Opinion
Pеtitioner filed a workers’ compensation claim for a heart disability suffered while in the employment of McDonnell Douglas Company. A workers’ compensation judge found that petitioner was permanently disabled and apportioned 25 percent of his disability to his work resulting in a permanent disability rating of 18 percent. On reconsideration, the Workers’ Compensation Apрeals Board determined that petitioner was totally and permanently disabled, apportioning 5 percent of his disability to his work. Petitioner seeks review and annulment of the board’s decision on the ground its apportionment finding is not supported by substantial evidence.
When his disability arose in February 1974, petitioner was 62 years old. He had been employed as an administrator by McDоnnell Douglas for nine years, and had just received a notice of imminent layoff.
1
During his years of employment, petitioner had worked on parts procurement for numerous aerospace projects. He had been subjected to the stress of tight deadlines, interspersed with the threat of layoff during slack periods, and had experienced problems in getting along with difficult сoworkers. Petitioner had been under treatment for hypertension since 1969, and manifested congestive heart failure at the time of a renal cancer operation
The medical evidence in petitioner’s case consists of the reports, testimony, and records of eight physicians and two hospitals. Most pertinent to this inquiry are the statements of four physicians: Petitioner’s personal physician, Dr. John R. Kern; petitioner’s examining physician, Dr. Edward R. Dickstein; Dr. Kenneth M. Smith, respondent Industrial Indemnity Company’s examining physician; and Dr. Edward Phillips, an independent medical examiner. 2
Dr. Kern, who became petitioner’s physician sometime after his illness and recovery in 1971-1972, reported that petitioner suffered a myocardial infarct on February 16, 1974, while under his care. 3 When queried, he stated that he did not know whether work stresses caused petitioner’s heart disability, though he believed that current medical opinion ruled out jоb stress as a cause of such injuries.
Dr. Dickstein found that petitioner suffered from cardiomegaly brought on by hypertension and hypertensive cardiovascular disease. His opinion was that petitioner’s condition stemmed from aggravation of his hypertension by the stress and harassment of his job.
Dr. Smith found no evidence that petitioner had ever experienced an acute myоcardial infarct. He stated that petitioner suffered from hypertension and arteriosclerotic heart disease, neither caused nor aggravated by his employment. However, Dr. Smith did find that petitioner had suffered anginal symptoms due in part to the stress of his separation from employment in February of 1974.
Because of the voluminous conflicting medical evidence in this cаse, the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board granted a petition for reconsideration and referred petitioner to an independent medical examiner. Dr. Phillips, the independent medical examiner, found that petitioner had experienced severe chest pain for the first time on
In his report, Dr. Phillips expressed his opinion that petitioner was peculiarly susceptible to mental stress. He stated that petitioner assumed sole resрonsibility for the success of whatever enterprise he might be engaged upon, and that petitioner should not and could not cope with emotional pressure. Nevertheless, the doctor found that petitioner’s sickness was aggravated by his work to only a small degree, and recommended that just 5 percent of his disability be apportioned to his employment. He attributed the rest of the disability to “other stresses and strains of living, including the cancer of the kidney.” However, when deposed on this point, the doctor acknowledged that determining the degree of illness generated by each of the stress factors in claimant’s life was “pure guess work as far as medicine is concerned.” Finally, Dr. Phillips opined that petitioner’s disease was of a progrеssive nature which would ultimately have become symptomatic even without the pressures of petitioner’s work. On the basis of this report, the board held that petitioner was permanently disabled and apportioned 5 percent of the disability to the heart injury which petitioner sustained through his work.
Petitioner contends that the apportionment ordered by the board was not supported by substantial medical evidence. We agree and have concluded that the decision must be annulled and the case remanded to the board for further proceedings in accordance with the views set out below.
Discussion
Labor Code section 4663 governs apportionment of disability resulting from aggravation of a prior disease. It provides: “In case of aggravation
Initially, section 4663 must be read in light of the settled principle that the employer must take the employee as he finds him at the time of employment. Thus, an employee may not be denied compensation merely because his physical condition was such that he sustained a disability which a person of stronger constitution or in better health would not have suffered. (E.g.,
Ballard
v.
Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd.,
Further, it is firmly established that section 4663 mandates the apportionment of the employee’s
disability,
not apportionment among the
causes
of his disability. This principle requires that apportionment be applied only in those situations in which the worker’s disability would have occurred even without the industrial aggravation, as part of the normal progress of his preexisting disease. (E.g.,
Ballard
v.
Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd., supra,
This tenet of apportionment was fully explored in two recent cases,
Franklin
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd., supra,
Similarly, in
Hart,
this court held that it was improper to apportion disability suffered by a deputy sheriff resulting from a cerebrovascular accident brought on by work pressures.
(Hart
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd., supra,
In both
Franklin
and
Hart,
the medical experts on whom the board relied confused the concepts of
cause
and
disability.
