TEMPS & COMPANY SERVICES аnd Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
v.
Donna CREMEENS, Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*395 G. Dennis Lynn, Jr., of Greene & Mastry, P.A., St. Petersburg, for appellants/cross-appellees.
Peter H. Dubbeld & Joey D. Oquist, of Peter H. Dubbeld, P.A., St. Petersburg, for appellee/cross-appellant.
SHIVERS, Judge.
The employer/carrier (e/c) appeal, and claimant cross-appeals, an order of the judge of compensation claims (JCC) that, in pertinent part: 1) ordered the e/c to reimburse claimant in the sum of $6,358.63, representing the еntire purchase price of a 1986 Chevrolet Camaro with automatic transmission and power steering (AT/PS), with no credit for the trade-in value of claimant's 1988 Ford Festiva; 2) made the e/c responsible for all insurance, major maintеnance and repair costs of the replacement vehicle; 3) found that no attempt was made by the e/c to deliver the needed motor vehicle to claimant; and 4) allowed the e/c to choose whether to title the replacement vehicle in claimant's name, over her objection. We reverse as to the first three findings and affirm as to the issue cross-appealed concerning titling the car.
Claimant, a 36-year-old woman, sustained the amputation of four fingers on her dominant right hand on April 17, 1990, while working at Medical Technologies as a temporary employee provided by appellant Temps & Company. Her claim eventually *396 led to a final hearing on December 7, 1990, after which the JCC issued the order resulting in this appeal/cross-appeal.
The e/c contend that the JCC erred in awarding claimant the entire purchase price of the replacement vehicle, with no credit to the e/c for the trade-in value of claimant's prior vehicle. It is undisputed that claimant has a medical need of a modified vehicle with AT/PS pursuant to section 440.13(2)(a), Florida Statutes (1989); see Stables v. Rivers,
The JCC determined that the Camaro purchased by claimant is a medical expense or apparatus, and relied on the line of decisions holding that a medical expense or apparatus is not apportionable. See, e.g., Skinner v. Florida Power Corp.,
At the time of the accident, claimant already owned an automobile. As a result of her injuries, she required a motor vehicle with AT/PS. "The test for when medical benefits may be awarded is whether the award would improve the condition caused by the accident or would aid in the reсovery from the accident." Brown v. Steego Auto Parts,
In Skinner, the quadriplegic claimant constructed a new 2,300-square-foot, $310,000 wheelchair-accessible home. Acknowledging that Chapter 440, Florida Statutes, does not provide fоr apportionment of necessary costs of medical apparatus, we held the e/c responsible only for the necessary and reasonable costs of making the home wheelchair-accessible, an аmount about 1/10 of the cost of the entire house. Id. at 616. The modifications were the medical apparatus that we deemed not to be apportionable. By analogy, the AT/PS options are the medical appаratus necessary to permit claimant to drive, and thereby constitute medical apparatus the cost of which should be borne by the e/c. See Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Cooper,
We find Ramada Inn South Airport v. Lamoureux,
The e/c assert that the JCC should have awarded claimant $795, an amount that by the e/c's reckoning is the difference between the book value of claimant's Festiva *397 ($3,500) and the most еxpensive ($4,295) of the three "similar" cars located through an auto search agency and offered by the e/c as potential replacement vehicles. Alternatively, the e/c suggest that the proper award is $2,500, representing the difference between the trade-in value of the Festiva and the actual cost of the Camaro.
Ordinarily an award would be based on the actual difference between the book value of the prior vehiсle and the cost of a similar replacement car with the medically necessary apparatus. Given the unusual circumstances presented in the record, however, we find that an award of $2,500 as reimbursement to claimаnt is justified. Accordingly, we reverse that portion of the order awarding claimant the entire cost of the Camaro.
As to the requirement that the e/c bear the expenses of all insurance, major maintenance and reрair costs of the replacement vehicle, we reverse on the authority of Polk County Board of Commissioners v. Varnado,
We reverse the order as to this second issue and remand for the JCC to order the е/c responsible only for those expenses for insurance, major maintenance and repair directly attributable to the AT/PS. Varnado. Claimant is to bear the initial cost of said expenses and is to be reimbursed by the e/c upon a рresentation of proper documentation of the expenses.
The JCC found that "[o]ther than the providing of several leads of motor vehicles that the employer/carrier believed to be similar, no attempt was mаde by the employer/carrier to deliver the needed motor vehicle to the claimant." Based on that finding, the JCC determined that claimant was entitled to purchase the Camaro on her own, with only the reasonableness and necessity of the expense to be approved by the JCC. Firestone Tire. The JCC determined that claimant undertook an adequate search to locate a suitable vehicle and that its purchase and cost were reasonаble and necessary. Relying on Edgewood Boys' Ranch Foundation v. Robinson,
Additionally, the finding of a minimal attempt by the e/c to assist claimant is not supported by CSE. The e/c provided cab service for claimant to get to therapy and provided an aide tо run errands. The e/c considered measures for modifying claimant's Festiva and provided an occupational therapist who attempted to provide a strap device to allow claimant to engage the four-speed manual transmission. An auto search group was used to locate three similar prospective replacement vehicles. The adjuster provided contacts at each of the car dealerships. Cf. Firestone Tire (aрparently, e/c were requested, but failed, to provide the medically necessary pool); *398 Robinson. It was claimant who initiated the offer to trade in her Festiva for a similar vehicle with AT/PS, with a deduction for the trade-in value of her car. Subsequent events, for which neither party is entirely responsible, fostered an atmosphere of distrust and lack of cooperation, such that claimant and the e/c were unable to agree on a replacement car.
As cross-appellant, claimant argues that the JCC erred in allowing the e/c to choose whether to have title to the replacement vehicle in claimant's name. Section 440.13(2)(a), Florida Statutes, requires thе e/c to furnish medically necessary apparatus, which was done here. We recognized in Firestone Tire that an order requiring the e/c to furnish medically necessary apparatus pursuant to section 440.13, Florida Statutes, is not necessarily "an unconditional mandate for `vesting of title'" in claimant's name. Id.,
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED with directions.
MINER and WOLF, JJ., concur.
