EWC Construction v. Kenneth Arnold Payne ( 1996 )


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  •                     COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present:  Chief Judge Moon, Judge Annunziata and
    Senior Judge Duff
    Argued at Alexandria, Virginia
    EWC CONSTRUCTION, ET AL.
    v.          Record No.   1474-95-4       MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
    JUDGE ROSEMARIE ANNUNZIATA
    KENNETH ARNOLD PAYNE                         MARCH 12, 1996
    FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS' COMPENSATION COMMISSION
    William C. Walker (Bradford C. Jacob; Taylor
    & Walker, P.C., on brief), for appellants.
    Edward P. Cuccias for appellee.
    On September 7, 1993, Kenneth Payne ("claimant") suffered an
    accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his
    employment with EWC Construction ("employer").     Employer accepted
    claimant's claim as compensable and paid him benefits for total
    incapacity from September 14 through September 29, 1993 pursuant
    to an award entered February 11, 1994.    On December 1, 1994,
    claimant filed an application for hearing alleging a change in
    condition and seeking reinstatement of compensation for total
    incapacity beginning April 15, 1994.    The deputy commissioner
    entered an award for claimant which the full commission affirmed.
    On appeal, employer contends the commission erred in concluding
    that claimant was not required to prove that he had reasonably
    marketed his residual work capacity.    We disagree, and, for the
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17-116.010 this opinion is not
    designated for publication.
    reasons that follow, affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Claimant worked as a bricklayer for twenty-two years.   On
    September 7, 1993, he suffered a back injury while working for
    employer.    Claimant received treatment from Dr. W. Bartley Hosick
    who ordered claimant not to work for two or three weeks.
    Employer accepted claimant's claim as compensable and paid him
    benefits for total incapacity from September 14 through September
    29, 1993 pursuant to an award entered February 11, 1994.
    Claimant returned to work for employer, but he could work only
    part-time due to his back pain.
    Claimant continued to see Dr. Hosick who noted claimant's
    continuing symptoms which were unexplained by an early 1994 bone
    scan.    Dr. Hosick eventually diagnosed claimant's condition as a
    chronic lumbar strain.    Because of claimant's symptoms and Dr.
    Hosick's belief that claimant suffered a significant muscular
    ligamentous injury to the lower back, Dr. Hosick ordered claimant
    to stop working in mid-April 1994 and referred him to a work
    hardening program.    At that time, employer began paying claimant
    compensation for his total incapacity to work.    However, employer
    failed to file a memorandum of agreement reflecting its payments.
    Claimant's work hardening continued from April 15 to May 27,
    1994 but was discontinued because claimant's condition failed to
    improve.    An MRI conducted at that time failed to identify the
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    source of claimant's continuing problem.       Dr. Hosick referred
    claimant to a spine specialist for evaluation and recommended
    that claimant return to work on "a limited capacity" basis if the
    spine specialist found no further treatment was necessary.
    Dr. Neal Kahanovitz evaluated claimant on July 25, 1994 and
    found no neurological or structural abnormalities.      Concluding
    that no further treatment was indicated, Dr. Kahanovitz found
    that claimant could return to work on a "medium lifting capacity"
    basis.      Claimant did not return to work.   However, employer
    continued paying him total incapacity benefits until October 7,
    1994.
    After employer ceased paying benefits, claimant filed an
    application alleging a change in condition beginning April 15,
    1994, the day on which he stopped working.      The deputy
    commissioner found that employer had accepted claimant's change
    in condition when it reinstated benefits in April 1994.         Because
    employer continued to pay claimant benefits without filing a
    supplemental memorandum of agreement, the deputy commissioner,
    applying National Linen Service v. McGuinn, 
    5 Va. App. 265
    , 
    362 S.E.2d 187
    (1987), placed the burden of proving a subsequent
    change in condition on employer.     The deputy commissioner
    concluded that employer, who did not appear at the hearing, had
    not shown such a change in condition and awarded claimant total
    incapacity benefits commencing April 15, 1994. 1     The full
    1
    The award provided employer a credit for the payments
    it had voluntarily made.
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    commission affirmed, finding that there was no disagreement that
    claimant was totally disabled beginning April 15, 1994.   The
    commission concluded that claimant's condition had changed,
    employer was aware of the change, employer participated in the
    change, and employer had an obligation under Code § 65.2-701 to
    file a memorandum of agreement reflecting that a change occurred.
    ANALYSIS
    Under Code § 65.2-708,
    upon the application of any party in
    interest, on the ground of a change in
    condition, the Commission may review any
    award and on such review may make an award
    ending, diminishing or increasing the
    compensation previously awarded.
    The party alleging a change of condition has the burden of
    proving the allegation by a preponderance of the evidence.      See
    Jones Construction Co. v. Martin, 
    198 Va. 370
    , 373, 
    94 S.E.2d 202
    , 204 (1956); Pilot Freight Carriers, Inc. v. Reeves, 1 Va.
    App. 435, 438-39, 
    339 S.E.2d 570
    , 572 (1986).
    Generally, partially disabled claimants seeking an award for
    total incapacity, whether on initial application or on
    application for change of condition, must prove that they have
    made a reasonable effort to market their residual work capacity.
    See, e.g., Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority v.
    Harrison, 
    228 Va. 598
    , 601, 
    324 S.E.2d 654
    , 654-55 (1985); cf.
    Georgia Pacific Corp. v. Dancy, 
    17 Va. App. 128
    , 134, 
    435 S.E.2d 898
    , 901-02 (1993) (totally disabled claimants seeking award for
    total incapacity not required to prove they made a reasonable
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    effort to market their residual capacity); National Linen Service
    v. McGuinn, 
    5 Va. App. 265
    , 271, 
    362 S.E.2d 187
    , 190 (1987) (en
    banc) (same).   Conversely, once a claimant receives benefits
    pursuant to an award for total incapacity, the employer bears the
    burden of showing a change in condition when the claimant's
    condition improves.   See Foust Coal Co. v. Messer, 
    195 Va. 762
    ,
    768, 
    80 S.E.2d 533
    , 537 (1954); 
    McGuinn, 5 Va. App. at 270
    , 362
    S.E.2d at 189-90.   In such a case, the employer must prove "a
    change as would enable [claimant] at least to do some kind of
    selective work within his then capacity."      
    Messer, 195 Va. at 768
    , 80 S.E.2d at 537; see also 
    McGuinn, 5 Va. App. at 270
    , 362
    S.E.2d at 190 (employer must introduce evidence that claimant
    either able to return to regular employment or had been offered
    or provided selective employment within his capacity).
    Here, claimant filed an application alleging a change in
    condition as of April 15, 1994, the day his doctor ordered him to
    stop working.   Employer does not dispute that claimant was
    totally incapacitated from work as of that date and that
    2
    claimant's condition had changed.       Indeed, employer concedes
    that it owed claimant compensation during the six weeks he
    engaged in work hardening, and it had, in fact, resumed payment
    of total incapacity benefits on April 15.      For these reasons, we
    2
    Since claimant was totally incapacitated as of April
    15, he was not required to establish that he had made a
    reasonable effort to market his residual work capacity to meet
    his burden of proving a change in condition on that date.
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    find the evidence clearly supports the commission's finding that
    claimant underwent a change of condition on April 15.      By
    statute, the burden was thereafter on employer to prove any
    subsequent change in claimant's condition.
    Employer attempts to escape this result by arguing that by
    the time claimant filed his application, in December 1994,
    claimant was only partially disabled and was, therefore, required
    to establish that he had made a reasonable effort to market his
    residual work capacity.   Employer's argument is flawed in three
    major respects.
    First, claimant's application was based on a change of
    condition alleged to have occurred on April 15, 1994.      As
    discussed above, the parties did not dispute that claimant was
    totally incapacitated as of April 15.
    Second, employer's argument assumes a finding of fact the
    commission never made, viz., that claimant was only partially
    disabled.   The issue before the commission was whether claimant
    established a change of condition as of April 15 which entitled
    him to total incapacity benefits, not whether claimant's
    condition had improved by some later date.
    Finally, but for employer's failure to file a memorandum of
    3
    agreement as required by Code § 65.2-701, reflecting its payment
    3
    Code § 65.2-701 provides, in part:
    [i]f after injury . . . the employer and the
    injured employee . . . reach an agreement in
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    of total incapacity benefits to claimant beginning April 15, an
    award based on total incapacity would have been entered in
    claimant's behalf contemporaneous with his April 15 change in
    condition. 4    Had such an award been entered, "employer would have
    been obligated to honor the award" until it established a
    subsequent change of condition.      
    McGuinn, 5 Va. App. at 270
    , 362
    S.E.2d at 189; see also 
    Messer, 195 Va. at 768
    , 80 S.E.2d at 537;
    