They overlooked the fact that petitioners’
present disabilities
resulted, not from their underlying chronic diseases, but from specific heart and cerebrovascular incidents precipitated by work stress. In so doing, the experts ignored the principle that the employer takes the employee as he finds him at time of
Berry
and
Zemke
also set out other standards for evaluating whether medical testimony on apportionment constitutes substantial evidence. In
Berry,
the court cautioned that an apportionment cannot be based merely on what the medical expert feels is “fair,” or on his “offhand feeling” that apportionment is called for in a given situation (
In the present case, Dr. Phillips, the independent medical examiner, made the same fundamental mistake concerning cause and disability as that represented by Franklin and Hart. He stated that petitioner experienced the symptomatic coronary disease which makes up his present disability because of the stress of his layoff, thus identifying petitioner’s present disability as work-induced. However, the doctor then went on to say that petitioner’s sickness was aggravated by his work to only a small degree, that most of it was attributable to other life stresses. With this stаtement, the physician made the error of recommending apportionment because of the multiple causes of petitioner’s general ill-health, rather than focusing on the present disability for which compensation was sought. Dr. Phillips’ opinion, based on an erroneous legal theory, cannot serve as substantial evidence on which to base an appоrtionment finding.
Other parts of Dr. Phillips’ testimony also fail to meet the tests for substantiality established by Berry, Zemke and similar cases. The doctor stated that his recommendation on percentage of apportionment was based on “pure guess work.” Thus, he failed to provide the underlying medical basis for his conclusion that only 5 percent of petitioner’s disability should be apportioned to his work, relying instead on mere speculation. The doctor’s testimony that petitioner would ultimately have manifested symptomatic coronary disease even without work stress is also too speculative and conclusory to constitute sufficient evidence that petitioner’s present disability is due in part to the normal progress of preexisting disease.
We concludе that there was no substantial evidence in the record to support the apportionment ordered by the board. The decision is, therefore, annulled and the matter is remanded to the board for further proceedings consistent with the guidelines for proper apportionment under Labor Code section 4663 set out above.
Kaufman, J., and Grover, J., * concurred.
Notes
Prior to the nine-year span of presеnt employment with McDonnell Douglas, petitioner had worked for McDonnell Douglas’ predecessor Douglas Aircraft from 1962 to 1963, when he was laid off because of cancellation of a missile project.
Also included in the record are petitioner’s hospital records for the periods during and after his renal cancer operation in 1971, reports of three рsychiatrists who examined petitioner during the adjudication of this case, and a report from petitioner’s current personal physician.
Dr. Kern also reported that petitioner had suffered a previous myocardial infarct in 1971. However, this is not borne out by petitioner’s hospital records during that period, which show only congestive heart failure and a heart situation otherwise “unremarkable.”
The section 4663 rule of apportionment applies only to permanent disability
(McGlinn
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd,
In
Franklin,
the court discusses at length the distinctions between disability and causation, and their relation to the normal progress of the preexisting disease. It states that the identified cause of a disability “ ‘cannot be made to yield to purely hypothetical ones,’ ” and holds that a statement that petitioner would have suffered an infarct within three years even without industrial stress “is irrelevant tо the extent that the present disability is, in fact, due to the industrial injury.”
(Franklin
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd., supra,
In the wake of these decisions, a commentator on California workers’ compensation law formulated a succinct review of the rules of apportionment established by Zemke, Berry, and companion cases.
“(1) The acceleration, aggravation, or ‘lighting up’ of a preexisting, nondisabling condition is an injury in the employment causing it.
“(2) If the resultant pеrmanent disability is entirely due to the industrial injury, the employer is fully liable and there can be no apportionment.
“(3) Whether a disability results in whole or in part from the normal progress of a preexisting disease or represents a fully compensable lighting up or aggravation of a preexisting condition is a factual question for the appeals board to determine, and its awаrd will not be annulled if there is any substantial evidence to support it.
“(4) The supporting evidence, to be substantial, must be medical opinion based upon relevant facts and correct legal theory; apportionments not based upon such evidence are subject to annulment. The recent opinions have made it clear that medical evidence will not be dеemed substantial when:
“(a) It merely states a legal conclusion, i.e., offers the doctor’s statement, without disclosure of its underlying basis, that it would be fair to charge a specified percentage of the patient’s over-all disability to preexisting factors and the balance to the industrial injury.
“(b) It provides no indication of how much of the disability has been due to underlying pathology аnd its natural progress apart from work aggravation, i.e., how much of such disability would be present even though the industrial injury had not occurred.
“(c) It is predicated upon the fact or belief that the underlying preexisting condition hindered recovery from the industrial injury, or that the disability was greater than that which would have resulted if the employee had had a stronger or healthier constitution.” (Hanna, Apportionment of Permanent Disability: A Review of Recent California Court Opinions (1970) 21 Hastings L.J. 623, 627-628.)
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
