Case Information
*1 The summaries of the Colorado Court of Appeals published opinions constitute no part of the opinion of the division but have been prepared by the division for the convenience of the reader. The summaries may not be cited or relied upon as they are not the official language of the division.
Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opiniоn
should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion.
SUMMARY
March 7, 2019
No. 18CA0565, Burren v. Industrial Claims Appeals Office — Labor and Industry — Workers’ Compensation — Determination of Maximum Medical Improvement
In this workers’ compensation case, a division of the court of appeals addresses whether a claimant can be placed at maximum medical improvement (MMI) by an administrative law judge (ALJ) despite the lack of an MMI finding frоm any treating physician or the physician conducting the division-sponsored independent medical examination (DIME). The division concludes that an ALJ cannot determine MMI when neither a treating physician nor a DIME physician has placed the injured worker at MMI.
Consequence, the division sets aside the order of the Industrial
Claim Appeals Office (Panel) upholding the ALJ’s order and
*2
remands the matter to the Panel to return the case to the ALJ to
enter an order consistent with this opinion.
*3
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS Court of Appeals No. 18CA0565
Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State of Colorado WC No. 4-962-740
Susan Burren,
Petitioner,
v.
Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State of Colorado, Destination Maternity, and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company,
Respondents. ORDER SET ASIDE AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS
Division III
Opinion by JUDGE WELLING Webb and Harris, JJ., concur Announced March 7, 2019 Irwin Fraley, PLLC, Roger Fraley, Jr., Centennial, Coloradо, for Petitioner No Appearance for Respondent Industrial Claim Appeals Office Ruegsegger Simons Smith & Stern, Michele Stark Carey, Denver, Colorado, for Respondents Destination Maternity and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company *4
This workers’ compensation action requires us to address ¶ 1 whether a claimant can be placed at maximum medical improvement (MMI) by an administrative lаw judge (ALJ) despite the lack of an MMI finding from any treating physician or the physician conducting the division-sponsored independent medical examination (DIME). We conclude that an ALJ cannot determine MMI when neither a treating physician nor a DIME physician has placed the injured worker at MMI. We therefore set aside the order of the Industrial Claim Appeals Office (Panel) upholding the ALJ’s order, and we remand the matter to the Panel to return the case to the ALJ to enter an order consistent with this opinion.
I. Background Claimant, Susan Burren, worked for employer, Destination
Maternity, in a store called A Pea in the Pod. On September 25 and 26, 2014, she sustained admitted work-related injuries to her arm and shoulder. Several physicians treated her for her injuries well into 2017. Despite several years of treatment, claimant complained that her pain continued to worsen. She testified that none of the treatment she received improved her condition. None of claimant’s treating physicians placed her at MMI. *5 In June 2015, employer retained Dr. Allison Fall to perform a
¶ 3 medical examination of claimant. Dr. Fall opined that claimant was not at MMI at that time, but anticipated that claimant would reach MMI “in three to six months.” Dr. Fall examined claimant a second time in August 2016. In
¶ 4 her ensuing report, Dr. Fall set forth her impressions of claimant’s condition as follows:
1. Work-related right ulnar neuritis without current complaints, essentially resolved.
2. Right upper trapezius and levator scapular myofascial pain with subjective complaints outweighing objective findings.
3. Sоmatoform or conversion disorder, ruled out as work- related.
She also opined that claimant had reached MMI with “no permanent impairment for subjective complaints of upper quadrant myofascial pain.” Several weeks after receiving Dr. Fall’s opinion, employer
requested a twenty-four-month DIME pursuant to section 8-42- 107(8)(b)(II), C.R.S. 2018, because no treating physician had placed *6 claimant at MMI in the two years that had elapsed since her work- related injury. Dr. Clarence Henke was selected to perform the DIME. He examined claimant and opined that claimant suffered from right ulnar nerve compression, right median nerve compression at wrist level, right rotator cuff tendinitis, and cervical myalgia. As now pertinent, he also determined claimant was not аt MMI. Not satisfied with this result, employer applied for a hearing to
overcome Dr. Henke’s DIME opinion. Dr. Fall testified at the hearing that the mechanism of claimant’s injury could not have injured her cervical spine. Dr. Fall also criticized Dr. Henke’s DIME report, pointing out that Dr. Henke did not rate claimant’s impairment as required, failed to explain why he concluded claimant was not at MMI, and recommended follow-up treatment without specifying the treatment needed. Hearing this and claimant’s testimony, the ALJ ruled that employer clearly and convincingly overcame the DIME. The ALJ expressly found Dr. Fall’s opinions and testimony to be more “well-informed, thorough, credible and persuasive than those of DIME Dr. Henke.” The ALJ also noted:
The DIME doctor reviewed only a portion of Claimant’s medical records and failed to consider Dr. Fall’s second [independent medical exam] report. He did not rate any impairment as required. Dr. Henke failed to provide any details or analysis as to why Claimant is not at MMI, or what needs to be done for Claimant to reach MMI. Dr. Henke failed to state what body part Claimant should follow up with, what type of orthopedic evaluation Claimant needs, or why further orthopedic evaluation is necessary, despite nearly three years of treatment without any perceived benefit.