    Martin, 198 Va. at 373
    , 94 S.E.2d at 204; Reeves, 1 Va. App. at
    (..continued)
    regard to compensation or in compromise of a
    claim for compensation under this title, a
    memorandum of the agreement in the form
    prescribed by the Commission shall be filed
    with the Commission for approval.    The
    agreement may be prepared by the employee,
    the employer or the compensation carrier.
    . . . Nothing herein contained shall be
    construed so as to prevent settlements made
    by and between the employee and employer, but
    rather to encourage them . . . . A copy of
    such settlement agreement shall be filed with
    the Commission by the employer.
    4
    Based on the undisputed finding that claimant underwent
    a change of condition rendering him totally incapacitated, had
    employer properly filed a memorandum of agreement, the commission
    clearly would have entered an award in claimant's behalf. See
    
    McGuinn, 5 Va. App. at 270
    , 362 S.E.2d at 189.
    - 7 -
    
    438-39, 399 S.E.2d at 572
    .    Employer's failure to file a
    memorandum of agreement violated the statute, and it cannot use
    its failure to comply with the statute as a means of
    circumventing the burden it would otherwise face.      See 
    McGuinn, 5 Va. App. at 270
    , 362 S.E.2d at 189-90 ("To hold otherwise would
    be to allow an employer or its carrier to unilaterally violate
    the clear requirements of § [65.2-701] and thereby frustrate the
    purpose behind that statute.").
    Employer argues that the result claimant urges and which we
    reach here will discourage employers from making voluntary
    payments to settle claims and that the result therefore
    undermines the purposes of the Act.      Indeed, the Act encourages
    voluntary settlement of compensable claims.      See Code
    § 65.2-701(C); 
    McGuinn, 5 Va. App. at 268
    , 362 S.E.2d at 188.
    However, the result reached here was caused not by employer's
    attempt to settle the claim but, rather, by its failure to record
    the settlement by filing a memorandum of agreement as required by
    statute.   Employer ignores the "equally strong policy that when
    agreements as to settlements are reached they . . . be
    memorialized in a memorandum of agreement filed with the
    commission."    See 
    McGuinn, 5 Va. App. at 268
    , 362 S.E.2d at
    188-89.    This policy serves the fundamental purpose of the Act:
    "to protect employees, not to facilitate a deprivation of an
    employee's rights by an employer who has not complied with the
    statutory requirements."     
    McGuinn, 5 Va. App. at 270
    , 362 S.E.2d
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    at 190 (citation omitted).
    Accordingly, the commission's award is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
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