Plaintiff-appellant, Theresa Grant, appeals from the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the Industrial Commission of Ohio, and denying her claim for workers’ compensation benefits. Her two assignments of error address the same issue — the common pleas court committed error when it restricted her appeal to a purely mental or emotional condition, which is not compensable. We agree.
*79 On July 16, 1983, Grant, a clerk in a state liquor store, was the victim of an armed robbery. It was the second time within a year that she had been robbed at gunpoint on the job. On November 14, 1984, Grant filed her application for workers’ compensation benefits, describing the nature of the injury as “Anxiety Reaction” to the “Mind.” The district hearing officer denied her claim for the reason that Grant alleged a purely emotional condition without a contemporaneous physical injury, which is not compensable under R.C. 4123.01(C). The Dayton Regional Board of Review upheld the district hearing officer’s finding and the Industrial Commission refused her appeal.
In her appeal to the Hamilton County Common Pleas Court, Grant’s complaint alleged that she suffered “anxiety and depression” caused by the robbery. On January 15,1987, an assistant attorney general deposed Grant. She testified that during the robbery she ripped her finger by removing a ring at the gunman’s command, and then while attempting to open the door with the gun pointed at her back, she aggravated an injury to her arm and shoulder. Dr. Max L. Lurie, a psychiatrist who evaluated Grant on June 8, 1987, was deposed on December 16, 1987. He diagnosed Grant as having developed posttraumatic stress syndrome and a peptic ulcer as a result of the robbery.
On January 26, 1988, upon the evidence gathered in the depositions, Grant moved to amend her complaint to allege that in addition to her psychiatric condition she sustained a contemporaneous arm injury during the robbery, and subsequently, because of her psychiatric condition, she developed an ulcer. On February 23, 1988, the week before the scheduled trial date, the trial court overruled Grant’s motion for leave to file an amended complaint. On August 6, 1990, the trial court granted the commission’s motion for summary judgment.
In her first assignment of error, Grant contends that the common pleas court erred in denying her motion for leave to amend her complaint. Grant requested leave to recast her claim from a stress-related mental or emotional condition (mental-mental) to (1) a mental or emotional condition resulting from physical injuries to her arm and finger (physical-mental), and also (2) a physical injury manifested by an ulcer occasioned by her mental or emotional condition (mental-physical).
Entitlement to benefits by a claimant is determined by the statutes in effect on the date of the injury.
State ex rel. Kirk v. Owens-Illinois, Inc.
(1986),
The commission contends that Grant cannot raise new conditions in the common pleas court, not already raised in the administrative proceedings, and that the common pleas court did not have jurisdiction to receive evidence of injuries to her arm and finger or concerning the ulcer. The procedure for an appeal to the common pleas court of “a decision of the Industrial Commission or of its staff hearing officer” is prescribed in R.C. 4123.519:
“(C) * * * Further pleadings shall be had in accordance with the Rules of Civil Procedure * * *. The court, or the jury under the instructions of the court, if a jury is demanded, shall determine the right of the claimant to participate * * * in the fund upon the evidence adduced at the hearing of the action.
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*81 “(F) If the finding of the court or the verdict of the jury is in favor of the claimant’s right to participate in the fund, the commission and the administrator shall thereafter proceed in the matter of the claim as if the judgment were the decision of the commission, subject to the power of modification provided by section 4123.52 of the Revised Code.”
An appeal from the Industrial Commission pursuant to R.C. 4123.519 is a
de novo
determination of both the facts and law. See
Afrates v. Lorain, supra.
The claimant is not limited to the record of the evidence presented at the Industrial Commission but may offer evidence in the common pleas court as in any civil action. As the trier of fact, the judge or the jury upon the evidence adduced at the hearing decides
de novo
a single issue of the claimant’s right to participate in the fund without deference to the decision of the Industrial Commission.
Maitland v. St. Anthony Hosp.
(Oct. 3, 1985), Franklin App. No. 85AP-301, unreported,
The several appellate districts that have concluded that a claimant’s condition is precluded unless raised before the Industrial Commission do not focus on the nature of the
de novo
appeal provided by the legislature in R.C. 4123.519.
Dunn v. Mayfield
(1990),
Rights under the Ohio workers’ compensation system are conferred by Section 35, Article II of the Ohio Constitution, which delegates the exclusive power to the legislature to pass laws providing for injuries and occupational diseases occasioned in a worker’s course of employment.
Van Fossen v. Babcock & Wilcox Co.
