., 383 S.W.3d 93, 95 (Mo.App. 2012). Failure to do
so robs the Fund’s arguments of most, if not all, persuasive or analytical value. Id.
For these reasons, the Fund fails to convince me that it is entitled to appellate
relief. I concur in the result.
DANIEL E. SCOTT, P.J. – CONCURRING OPINION AUTHOR
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