Garrett R. Whiting v. City of Charlottesville Fire and Rescue ( 2015 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Beales, McCullough and O’Brien
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia
    GARRETT R. WHITING
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 0141-15-4                                   JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES
    AUGUST 11, 2015
    CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE FIRE AND RESCUE
    FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION
    Michael A. Kernbach (Law Office of Michael A. Kernbach, P.C., on
    brief), for appellant.
    Ralph L. Whitt, Jr. (Megan A. Kerwin; Whitt & Del Bueno, PC, on
    brief), for appellee.
    Garrett Whiting (claimant) appeals the decision of the Workers’ Compensation
    Commission (the commission) declining to apply the rebuttable presumption provided for in
    Code § 65.2-402(C). Claimant argues that the commission erred by “inconsistently interpreting
    the intent of the General Assembly in enacting the provisions of § 65.2-402(C)” and that the
    commission erred by “determining that there was insufficient evidence of exposure to toxic
    substances causing or suspecting to cause prostate cancer triggering the provision of
    § 65.2-402(C).” In addition, claimant argues that the unanimous commission erred when it
    determined that “the phrase ‘possible risk factor’ is not language which meets or approximates
    the statutory phrase of ‘suspected to be the cause’ triggering the benefit of § 65.2-402(C).” For
    the following reasons, we affirm the commission.
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Under settled principles of appellate review, we consider the evidence in the light most
    favorable to employer, as the prevailing party before the commission. Apple Constr. Corp. v.
    Sexton, 
    44 Va. App. 458
    , 460, 
    605 S.E.2d 351
    , 352 (2004). In this case, claimant had been
    working as a firefighter for the City of Charlottesville Fire Department since July 1, 1983, and, at
    the time of the hearing before the deputy commissioner on February 18, 2014, was actually the
    Fire Marshal for the City of Charlottesville. On November 15, 2011, claimant was diagnosed
    with prostate cancer. He underwent a surgical procedure to have his prostate removed on
    December 19, 2011. Although his entire prostate was removed, claimant’s prostate-specific-
    antigen (PSA) – an indicator of prostate cancer – increased after the removal operation. In
    response to this increase in claimant’s PSA, the doctors urged claimant to undergo thirty-seven
    weeks of radiation treatment.
    On September 19, 2013, claimant filed a claim for benefits, alleging that he had
    contracted an occupational disease. He sought medical benefits, along with temporary total
    disability benefits from December 19, 2011 through January 8, 2012, and two periods of
    temporary partial disability benefits from January 9, 2012 through January 29, 2012 and
    September 19, 2013 through November 11, 2013 (the date that his radiation treatments were
    apparently scheduled to end). The parties stipulated that if the presumption in Code
    § 65.2-402(C) did not apply, then claimant’s claim would necessarily fail.
    At the February 18, 2014 hearing before the deputy commissioner, claimant testified as to
    the various substances to which he had been exposed throughout his career as a firefighter.
    Specifically, he testified that, early in his career, his self-contained breathing apparatus was not
    custom fit and that, consequently, fumes would sometimes come in through the mask. Claimant
    also testified that because the fire trucks were regularly turned on inside the fire station, the
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    diesel fumes and particles would stick to the walls, which would eventually “be yellow and black
    because of the soot and stuff.” During practice fires, claimant testified, he was exposed to smoke
    and fumes because he was not required to wear his self-contained breathing apparatus while
    waiting his turn to go into the practice fire. When claimant would go home after fighting a fire,
    he would “still have the odor” of the chemicals and fire on his body, and would actually
    sometimes blow particulate matter out of his nose.
    Claimant admitted into evidence the International Agency for Research on Cancer
    (“IARC”) Monograph1 on which he had identified the various chemicals to which he believed he
    had been exposed over the course of his firefighting career. Claimant explained how he arrived
    at the determination that he had likely been exposed to each of the chemicals he identified on the
    IARC Monograph as follows:
    What I’d use to find out whether I may or may not have been
    exposed to them, I started Googling them and found out that these
    were products or compositions of normal household items like
    woods, plastics, solvents, stains, things that would have been
    commonly found in a household that I could have been commonly
    exposed to by – in a structure fire.