(1988),
In a trial
de novo
the issues “arise on the pleadings.” R.C. 2311.01. The claimant’s right to participate in the fund has no limitation under R.C. 4123.519, as Justice Douglas succinctly observed in his dissent in
Mull v. Jeep Corp., supra.
In determining the claimant’s right to participate, any issues can be raised in the trial court except issues of extent of disability.
Alcorn v. Spalding & Evenflo Corp.
(1992),
*83
Grant’s physical-mental claim and mental-physical claim are both compensable, as long as the claimant can sustain her burden of proof. Therefore, the common pleas court abused its discretion in failing to allow Grant leave to amend her complaint. As provided in R.C. 4123.519, the pleadings are governed by the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure. Under Civ.R. 15(A) a court should “freely” allow leave to amend. The purpose of this provision is that cases will be decided on their merits rather than on procedural technicalities.
Hoover v. Sumlin
(1984),
The Ohio Supreme Court’s definition of “abuse of discretion” contemplates an attitude that is unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. Noting that abuse of discretion usually involves decisions that are unreasonable rather than arbitrary or unconscionable, the Supreme Court has defined “unreasonable” as having “no sound reasoning process that would support that decision.”
AAAA Enterprises, Inc. v. River Place Community Urban Dev. Corp.
(1990),
Grant further asserts that exclusion of mental-mental claims from the workers’ compensation system violates the Equal Protection Clauses of the United States and Ohio Constitutions. She argues that no rational basis exists for disparate treatment of the class of mental-mental claimants in furtherance of a legitimate governmental interest. See
Morris v. Savoy
(1991),
In her second assignment of error, Grant contends that because she was unable to amend her complaint to allege a physical-mental claim and a mental-physical claim under Civ.R. 56, the summary judgment was also error. Summary judgment is a procedural device used to dispense promptly with factually groundless claims.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett
(1986),
In her uncontradicted deposition, Grant submitted evidence of her contemporaneous physical injury, which was coupled with the opinion of her psychiatrist that her posttraumatic stress syndrome was occasioned by the injury sustained in the second robbery. Under the test in
Ryan v. Connor, supra,
there is, likewise, evidence that her alleged emotionally caused ulcer resulted from a greater emotional strain than that to which all workers are occasionally subjected. These are not mental-mental claims based solely on job-related stress.
4
The posttraumatic stress syndrome diagnosed by Dr. Lurie was not, as the commission contends, an attempt to raise a new condition in the common pleas court. Despite the new allegation that the condition was caused by a contemporaneous physical injury, the claim continued to be for posttraumatic stress syndrome, the same condition she asserted at the Industrial Commission. See
Dunn v. Mayfield, supra.
By contrast, her mental-physical claim for her ulcer may entitle
*85
Grant to an additional allowance for a “flow through” condition caused by posttraumatic stress syndrome pursuant to the commission’s continuing jurisdiction under R.C. 4123.52. Assuming the facts show that notice to the commission was timely given within two years of when Grant knew or should have known of the ulcer pursuant to R.C. 4123.84, we hold that the claim is not barred. See
Clementi v. Wean United, Inc.
(1988),
For these reasons, Grant’s assignments of error are well taken. The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and this cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Notes
. Although appellate courts speak in terms of mental or emotional conditions related to a contemporaneous physical injury, in
Ryan v. Connor, supra,
the Ohio Supreme Court refers to claims for injuries resulting from "physical impact or trauma.” If a claimant is the victim of an attempted rape in the course of her employment, where no penetration or physical injury occurred, can she assert a claim for posttraumatic stress syndrome under R.C. 4123.01(C)? The Ohio Supreme Court wrestled with, but did not decide, the issue in
Kerans v. Porter Paint Co.
(1991),
. In
Kaltenbach v. Mayfield, supra,
the court relied on
Rummel v. Flowers
(1972),
. This court’s decision in
Walden v. Jet Window Cleaners
(Feb. 25, 1981), Hamilton App. Nos. C-790703, C-790712, unreported,
. Arguably, in theory psychiatric conditions that can be objectively identified and traced to a startling event are included in the definition of "injury” under R.C. 4123.01(C). They are unlike mental conditions arising from anxiety, pressure, and worry from job-related stress with causal connection attributable to a variety of sources. In defining "injury” the legislature did not use the word "physical” in R.C. 4123.01(C). The startling event of an armed robbery is easily identifiable and medically traceable as a mental condition "caused by external accidental means.”
