BILL HODGES TRUCK COMPANY, Own Risk, Petitioner, v. Wilton Ray GILLUM and The Workers’ Compensation Court of the State of Oklahoma, Respondents.
No. 66830.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
May 31, 1989.
778 P.2d 927 | 1063
William O. West, Messrs. West and Synar, Edmond, for respondents.
OPALA, Vice Chief Justice.
The issues presented for review are: 1) May proof of a changed condition be effectively dispensed with by an employer‘s incourt stipulation never sought to be withdrawn with leave of the trial tribunal? and 2) Did the worker meet his burden to establish that the heart transplant he seeks should be approved as a “reasonable and necessary” expense incident to recovery from a compensable accidental injury? We answer the first question in the affirmative and the second in the negative.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
On August 20, 1982 and May 22, 1983 Wilton Ray Gillum [worker] sustained job-related accidental injuries to his heart from myocardial infarctions, for which he claimed compensation. An agreed award of October 20, 1983 (amended nunc pro tunc on November 23, 1983) allowed him both temporary total and permanent total disability. The order included the standard clause requiring the employer to pay “all reasonable and necessary medical expenses incurred by claimant as a result of said injury“. This award became final when
The worker‘s Form 9, filed in February 1986 and followed by two amendments in March 1986, seeks additional temporary disability and approval of a heart transplant with incidental medical care. The latter request was heard on April 8, 1986.1 During the hearing the parties stipulated the only issue to be submitted for the court‘s decision was whether a heart transplant constitutes a “reasonable and necessary” expense of an accidental injury to be borne by the employer.2 The trial judge‘s May 1, 1986 order provides that a heart transplant procedure falls within the category of reasonable and necessary medical expenses previously ordered on October 20, 1983.3 It is this order, later affirmed by a three-judge appellate panel, that is now on review.
Below the employer resisted the quest for organ substitution by contending that a heart transplant is not a reasonable and necessary medical expense within the purview of health services mandated by
II
THE TRUE LEGAL ATTRIBUTES OF THE APPLICATION UNDER REVIEW
A. The worker‘s theory
The worker asserts that the expenses of transplant procedure were correctly found, in the order on review, to have been included within the sweep of health services directed to be furnished by the terms of the October 20 award, inasmuch as that order was treated below by the parties as one which authorized continuing postaward medical treatment. We reject this argument as unfounded and unsound.
A permanent disability award constitutes a solemn adjudication that the worker‘s healing period has come to an end and his condition or state of health has reached the very optimum that is then medically attainable.6 The law assumes that a condition of health, once adjudged to be permanent, is stationary. Stationary conditions generally require no medical care or maintenance. The moment permanent disability begins, the right to receive medical treatment ceases by operation of
The October 20 award for permanent disability cannot serve as authority for medical treatment beyond its date. The worker‘s postaward quest for additional medical care—now on review—is in law but a
B. The worker‘s postaward request is not one for a “definitional clarification”
The claimant‘s postaward request for organ substitution surgery may not be treated as but a definitional clarification of the October 20 award, insofar as the latter authorizes medical services. This case differs from Orrick Stone Company v. Jeffries,12 where a postaward proceeding for determination of services that were due was sanctioned. We do not deal here with a stationary paraplegic or quadriplegic patient found to require day-to-day, long-term maintenance care.
The Orrick Stone category of health or nursing service claims affordable under
III
ABSENCE OF EVIDENCE TO SHOW A CHANGED CONDITION IS AT BEST A FAILURE OF PROOF RATHER THAN A JURISDICTIONAL DEFECT
The Workers’ Compensation Court has exclusive original jurisdiction over all proceedings for compensation which is legally due for an on-the-job injury.14 This statutory cognizance includes all conceivable
The
Because we find the worker‘s quest for organ substitution should be viewed as one to reopen the original claim and hence within the compensation court‘s cognizance, we must next decide whether there was a failure of proof to show a changed condition or whether the employer‘s in-court stipulation was sufficiently broad to dispense with this probative requirement.
IV
THE EMPLOYER‘S IN-COURT STIPULATION IS SUFFICIENT TO DISPENSE WITH PROOF OF A CHANGED CONDITION
While employer‘s counsel agreed at the hearing that the “nature of the [reopening] claim is for additional medical [services],” he challenged the sufficiency of the expert evidence to bring the heart transplant claim within the purview of the compensation law.20
Stipulations made in open court are solemn admissions of fact. They are binding and conclusive on the parties as well as on the court.21 Withdrawal of a stipulation without the consent of the opposing party may be allowed only by leave of court upon a showing of good cause.22 A stipulation of fact between an employer and employee must conform to the Workers’ Compensation Act, as well as to the rules of the tribunal, and must be approved by the judge as binding on the parties.23 Neither the trial judge nor the three-judge panel was ever asked to relieve the employer of the legal effect of its broad stipulation upon the latter‘s showing that the terms of the in-court concession to the worker were avoidable or upon some other tenable legal ground.