    In addition to relying on Google to identify the substances to which he believed he had been
    exposed, claimant also relied on published scientific studies analyzing the different kind of
    chemicals produced by certain kinds of fires. These studies were not introduced into evidence.
    During the hearing, the deputy commissioner also considered completed questionnaires
    from Dr. Claiborne Whitworth, claimant’s urologist, and Dr. Robert Nelson, Jr., claimant’s
    surgeon who removed claimant’s prostate. In response to an October 28, 2013 questionnaire,
    Dr. Whitworth responded “No,” to the question of whether claimant’s diagnosis of prostate
    1
    The IARC Monograph provides a list of chemical agents that are separated into
    different groups based on their known or suspected carcinogenicity to humans.
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    cancer was “related to or a direct result of” his employment as a firefighter. In that same
    questionnaire, Dr. Whitworth replied “No” in response to the following question: “If not related
    to his employment, can you provide within a reasonable degree of certainty what caused
    [claimant]’s prostate cancer?” In a questionnaire dated November 7, 2013, Dr. Nelson
    responded “Not known by me” in response to the question whether claimant’s prostate cancer
    was “related to or a direct result of” his employment as a firefighter in the City of Charlottesville.
    Dr. Nelson could not provide with a reasonable degree of certainty what caused claimant’s
    prostate cancer.
    In a later questionnaire, dated February 2, 2014, Dr. Whitworth – who had previously
    stated that claimant’s cancer was not related to or caused by his employment – indicated that he
    had not had an opportunity to speak with claimant about his employment as a firefighter; that the
    exact medical cause of claimant’s prostate cancer was unknown; that the prostate cancer’s
    development was “thought to be related to certain risk factors which may be contributing
    initiators or promotors toward the development of prostate cancer;” that there were various
    possible non-occupational risk factors in the “possible development” of claimant’s prostate
    cancer; that although he knew claimant was a firefighter, he did not know that claimant had been
    a firefighter since July 1, 1983; that he was not familiar with or aware of claimant’s exposures to
    “carcinogenic substances, toxic substances, diesel exhaust fumes, gasoline exhaust fumes and the
    like” in his job as a firefighter; that exposures to such substances and fumes constituted “possible
    risk factors in the possible development of [claimant]’s prostate cancer;” and that he could not
    “exclude” claimant’s exposures as “contributing risk factors in the development of [claimant]’s
    prostate cancer.”
    After having had an opportunity to speak with claimant about his exposures to
    carcinogenic substances, toxic substances, diesel exhaust fumes, gasoline exhaust fumes, “and
    -4-
    the like” during his career as a firefighter, Dr. Whitworth completed another questionnaire, dated
    February 14, 2014. In that February 14 questionnaire, Dr. Whitworth responded that claimant’s
    occupational exposures were “possible risk factors in the development of [claimant]’s prostate
    cancer.” Dr. Whitworth was unable to exclude the occupational exposures as “contributing risk
    factors in the development of [claimant]’s prostate cancer.”
    On March 28, 2014, the deputy commissioner found that claimant’s evidence failed to
    prove that any of the carcinogens to which he had been exposed during his career as a firefighter
    “causes, or is suspected to cause . . . prostate . . . cancer,” see Code § 65.2-402(C), and that a
    “possible risk factor” is not the equivalent of “cause or is suspected to [be the] cause,” as
    required by the statute. Thus, the deputy commissioner found that the presumption in Code
    § 65.2-402(C) that claimant’s prostate cancer was actually an occupational disease did not apply,
    and claimant’s claim failed since the parties stipulated the claim would fail if the presumption
    did not apply. Claimant filed a timely request for review by the commission, arguing that the
    substances to which he was exposed during his career as a firefighter caused his prostate cancer
    and that Dr. Whitworth’s identification of those substances as “possible risk factor[s]” should
    have been sufficient to invoke the presumption of Code § 65.2-402(C). He also argued that, if
    the commission decided to affirm the deputy commissioner, then the case should be remanded
    for the taking of additional evidence.
