[Cite as Roos v. Morrison, 2019-Ohio-1514.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
STEPHEN L. ROOS, : APPEAL NO. C-170646
TRIAL NO. A-1602370
Plaintiff-Appellee, :
O P I N I O N.
vs. :
SARAH MORRISON :
ADMINISTRATOR, OHIO BUREAU
OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION, :
Defendant-Appellant, :
and :
CITY OF DEER PARK, :
Defendant. :
Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas
Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed
Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: April 24, 2019
Fox & Fox Co. L.P.A. and M. Christopher Kneflin, for Plaintiff-Appellee,
David J. Fierst, Assistant Ohio Attorney General, for Defendant-Appellant.
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
BERGERON, Judge.
{¶1} Officer Stephen Roos suffered injuries incurred in conjunction with his job as
a Deer Park police officer and sought participation in the workers’ compensation fund based
on the aggravation of a preexisting condition. The trial court ultimately found Officer Roos
entitled to workers’ compensation benefits, but the court was no fan of either side’s expert,
expressing a lack of confidence in both. Believing this to be a fatal flaw in the court’s
analysis, the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation appeals, seeking to strip Officer Roos
of his benefits. Upon reviewing the record, we conclude that the trial court had before it
competent evidence demonstrating that Officer Roos’s work-related injury aggravated a
preexisting condition, and accordingly we affirm its decision to award him benefits.
I.
{¶2} Officer Roos suffered a lower back injury in 2005 during a work-related
training exercise as part of his job as a police officer for the city of Deer Park. Subsequent to
the 2005 injury, Officer Roos was placed on light duty, but eventually returned to full duty.
He later experienced a flare-up in his symptoms after tackling a fleeing suspect at the
Hamilton County Courthouse. While Officer Roos remained on full duty after this incident,
he described his back pain as constant during this period. Officer Roos ultimately retired
from the police force in 2010 due to pain in his lower back.
{¶3} In 2014, Officer Roos filed an application for benefits with the Ohio Bureau of
Workers’ Compensation (the “Bureau”). He requested allowances for participation in the
workers’ compensation fund for the conditions of L3-4, L4-5, L5-S1 Facet Arthrosis and L4-
5 Spondylosis, which ultimately were denied by the Industrial Commission, the entity which
conducts hearings on workers’ compensation claims. In its denial, the Industrial
Commission found that these conditions were not causally related to the 2005 injury
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
suffered by way of direct cause, flow-through, or aggravation. Officer Roos subsequently
appealed this decision to the court of common pleas.
{¶4} On appeal, the trial court ultimately found that the requested participation in
workers’ compensation for the L3-4, L4-5, L5-S1 Facet Arthrosis and L4-5 Spondylosis
should have been allowed because Officer Roos’s injuries aggravated his preexisting
conditions. In the aftermath of this decision, the Bureau lodged an appeal, assigning error
to the court’s purported failure to rely on expert testimony.
II.
{¶5} The parties agree that the manifest-weight-of-the-evidence standard governs
this case, which requires an evaluation of the entire record, weighing of evidence and all
reasonable inferences, and consideration of the credibility of the witnesses to determine
whether the trier of fact lost its way in resolving the conflicts of evidence, resulting in a
manifest miscarriage of justice. Moore v. Administrator, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-140413,
2015-Ohio-3969 ¶ 9 (reversal under manifest-weight standard required when the decision
of the trial court was not supported by the record).
{¶6} That standard of review is measured against Ohio’s workers’ compensation
laws, which oblige a claimant seeking recovery for a work-related injury to establish, by a
preponderance of the evidence, direct and proximate causation between the accident and
the injury. Fox v. Indus. Comm. of Ohio, 162 Ohio St. 569, 576, 125 N.E.2d 1 (1955). The
worker bears the burden of establishing that such an injury exists. See Starkey v. Builders
FirstSource Ohio Valley, L.L.C., 130 Ohio St.3d 114, 2011-Ohio-3278, 956 N.E.2d 267, ¶ 15.
{¶7} Additionally, aggravation of a preexisting condition (at issue in this case)
qualifies as an “injury” under Ohio’s workers’ compensation system. R.C. 4123.01(C)(4).
While not all injuries require expert medical testimony to establish causation, in the case of
matters beyond common knowledge, the court requires expert medical testimony to
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establish a causal connection. Stacey v. Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp., 156 Ohio St. 205, 210,
101 N.E.2d 897 (1951).
{¶8} Officer Roos wisely concedes that his claim for aggravation of his preexisting
conditions falls outside the bounds of common knowledge and thus required expert medical
testimony to establish causation between the injury and the aggravation of the preexisting
condition. The Bureau just as wisely concedes that Officer Roos provided competent
testimony via his expert on this point. So far, so good.
