The issue before us is whether a claimant who leaves his
In Baker I, we held that Baker’s voluntary departure from Stahl-Wooster precluded Baker’s eligibility for TTD, as his departure from his former position of employment was predicated on his own actions, i.e., acceptance of a truck mechanic position with Truck Stops, and not on his industrial injury. Baker,
The pertinent portions of R.C. 4123.56, governing temporary disability compensation, provide:
“(A) * * * [I]n the case of temporary disability, an employee shall receive sixty-six and two-thirds per cent of his average weekly wage so long as such disability is total * * *. Payments shall continue pending the determination of the matter[;] however payment shall not be made for the period when any employee has returned to work, when an employee’s treating physician has made a written statement that the employee is capable of returning to his former position of employment, when work within the physical capabilities of the employee is made available by the employer or another employer, or when the employee has reached the maximum medical improvement. * * * The termination of temporary total disability, whether by order or otherwise, does not preclude the commencement of temporary total disability at another point in time if the employee again becomes temporarily totally disabled.” (Emphasis added.)
R.C. 4123.56 is instructive in that it ties an injured worker’s eligibility for TTD to the worker’s capability of returning to his former position of employment. This “former position of employment” standard was intended to be a threshold physical measurement of whether an injured worker was able to perform the duties of the job that he held at the time of injury. A worker’s physical capabilities are unrelated to whether the worker is actually working at his former position of employment and whether the former position is even available for the injured worker to return to after he is medically released.
In State ex rel. Ramirez v. Indus. Comm. (1982),
Eligibility for TTD is contingent upon an injured worker’s inability to perform the duties of his former position of employment. Ramirez; Jones & Laughlin, supra. This eligibility standard is consistent with the purpose of TTD, which is to compensate an injured employee for the loss of earnings he incurs while his injury heals. State ex rel. Ashcraft v. Indus. Comm. (1987),
For example, in Jones & Laughlin>
In addition to Jones & Laughlin, where the claimant voluntarily and permanently removed himself from the work force, there are a number of other examples of situations wherein a claimant has been denied continued TTD based on his voluntary abandonment of his former position of employment: State ex rel. Ashcraft v. Indus. Comm. (1987),
Relying on two of the foregoing voluntary-abandonment cases, McGraw and Jones & Laughlin, this court held in Baker I that Baker voluntarily abandoned his former position of employment by accepting a new position of employment and, therefore, Baker was not eligible for TTD. Upon reconsideration, we now find that both McGraw and Jones & Laughlin are factually distinguishable from the facts of the case now before us. Specifically, we now find that changing jobs is clearly distinguishable from some other situations of voluntary abandonment of employment and that a job change does not preclude a claimant from TTD.
In Jones & Laughlin, the employer contended that because its employee was receiving a regular pension, the employee had voluntarily retired from the work force and was therefore precluded from receiving TTD. While denying the employer’s request for a writ for other reasons, the court of appeals did agree with the employer that “voluntary retirement may preclude a claimant from receiving temporary total disability benefits to which he otherwise might be entitled, if by such retirement the claimant has voluntarily removed himself permanently from the work force.” (Emphasis added.)
MeGraw is also distinguishable from the facts of the case now before us. Unlike Baker, the appellant in MeGraw abandoned the work force for reasons unrelated to his original industrial injury, and he was not working at the time of his subsequent injury, which he claimed was related to his original industrial injury and again rendered him temporarily and totally disabled. MeGraw,
The claimant in MeGraw not only abandoned the work force, as he was unemployed for approximately eight or nine months before his request for continued TTD, but he requested continued TTD more than ten years after his original industrial injury. MeGraw was not working at the time of his injury; thus, he did not incur any loss of earnings at the time that he reaggravated his original industrial injury. MeGraw, unlike Baker, abandoned his employment and the work force.
Much is being made of the court of appeals’ further statement in Jones & Laughlin that “[s]uch action [abandonment] would include such situations as the acceptance of another position, as well as voluntary retirement.” (Emphasis added.)
To clarify these issues, we developed a two-part test to determine a claimant’s eligibility for TTD. In State ex rel. Ashcraft v. Indus. Comm. (1987),
Applying the two-part test to the facts in Ashcraft, we held that the claimant’s incarceration constituted a factor that precluded his receipt of TTD independently of his previously recognized work-related injury. Id. at 44-45,
Accordingly, we apply the two-prong test of Ashcraft to the facts of the case now before us. In this case, there is no debate about the application of the first prong. It is the second prong of the Ashcraft test, namely the underlying purpose of TTD, that compels a different result in the case at bar.
First, with respect to the disabling aspect of Baker’s injury, there is no dispute that Baker was unable to perform the duties of his former position of employment as a result of his industrial injury. Baker’s original industrial injury was reaggravated at Baker’s new job, and it is uncontroverted that Baker’s subsequent injury was directly related to his original injury at Stahl-Wooster. Second, Baker’s acceptance of his new position at Truck Stops was not a factor that prevented Baker from returning to his former position. Baker could (and did) return to his former position, but then he elected to move to different employment. This change of employment was not related to his injury. Although Baker did not return permanently to his former position of employment,
Accordingly, we hold that when a claimant who is medically released to return to work following an industrial injury leaves his or her former position of employment to accept another position of employment, the claimant is eligible to receive temporary total disability compensation pursuant to R.C. 4123.56(A) should the claimant reaggravate the original industrial injury while working at his or her new job.
Today’s decision does nothing more than recognize the job mobility of today’s labor market. No citation of authority is needed to acknowledge the obvious that any number of people, different from day to day, are moving to other jobs for their same employer, or to different jobs for different employers. To hold as appellees and their amici urge us would be to consign all workers to a particular employment position and employer unless they were willing to abandon some earned benefits. This would be so regardless of promotional opportunities in the same company or other opportunities outside the company. In this case, in the court of appeals, Judge Tyack dissented from the majority opinion, stating:
“I see a significant distinction to be made between the situation where an injured worker stops employment entirely and the situation where an injured worker moves from one job within his or her capability to another job within his or her capabilities. The workers’ compensation system cannot be used to chain a worker to one specific employer. A worker who has an opportunity to advance his or her lot in life by a career change should not have to face the prospect of losing workers’ compensation benefits if an injury sustained on the job with a former employer causes the worker to become unemployed, even at a later date.
“A complete abandonment of employment can, under certain circumstances, break the chain of cause and effect necessary to demonstrate that an injured worker actually is unemployed because of the injury. A change of jobs does not constitute an abandonment of employment and does not automatically break the chain of cause and effect.”
We agree, and we therefore vacate our decision in State ex rel. Baker v. Indus. Comm. (2000),
Judgment reversed and writ granted.
Notes
. Since the claimant in the instant case is male, we use masculine adjectives and pronouns, except in the syllabus, throughout the opinion. We do so only for ease of reading. We continue to recognize that our opinions should always be gender-neutral.
. Appellee, Stahl-Wooster, lists an inaccurate citation for this case in its table of authorities and on page 3 of its supplemental brief. The proper citation for State ex rel. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. v. Indus. Comm. is (1985),
. Baker actually returned to Stahl-Wooster the day after he was released to light-duty work. On that day, Baker signed a termination notice with Stahl-Wooster, stating that he had accepted other employment. Thereafter, Baker began his new job as a truck mechanic with Truck Stops.