    On January 6, 2015, the commission issued a review opinion, unanimously affirming the
    deputy commissioner’s finding that claimant was not entitled to the benefit of the presumption.
    The full commission found that a plain reading of Code § 65.2-402(C) required the conclusion
    that “proving the substance to which a claimant was exposed is carcinogenic is not enough; it
    must be a carcinogen known or suspected of causing prostate cancer.” The commission also
    found that, although claimant had proven exposure to certain substances during the course of his
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    employment, none of claimant’s evidence linked his exposure to his development of prostate
    cancer. The commission declined to remand claimant’s case for the additional taking of
    evidence.2
    II. ANALYSIS
    We review the commission’s construction of the statutes de novo on appeal. Thomas v.
    Commonwealth, 
    59 Va. App. 496
    , 500, 
    720 S.E.2d 157
    , 159 (2012). However, under settled
    principles, “we must defer to the commission’s findings of fact if supported by credible evidence
    in the record.” Diaz v. Wilderness Resort Ass’n, 
    56 Va. App. 104
    , 114, 
    691 S.E.2d 517
    , 522
    (2010). “‘In determining whether credible evidence exists, the appellate court does not retry the
    facts, reweigh the preponderance of the evidence, or make its own determination of the
    credibility of the witnesses.’” Pruden v. Plasser Am. Corp., 
    45 Va. App. 566
    , 574-75, 
    612 S.E.2d 738
    , 742 (2005) (quoting Wagner Enters. v. Brooks, 
    12 Va. App. 890
    , 894, 
    407 S.E.2d 32
    , 35 (1991)).
    Code § 65.2-402(C) states, in pertinent part, as follows:
    [P]rostate . . . cancer causing . . . any health condition or
    impairment resulting in total or partial disability of, any . . .
    salaried firefighter . . . having completed 12 years of continuous
    service who has a contact with a toxic substance encountered in the
    line of duty shall be presumed to be an occupational disease,
    suffered in the line of duty, that is covered by this title, unless such
    presumption is overcome by a preponderance of competent
    evidence to the contrary. For purposes of this section, a “toxic
    substance” is one which is a known or suspected carcinogen, as
    defined by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, and
    which causes, or is suspected to cause, . . . prostate . . . cancer.
    2
    Claimant has, however, attempted to introduce additional evidence by including
    scientific literature in the back of his opening brief. However, this scientific literature was never
    introduced below.
    -6-
    (Emphasis added). “When the legislature has spoken plainly it is not the function of courts to
    change or amend its enactments under the guise of construing them. The province of
    construction lies wholly within the domain of ambiguity, and that which is plain needs no
    interpretation.” Winston v. City of Richmond, 
    196 Va. 403
    , 407-08, 
    83 S.E.2d 728
    , 731 (1954)
    (citing Almond v. Gilmer, 
    188 Va. 1
    , 14, 
    49 S.E.2d 431
    , 439 (1948)). “Language is ambiguous
    if it admits of being understood in more than one way or refers to two or more things
    simultaneously . . . [or if] the language is difficult to comprehend, is of doubtful import, or lacks
    clearness and definiteness.” Brown v. Lukhard, 
    229 Va. 316
    , 321, 
    330 S.E.2d 84
    , 87 (1985)
    (internal citations omitted). When, on the other hand, the language in a statute is clear and the
    statute lacks ambiguity, “there is no need for construction by the court; [and] the plain meaning
    and intent of the enactment will be given it.” 
    Id. (citing School
    Board of Chesterfield County v.