She therefore concluded that the evidence employer presented to overcome the DIME “is unmistakable and free from serious or substantial doubt showing it highly probable the DIME physician is incorrect.” Having found that employer overcame the DIME, the ALJ determined that claimant reached MMI on June 28, 2016, the date on which one of her treating physicians placed her cervical spine at MMI. On review, the Panel upheld the ALJ’s order, concluding that
substantial evidence supported the decision. The Panel also rejected claimant’s contention that the ALJ misapplied the statute when she found claimant at MMI as of June 28, 2016. The Panel disagreed with claimant’s position that an ALJ cannot find a *8 claimant to be at MMI unless a treating physician or the DIME has placed the claimant at MMI. In the Panel’s view, once an ALJ determines that a DIME physician’s MMI opinion has been clearly and convincingly overcome, “the ALJ [is] required to determine the claimant’s MMI date as a matter of fact.”
II. Stаtutory Interpretation On appeal, claimant contends that the Panel and the ALJ have
¶ 8 misinterpreted section 8-42-107(8)(b). In claimant’s view, by permitting the ALJ to determine a claimant’s MMI date as a matter of fact, the Panel disregards the requirement of section 8-42- 107(8)(b)(I) that “[a]n authorized treating physician shall make a determination as to when the injured employee reaches maximum medical improvement as defined in section 8-40-201(11.5)[, C.R.S. 2018].” According to claimant, once the ALJ determined employer overcame the DIME, the ALJ should have ordered her treatment resumed until her authorized treating physician (ATP) placed her at MMI. We agree that the ALJ and the Panel have misapplied the statute, but not for the reason argued by claimant.
A. Relevant Statute Section 8-42-107 providеs, in relevant part, as follows:
(8)(b)(I) An authorized treating physician shall make a determination as to when the injured employee reaches maximum medical improvement as defined in section 8-40- 201(11.5).
(II) If either party disputes a determination by an authorized treating physician on the question of whether the injured worker has or has not reached maximum medical improvement, an independеnt medical examiner may be selected in accordance with section 8-42-107.2[, C.R.S. 2018]; except that, if an authorized treating physician has not determined that the employee has reached maximum medical improvement, the employer or insurer may only request the selection of an independent medical examiner if all of the following conditions are met: (A) At least twenty-four months have passed since the date of injury;
(B) A party has requested in writing that an authorized treating physician determine whether the employee has reached maximum medical improvement;
(C) Such authorized treating physician has not determined that the employee has reached maximum medical improvement; and (D) A physician other than such authorized treating physician has determined that the employee has reached maximum medical improvement.
(III) Notwithstanding paragraph (c) of this subsection (8), if the independent medical examiner selected pursuant to subparagraph *10 (II) of this paragraph (b) finds that the injured worker has reached maximum medical improvement, the independent medical examiner shall also determine the injured worker’s permanent medical impairment rating. The finding regarding maximum medical improvement and permanent medical impairment of an independent medical examiner in a dispute arising under subparagraph (II) of this paragraph (b) may be overcome only by clear and convincing evidence. A hearing on this matter shall not take place until the finding of the independent medical examiner has been filed with the division.
B. Rules of Statutory Construction and Standard of Review
When we interpret a provision of the Workers’ Compensation
Act (Act), “we interpret the statute according to its plain and
ordinary meaning” if its language is clear.
Davison v. Indus. Claim
Appeals Office
,
¶ 11 We review an issue of statutory construction de novo. Ray v.