Implicit in the employer‘s broad, open-court pre-hearing stipulation is its clear admission that the worker‘s condition has reverted to a healing period stage and that he is thus in need of further medical treatment. The stipulation is hence sufficient to dispense with proof that would establish a postaward recurrence of the healing period. Because by the stipulation the medical proof‘s sufficiency was specifically characterized as an issue in contest, we can find no employer‘s waiver of expert evidence to show a causal link between the worker‘s need for the requested transplant and his adjudicated accidental injury. Neither may the stipulation be viewed as broad enough to dispense with proved scientific justification for the procedure as an employer-borne expense for curing a compensable condition.
V
PROOF ADDUCED IN SUPPORT OF THE REOPENING CLAIM
While we hold the employer bound by its implicitly stipulated change of the claimant‘s condition, we find the medical proof adduced in support of the worker‘s reopening claim insufficient to support the imposition of liability for a postaward heart transplant surgery. The worker‘s medical evidence is indeed deficient. It does not connect the asserted need for further health care with the prior accidental on-the-job injury.24
Two doctors submitted letter-reports regarding the worker‘s heart condition. Neither of these shows any causal link between the accidental injury and the present
In today‘s pronouncement we need not, and do not, assume that payment for an anatomical alteration of an injured worker‘s body by organ substitution, much like the provision of artificial limbs, lies within the purview of or dehors the employer‘s statutory liability for health services mandated by
The award is vacated and the proceeding remanded to the trial tribunal for its reconsideration26 in a manner consistent with this pronouncement and with directions to treat the worker‘s request as his
HARGRAVE, C.J., and LAVENDER, DOOLIN and KAUGER, JJ., concur.
SIMMS, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
HODGES, ALMA WILSON and SUMMERS, JJ., dissent.
SIMMS, Justice, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I concur in the majority‘s vacation of this award but dissent from the remand of the matter for further proceedings.
ALMA WILSON, Justice, dissenting:
The record of this case clearly shows that, by agreement of the parties, the Workers’ Compensation Court entered orders on October 20, 1983, and on November 22, 1983. The orders awarded workers’ compensation benefits to Wilton Ray Gillum [Claimant] for personal injury to the heart (myocardial infarction) arising out of and in the course of Claimant‘s employment with Bill Hodges Truck Company, Inc. [Respondent]. The parties agreed that as a result of this job related heart injury, Claimant suffered permanent and total disability. This job induced disability, though permanent, nevertheless required continuing medical treatment for the purpose of sustaining Claimant‘s very life. Both parties, and the Court, acknowledged this fact, as evidenced by the terms of the Court
“THAT respondent shall pay all reasonable and necessary medical expenses incurred by claimant as a result of said injury.”
Contrary to the terms of the parties agreed order, Respondent now refuses to pay for reasonable and necessary medical expenses incurred by the Claimant as a result of his on-the-job heart injury. The majority opinion approves Respondent‘s refusal to honor its agreement on the ground that there was no “causal nexus” shown between the job induced heart injury and the need for a heart transplant, despite the admission that Claimant‘s physicians advised that a heart transplant is necessary and the only treatment left for Claimant. The admissions, agreements and stipulations of the parties in this case provide the evidentiary “causal nexus” between the job induced heart injury and the necessity for the heart transplantation procedure. Where stipulations have been entered into, the parties will not be allowed to withdraw therefrom, without consent of the other party, except by leave of court upon cause shown. Smith v. Owens, 397 P.2d 673 (Okla.1963).
Additionally, the provisions of the parties agreed order partake the nature of a settlement agreement. Ordinarily, courts favor compromising disputes by written agreements fairly and honestly made, and when so made, they are binding on the parties thereto. Prather v. Butler, 70 P.2d 106, 180 Okl. 462 (1937). When such agreements are not enforced by the Courts, confidence in any agreement procedure short of trial on all issues is threatened.
I would, thus, save for another day the question whether or not job related injuries to vital organs shall, by judicial interpretation, fall under “a separate rubric of compensation“, distinguishable from other job related injuries which permanently affect a bodily part, although there is nothing in the Workers’ Compensation Act which excludes coverage of vital organs of the body.
ALMA WILSON
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