    School Board of the City of Richmond, 
    219 Va. 244
    , 250, 
    247 S.E.2d 380
    , 384 (1978)).
    The meaning of Code § 65.2-402(C) is clear. In order to receive the benefit of the
    presumption under Code § 65.2-402(C), claimant needed to have shown the following: (1) that
    he was diagnosed with prostate cancer; (2) that the prostate cancer caused a health condition or
    impairment that resulted in total or partial disability; (3) that he was a firefighter; (4) that he had
    completed 12 years of continuous service; and (5) that he had contact with a “toxic substance” as
    that term is defined in the statute. At issue on appeal is whether claimant established that he had
    contact with a “toxic substance” as that term is defined under Code § 65.2-402(C). The plain
    language of Code § 65.2-402(C) indicates that the definition of a “toxic substance” actually
    contains two elements. To qualify as a “toxic substance” under Code § 65.2-402(C), a substance
    must (1) be a “known or suspected carcinogen,” and (2) either “cause” or be “suspected to
    cause,” in this case, prostate cancer.
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    A claimant seeking to obtain the benefit of the presumption in subsection C of Code
    § 65.2-402 faces a higher evidentiary burden than does a claimant who seeks to obtain the
    benefit of the presumption in either subsection A or B of Code § 65.2-402. Code § 65.2-402(A)
    provides, in relevant part, as follows:
    Respiratory diseases that cause (i) the death of . . . firefighters . . .
    or (ii) any health condition or impairment of such firefighters . . .
    resulting in total or partial disability shall be presumed to be
    occupational diseases, suffered in the line of duty, that are covered
    by this title unless such presumption is overcome by a
    preponderance of competent evidence to the contrary.
    Thus, a claimant seeking to obtain the presumption in Code § 65.2-402(A) need only show that
    he or she is a firefighter who (1) has acquired a respiratory disease that (2) has caused death or
    disability. In other words, it is presumed that any firefighter’s respiratory disease that causes
    death or disability is an occupational disease. Similarly, Code § 65.2-402(B) provides, in
    relevant part, as follows:
    Hypertension or heart disease causing the death of, or any health
    condition or impairment resulting in total or partial disability of
    (i) . . . firefighters . . . shall be presumed to be occupational
    diseases, suffered in the line of duty, that are covered by this title
    unless such presumption is overcome by a preponderance of
    competent evidence to the contrary.
    Thus, a claimant seeking to obtain the benefit of the presumption in Code § 65.2-402(B) need
    only show that he or she is a firefighter with either hypertension or heart disease that causes
    death or disability. It is not enough, for purposes of Code § 65.2-402(C), however, for a
    claimant to show that he or she was exposed to a carcinogen and then developed a particular
    cancer. Instead, the claimant must show that he or she was exposed to carcinogen(s) and that
    such carcinogens caused or are suspected of causing the particular type of cancer from which
    the claimant suffers. The difference between a claimant’s evidentiary burden in subsections A
    and B on the one hand, and subsection C on the other hand, is significant. “[T]he General
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    Assembly knew how to create a presumption and allocate the burden of proof.” Gilliam v.
    McGrady, 
    279 Va. 703
    , 709, 
    691 S.E.2d 797
    , 800 (2010). In short, the General Assembly
    certainly could have written Code § 65.2-402(C) in the same way it wrote Code § 65.2-402(A) or
    Code § 65.2-402(B) if it had chosen to do so.
    In this case, although claimant did establish through his testimony and through his
    annotations on the IARC Monograph that he was exposed to at least one “known or suspected
    carcinogen” over the course of his firefighting career, claimant failed to provide evidence to
    support a finding that his exposure either “cause[d]” or was “suspected to cause” prostate cancer.