Indus. Claim Appeals Office
,
C. MMI Finding Must Be Made by Either ATP or DIME Physician
Claimant contends that if neither a DIME physician nor an
ATP has found a claimant to be at MMI, section 8-42-107(8)(b)(I)
mandates that the claimant continue treating with the ATP until the
ATP places the claimant at MMI. In other words, under claimant’s
interpretation of section 8-42-107(8)(b), if a DIME conducted under
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section 8-42-107(8)(b)(II) finds a claimant is
not
at MMI, treatmеnt
should then proceed until an MMI determination is made under
section 8-42-107(8)(b)(I). To do otherwise, according to claimant,
would be to “ignore” the requirements of section 8-42-107(8)(b)(I).
Claimant’s interpretation is overly broad and consequently
flawed. The legislature intended subparagraphs (I) and (II) of
section 8-42-107(8)(b) to serve as alternative paths by which a
determination of MMI can be reached. As the Pаnel noted,
subparagraph (II) was added to the Act in 1996 to provide
employers an avenue to seek an MMI finding if an ATP’s treatment
continued despite an independent physician’s determination that
the claimant had reached MMI.
See
Ch. 112, sec. 1, § 8-42-
107(8)(b)(II), 1996 Colo. Sess. Laws 456-57;
see also Clark v. Mac-
Make-Up Art Cosmetics
, W.C. No. 4-858-859-06,
the Panel has “long held that once the ALJ determined the DIME
physician’s MMI opinion was overcome by clear and convincing
evidence, then the ALJ was required to determine the claimant’s
MMI date as a matter of fact,” as it observed in its decision below.
And numerous Panel decisions follow this reasoning or espouse this
interpretation.
See, e.g.
,
York v. Manpower Int’l, Inc.
, W.C. No. 4-
837-612-04,
MMI could be decided as a matter of fact: in each instance, a
conflict existed between the DIME and the ATP, which required
resolution by the finder of fact. Indeed, the rule authorizing ALJs to
decide MMI as a matter of fact grew out of a case of conflicting MMI
determinations by different ATPs.
See, e.g.
,
Blue Mesa Forest v.
Lopez
,
¶ 16 We know of no case, and employer has not pointed us to any,
in which the only physician placing the claimant at MMI was a doctor selected by the employer pursuant to section 8-42- 107(8)(b)(II)(D). To thе contrary, in all the cases we have reviewed, as well as each case cited by the parties, either an ATP or the DIME had placed the claimant at MMI. But those circumstances are absent here, distinguishing this case from those in which MMI became a fact question for the ALJ to decide. In our view, the situation resembles the supreme court case of
Williams v. Kunau
,
We hold that, once a claimant has successfully challenged a finding of MMI through the DIME process, the DIME process remains open and, when the treating physician makes a second finding of MMI, the employer or insurer may not file an FAL to close the case prior to returning the claimant to the independent medical examiner for a follow-up examination and determination of MMI.
Id. at 36. *18 ¶ 18 Similarly, in this case, the DIME did not find claimant to be at
MMI. Unlike in Williams , though, the ALJ did not return claimant for additional treatment and a follow-up DIME. Instead, the ALJ was persuaded by the opinions of employer’s retained physician to place claimant at MMI. In our view, this course runs сounter to the statute and the Panel’s historical practice of having the DIME physician who found a claimant was not at MMI later make the MMI determination. We therefore conclude claimant should have been returned to the ATP for continued treatment after the DIME physician found she was not at MMI. We recognize that our interpretation of the statute effectively
preсludes an employer’s ability to challenge a twenty-four-month DIME when the DIME agrees with the ATP that a claimant is not at MMI. However, we note that, prior to the addition of section 8-42- 107(8)(b)(II) in 1996, employers were at the mercy of ATPs and had no recourse to challenge perpetual care; treatment simply continued until an ATP placed the claimant at MMI. See 1996 Colo. Sess. Laws at 456-57. We conclude simply that where the DIME and the ATP agree that a claimant is not at MMI, treatment should continue until either the DIME or the ATP places the claimant at *19 MMI, which comports with the statute and the Panel’s historical practices. We note, too, that nothing in our opinion prohibits an employer from re-invoking the twenty-four-month DIME process at an appropriate time in the future. Thus, our decision will leave employers avenues to challenge treatment that seems interminable.
III. Substantial Evidence
¶ 20 Having concluded that the ALJ and the Panel misinterpreted
section 8-42-107(8)(b)(II), we need not address whether substantial evidence supported the ALJ’s findings of fact.
IV. Conclusion The order is set aside and the case remanded to the Panel with
directions to return it to the ALJ to enter an order consistent with this opinion.
JUDGE WEBB and JUDGE HARRIS concur.