{¶9} The Bureau, however, seizes upon a pair of sentences in the trial court’s
decision for the proposition that the court rejected the views of Officer Roos’s expert. It
thus analogizes this case to Krull v. Ryan, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-100019, 2010-Ohio-
4422, where this court faulted the claimant for failing to adduce medical evidence of his
condition.
{¶10} We do not believe, however, that the court below went so far. Instead, the
court noted that it could “ascribe to each expert some positive points and some negative
points regarding the weight given to be given to their opinions. Further, it is difficult to find
persuasiveness in either of the doctors’ findings or opinions.” If a trial court wishes to reject
an expert wholesale, it should say so directly and without equivocation.
{¶11} Admittedly, it would have facilitated our review if the trial court had
explained the “positive” and “negative points” that the court saw in the testimony, but that
lack of explanation does not spell reversal on the record before us. That is particularly true
when both experts were in lockstep for just about every aspect of their testimony, other than
the final conclusion. Both agreed that Officer Roos had L3-4, L4-5, L5-S1 Facet Arthrosis
and L4-5 Spondylosis, and that these conditions preexisted his workplace injury. Officer
Roos’s medical expert, Dr. Lisa Vickers, testified that these conditions were aggravated as a
direct and proximate cause of the workplace injury that he suffered. The Bureau’s expert,
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
Dr. Stephen Haverkos, quibbled with this conclusion, insisting that the condition was
instead “exacerbated” by the workplace injury (while invoking a novel understanding of the
word “exacerbate”). The semantical duel between “aggravation” and “exacerbation” aside,
our review reveals that the determination of the trial court, that Officer Roos’s condition
was aggravated by his workplace injury, was supported by the record, which was never
clearly rejected by the trial court. This case thus bears little resemblance to Krull because
Officer Roos introduced the very testimony found wanting in Krull.
{¶12} We accordingly overrule the Bureau’s sole assignment of error and affirm the
judgment of the trial court.
Judgment affirmed.
MOCK, P.J., concurs.
ZAYAS, J., concurs separately.
ZAYAS, J., concurring separately.
{¶13} I concur in the majority’s disposition, but do so for a different reason.
{¶14} A claimant must establish an injury to participate in the Ohio workers’
compensation fund. Schell v. Globe Trucking, Inc., 48 Ohio St.3d 1, 2, 548 N.E.2d 920
(1990); R.C. 4123.54. Under R.C. 4123.01(C):
Injury includes any injury, whether caused by external
accidental means or accidental in character and result, received
in the course of, and arising out of, the injured employee's
employment. Injury does not include:
***
(4) A condition that pre-existed an injury unless that pre-
existing condition is substantially aggravated by the injury.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
Such a substantial aggravation must be documented by
objective diagnostic findings, objective clinical findings, or
objective test results. Subjective complaints may be evidence of
such a substantial aggravation. However, subjective complaints
without objective diagnostic findings, objective clinical
findings, or objective test results are insufficient to substantiate
a substantial aggravation.
{¶15} Subjective complaints, standing alone, are insufficient to establish causation.
Id. However, subjective complaints coupled with objective evidence are sufficient to prove a
substantial aggravation. See Brate v. Rolls-Royce Energy Sys. Inc., 5th Dist. Knox No.
12CA000001, 2012-Ohio-4577, ¶ 16; Harrison v. Panera, L.L.C., 2d Dist. Montgomery No.
25626, 2013-Ohio-5338, ¶ 23.
{¶16} Here, the Bureau acknowledges that Roos’s expert, Dr. Vickers, presented
objective evidence to establish the substantial aggravation of Roos’s preexisting condition.
Instead, the Bureau argues that the trial court completely rejected Dr. Vickers’s testimony
and “relied solely” on Roos’s subjective testimony to establish causation.
{¶17} I initially note that nowhere in the trial court’s decision is there any indication
that the court relied solely on Roos’s testimony. Although the trial court did not elaborate
on its conclusion that Roos had established a substantial aggravation, Dr. Vickers’s
testimony when coupled with Roos’s testimony was sufficient to establish causation. See id.
{¶18} Accordingly, I concur in the court’s judgment.
Please note:
The court has recorded its own entry this date.
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