    The commission’s finding of fact on this point, which is binding on this Court on appeal, is
    supported by credible evidence. First, although Dr. Whitworth opined that claimant’s exposure
    to certain substances at work may have been “possible risk factors” in the development of
    claimant’s prostate cancer, a “possible risk factor” is not synonymous to the “cause” or
    “suspected to cause” language in Code § 65.2-402(C). Cf. Beahm v. City of Norfolk, 2011 VA
    Wrk. Comp. LEXIS 2603 (finding that the claimant – who, as a firefighter, had been exposed to
    benzene, a substance listed in the IARC, and had developed breast cancer – was entitled to the
    presumption in Code § 65.2-402(C) where the claimant’s treating physician opined, in part, that,
    benzene was “a toxic substance which is suspected of playing a role in causing breast cancer in
    an individual, such as Ms. Beahm, who is exposed to it”).
    Similarly, Dr. Whitworth’s indication that he could not exclude claimant’s exposures to
    carcinogens as “contributing risk factors” in the development of his prostate cancer falls short of
    constituting evidence that claimant’s exposures were “suspected to cause” or were “the cause” of
    3
    Although the commission’s “decisions are not binding authority on this Court,” UPS v.
    Prince, 
    63 Va. App. 702
    , 709 n.2, 
    762 S.E.2d 800
    , 803 n.2 (2014), such decisions can serve as
    persuasive authority.
    -9-
    his prostate cancer. “Suspect” is defined as “to be true or probable.” The American Heritage
    Dictionary 1225 (2d ed. 1991). Thus, a carcinogen is a suspected cause of a particular cancer if
    it is probably – or more likely than not – the cause of that cancer. It cannot be said, however,
    that a carcinogen that is a “contributing risk factor” in the development of a particular cancer is
    more likely than not the cause of that cancer. Thus, none of the responses from either of the
    doctors who completed the questionnaires establishes that claimant was exposed to a “known or
    suspected carcinogen” that “causes” or “is suspected to cause” prostate cancer.
    Second, we are not persuaded by claimant’s argument on appeal that, because he was
    exposed to Cadmium and Malathion, he was exposed to substances “associated with prostate
    cancer,” and therefore he has adduced sufficient evidence of exposure to a “toxic substance,” as
    that term is defined in Code § 65.2-402(C). Claimant did indicate in the IARC Monograph that
    he was exposed to Cadmium and Malathion. In so doing, claimant certainly proved the first
    prong of the Code § 65.2-402(C) definition of “toxic substance” – i.e., “a known or suspected
    carcinogen, as defined by the International Agency for Research on Cancer,” Code
    § 65.2-402(C) – but he did not (and has not) satisfactorily proved the second prong of the “toxic
    substance” definition – i.e., that the known or suspected carcinogen “causes” or “is suspected to
    cause” prostate cancer. However, claimant has attached various scientific studies to his opening
    brief, which generally indicate that Cadmium and Malathion are associated with prostate cancer.
    Claimant did not introduce this scientific literature into evidence at the hearing before the deputy
    commissioner (or later before the full commission), and therefore, that literature cannot be
    considered part of the record on appeal. See, e.g., Ward v. Charlton, 
    177 Va. 101
    , 107, 
    12 S.E.2d 791
    , 792 (1941) (explaining that, on appeal, the appellate court is limited to the record of
    the proceedings which have taken place below).
    - 10 -
    III. CONCLUSION
    The commission did not err when it interpreted Code § 65.2-402(C) to require a claimant
    to show, inter alia, that he or she had been exposed to a known or suspected carcinogen and that
    this known or suspected carcinogen caused or was suspected to cause a particular type of cancer
    listed in Code § 65.2-402(C) – in claimant’s case, prostate cancer. Claimant stipulated that he
    would not have a viable claim absent the presumption. Credible evidence supported the
    commission’s unanimous finding that claimant had not been exposed to a “toxic substance,” as
    that term is defined under Code § 65.2-402(C), that “causes” or is “suspected to cause” prostate
    cancer. Consequently, we affirm the commission’s order.
    Affirmed.
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