Sneed v. McDonnell Douglas

Decision Date26 October 1999
Docket NumberNo. 91,259.,91,259.
Citation1999 OK 84,991 P.2d 1001
PartiesRobert SNEED, Petitioner, v. McDONNELL DOUGLAS, Industrial Indemnity Company, and The Workers' Compensation Court, Respondents.
CourtOklahoma Supreme Court

J.L. Franks and Kathryn Burgy of Frasier, Frasier & Hickman of Tulsa, Oklahoma, for claimant.

Michael W. McGivern and Andrew D. Downing of Rhodes, Hieronymus, Jones, Tucker & Gable of Tulsa, Oklahoma, for respondents.

LAVENDER, J.

¶ 1 Resolution of today's appeal centers on whether a claimant's failure to schedule (on a Form 3) or otherwise give notice to his employer of a known bodily injury — the product of cumulative trauma — within two years of last exposure to a harm-dealing micro-traumatic event results in the claim being time barred.1

I FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2 Sneed [claimant] was employed by McDonnell Douglas [respondent or employer] for approximately eighteen years deburring metal. His work required the repetitive use of his hands, wrists and arms. He was last exposed to injury-causing micro-trauma on December 10, 1993. He was laid off on February 25, 1994.

¶ 3 Sneed filed a Form 3 on December 13, 1993, seeking compensation for cumulative-trauma injury to both arms and wrists. When he filed his claim, he did not list his shoulders as an injured body part even though — as he later testified2he was aware of the pain in his shoulders when he was last exposed to employment-related trauma. Claimant believed that his shoulder pain was associated with his arm injuries and surmised that it would dissipate when the bodily injuries scheduled on his Form 3 were ameliorated.

¶ 4 The trial court entered its order on August 31, 1994 granting claimant temporary total disability [TTD]3 and ordering medical treatment for both arms and his right hand. The issue of injury to his left hand was reserved.

¶ 5 In September 1996 McDonnell Douglas [employer or respondent] filed an amended Form 10 which alleged Sneed was not pursuing the medical care directed by the trial court and hence sought credit for an overpayment of TTD. In response claimant sought permanent partial disability [PPD] and further requested a vocational rehabilitation evaluation. The trial court ordered medical examination by an independent medical examiner [I.M.E.] In the I.M.E.'s report he opined that Sneed suffered from a shoulder impingement as the result of cumulative trauma — the same harm-dealing events which had precipitated the compensable arm-and-wrist injury for which Sneed had already received TTD. The I.M.E. recommended that Sneed's chronic shoulder impingement be surgically corrected. On September 12, 1997 [more than three years after the last date of exposure to trauma] claimant filed a Form 13 seeking the medical treatment recommended by the trial court's doctor. On December 24, 1997 the trial court (1) amended its earlier order, (2) found that the claimant had sustained injury to both shoulders related to on-the-job cumulative trauma last experienced by the claimant on December 10, 1993, (3) ruled that the shoulder-injury claim was not time barred, (4) directed respondent to provide necessary medical treatment, and (5) granted Sneed an extended period of TTD.

¶ 6 Employer sought review by a three judge panel. After consideration of the record, the panel found that Sneed's workers' compensation claim for his shoulder injury is time barred and partially reversed the trial tribunal's compensation order. On appeal the Court of Civil Appeals [COCA] reversed the three-judge panel's decision insofar as it held the shoulder claim time barred. Employer then sought certiorari which was granted.

II THE STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶ 7 When this Court examines a workers' compensation court's factual findings, we apply the any-competent-evidence standard.4 If supported by competent evidence, the trial court's findings may not be disturbed on review.5

¶ 8 While a three-judge panel's review of the trial tribunal's findings is governed by a clear-weight-of-the-evidence test,6 the Court — when examining that tribunal's factual resolutions — applies the any-competent-evidence standard.7 If supported by competent evidence, the panel's findings may not be disturbed on review.8

¶ 9 A statute-of-limitation issue ordinarily presents a mixed question of fact and law. Even though the trial court's factual determinations relative to the statutory time bar [if supported by any competent evidence] will not be independently reviewed, application of the 85 O.S.1991 § 439 time bar to render a claim not remediable is a conclusion of law and hence is subject to de novo review by this Court.10

