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MISSOURI WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CASE LAW UPDATE
July 2024 – September 2024
Claimant Only Needs One Qualifying, Preexisting Disability Combined With the Primary Disability for Fund PTD Liability
Eckardt v. Treasurer of Missouri as Custodian of the Second Injury Fund, Case No. ED112132 (Mo. App. 2024)
FACTS: In the course of 40 years as an aircraft mechanic, the claimant sustained seven work injuries. Claimant was first injured in March 1998, injuring his right knee, resulting in two knee surgeries and, eventually in 2014, a right knee total arthroplasty. On September 6, 2001, he sustained a second injury, which resulted in two left knee surgeries. The third injury was on January 13, 2010, and resulted in surgeries on the left wrist and left shoulder with post-surgical complications. In November 2012, he injured his right shoulder and received treatment for a right shoulder strain and impingement. The fifth and sixth injuries occurred prior to January 4, 2013, resulting in chronic, severe bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome, and he had surgeries on his right wrist on February 8, 2013 and left wrist on March 1, 2013. Despite his multiple injuries and difficulties performing his job duties, the claimant testified that he continued to work.
The claimant sustained his seventh and primary injury on October 3, 2015, which resulted in a cervical disc herniation at C3-4 and he underwent surgery in July 2016.
At the hearing, on behalf of the claimant, Dr. Volarich opined he was PTD as a direct result of the October 3, 2015 work-related injury in combination with his pre-existing medical conditions from his prior injuries.
The ALJ issued an Award in favor of claimant for PTD benefits against the Fund. The ALJ concluded the claimant met his burden to show he was PTD due to a combination of his primary and qualifying preexisting injuries which resulted in the following disabilities: right knee-50% (80 weeks); left knee-50% disability (80 weeks); left shoulder-40% disability (92.8 weeks); left wrist-45% disability (78.75 weeks); and right wrist-40% disability (70 weeks).
The ALJ noted the only preexisting injury that did not reach the statutory threshold was the right shoulder injury, which was 47.5 weeks or 2.5 weeks short of the statutory minimum.
The Fund appealed the Award. The Commission reversed the ALJ’s Award. The Commission found “no credible or persuasive evidence in the record that [claimant] is PTD due to the primary injury in combination with only preexisting disabilities that qualify under [Section] 287.220.3.”
HOLDING: The Court of Appeals found the Fund liable for PTD. The Court stated that it was undisputed that claimant was PTD and the sole issue on appeal was whether his PTD qualified for Fund liability. To make a compensable claim against the Fund, a claimant must meet two conditions. First, the employee must have at least one qualifying preexisting disability, which must be medically documented, equal to at least 50 weeks of PPD and meet one of the four listed criteria in the statute; second, the employee must show he sustained a subsequent compensable work-related injury that resulted in a PTD when combined with the preexisting disability.
In this matter, Dr. Volarich may have considered all of claimant’s disabilities, but his final determination that claimant was PTD does not rely on claimant’s preexisting nonqualifying right shoulder injury. All of his other disabilities sufficiently combined to cause the PTD absent the right shoulder injury.
The Court concluded the evidence supported the statutory requirement for Fund liability because the claimant demonstrated he had sustained a “subsequent compensable work-related injury, that when combined with the preexisting disability, . . . results in a permanent total disability”. The Court instructed the Commission to grant the claimant PTD benefits to which he is entitled to from the Fund.
Also, the Court concluded that Section 287.220.3(2)(a)a(ii) which defines a qualifying preexisting disability included occupational diseases such as carpal tunnel syndrome. The Court stated that pursuant to longstanding principles of statutory interpretation, they recognized the legislature’s intent as evidenced by its decision not to exclude such coverage when it had sufficient opportunity to do so. The Court concluded that Section (ii) refers generally to a “compensable injury”, and they found it does not exclude from such injury the specific category of occupational diseases, defined as compensable in Chapter 287 as a whole. In this matter, the claimant’s preexisting bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome qualified under Section 287.220 because it was the result of compensable injuries.