III SNEED'S SHOULDER-INJURY CLAIM IS BROUGHT TOO LATE AND IS TIME BARRED

¶ 10 Under the workers-compensation regime enacted in Oklahoma a job-related accidental physical injury is compensable if the worker timely seeks relief. The parties do not controvert that although Sneed was aware of pain in his shoulders when he first filed Form 3 alleging a compensable work-related injury, he did not schedule them as an injured body part. They also agree that the claimant's injuries are the result of cumulative trauma to which Sneed was last exposed on December 10, 1993. The first time Sneed sought relief under the Workers Compensation Act11 ["Act"] for his shoulder injury was on September 12, 1997 — more than three years after his original claim was filed. McDonnell Douglas asserts the statutory time bar of 85 O.S.1991 § 4312 which requires that a workers compensation claim (which is the result of cumulative trauma) be brought within two years after last exposure to harm-dealing events. The § 43 time bar is a true statute of limitation and acts upon the statutorily-afforded remedy and not the claimant's right.13 As such the limitation period can either be tolled or waived.14 Because Sneed brings his shoulder claim more than three years after his last exposure to job-related trauma, his shoulder injury is not remediable under the Act sans an exception which would toll the time within which the claim can be brought.

¶ 11 The statutorily-prescribed regime of limitations which governs compensation claims of workers injured on the job is completely self-contained.15 The Court historically has rejected attempts to impose upon the legislatively-declared time-bar [for workers' compensation claims] conceptual transplants — e.g., the tort discovery rule — from the common law or to borrow enactments applicable to district court litigation.16 The argument that the limitation period for a workers' compensation claim begins to run only when the injury occasioned by the work-related accident becomes fully apparent is neither consistent with § 43's language nor embraced by Oklahoma's extant jurisprudence.17

¶ 12 The construction of § 43 adopted today is consistent with the plain and ordinary meaning of the unambiguous language used by the Legislature in crafting the limitation period for accidental injuries occasioned by cumulative trauma.18 Workers' compensation claims for cumulative-trauma injuries — other than injuries caused by asbestosis, silicosis or nuclear radiation19 — must be brought within two years of last exposure to the harm-dealing micro trauma. The Legislature's will is explicitly and clearly declared in the statute's language. For purposes of the Act cumulative-trauma injuries can be inflicted no later than the last date of exposure to the harm-dealing event. If a claim for compensable injury [caused by cumulative trauma] is filed more than two years after this date, the employer may assert the statutory time bar and avoid liability under the Act.

¶ 13 Claimant would have the Court hold that the § 43 time bar was tolled by his timely filing a Form 3 for arm and hand injuries that emanated from the same job-related trauma which caused his shoulder injury. Such effect is not legally sustainable under the aegis of § 43. Sneed testified that he knew of pain in his shoulders as of the date of last exposure to job-related trauma. Claimant obviously relied upon his own judgment in assessing the seriousness and extent of any harm to his shoulders. He ignored what would otherwise be indicia of a shoulder injury — i.e., pain in his shoulders — and concealed the same from his employer. Although the statutory limitation periods for bringing workers' compensation claims have changed, the principle of reporting all known injuries has not and is well stated in Barnes v. Indian Terr. Ill. Oil Co., 170 Okla. 520, 41 P.2d 633 (Okla.1935).20 There the Court held:

"Where a claimant, at the time an award is made for accidental injuries, knows of injuries other than those for which he is being compensated, and exercises his judgment as to the seriousness of such other injuries and neglects to give notice to his employer within one year after the original accident, such claimant should not thereafter be permitted to recover for such undisclosed injuries." Id. at 635.

Under the present cause's facts the claimant's shoulder condition cannot be said to be after manifested.21 As of Sneed's last date of exposure to job-related cumulative trauma he was as much aware of pain in his shoulder as he was the pain in his arms and wrists. Claimant filed a Form 3 alleging compensable injury to the latter body parts but for reasons personal to himself he decided not to schedule his shoulders as injured. He attempted to bring the claim for a known cumulative-trauma injury to his shoulders more than three years after the last date of exposure to the harm-dealing events. Under the terms of § 43 and Oklahoma's extant jurisprudence Sneed's claim for shoulder injury is time barred.22

IV SUMMARY

¶ 14 Where, as here, on the date of last exposure to cumulative trauma the claimant is aware of pain in several body parts and elects when he files his Form 3 to schedule some, but not all, of the affected areas, he cannot be later heard to claim the injury as after manifested. The claimant's silence...

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