JOHN O'NEIL VS. BOARD OF TRUSTEES, POLICE AND FIREMEN'S RETIREMENT SYSTEM(POLICE AND FIREMEN'S RETIREMENT SYSTEM) ( 2017 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
    Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-4846-15T3
    JOHN O'NEIL,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    BOARD OF TRUSTEES, POLICE AND
    FIREMEN'S RETIREMENT SYSTEM,
    Respondent-Respondent.
    ______________________________
    Argued September 12, 2017 — Decided October 10, 2017
    Before Judges Reisner and Mayer.
    On appeal from the Board of Trustees, Police
    and Firemen's Retirement System, PFRS No. 3-
    99545.
    John D. Feeley argued the cause for appellant
    (Feeley & LaRocca, LLC, and The Blanco Law
    Firm, LLC, attorneys; Mr. Feeley on the brief;
    Pablo N. Blanco, of counsel and on the brief).
    Cameryn J. Hinton, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for respondent (Christopher
    S. Porrino, Attorney General, attorney;
    Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney General,
    of counsel; Ms. Hinton, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    John O'Neil appeals from a final agency decision of the Board
    of    Trustees,   Police   and   Firemen's   Retirement   System   (Board)
    denying his request for accidental disability retirement benefits.
    The Board concluded that O'Neil's disability was not undesigned
    and unexpected and that the psychological injury he suffered did
    not result from a terrifying or horror-inducing event involving
    actual death or injury. Because we disagree, we reverse and remand
    to the Board to grant accidental disability retirement benefits
    to O'Neil.
    A dispatcher contacted O'Neil, a police officer, to respond
    to a call about a man with a gun at a bar.         O'Neil responded and
    recognized a pickup truck that belonged to his brother, Darin
    O'Neil.     O'Neil approached the car and saw his brother with a
    gaping hole in his chest from a self-inflicted gunshot.             O'Neil
    took his brother's pulse and discovered he had no pulse.            O'Neil
    testified that he then "broke down" and had to be removed from the
    scene by fellow officers.
    Following the event, O'Neil saw several doctors who diagnosed
    him   as   suffering   from   post-traumatic   stress   disorder   (PTSD),
    anxiety, depression and sleep disorder.         He has not returned to
    work since the incident.
    O'Neil applied for accidental disability retirement benefits
    attributable to the emotional injury suffered when, in performing
    2                             A-4846-15T3
    his duty as a police officer, he discovered his brother dead by a
    self-inflicted gunshot wound.     The Board denied the application,
    determining that O'Neil was not totally and permanently disabled.
    O'Neil requested a hearing, and the Board referred the matter to
    the Office of Administrative Law.
    An   administrative   law   judge   (ALJ)   heard   testimony   from
    O'Neil, Dr. David Pilchman, a psychology expert who evaluated
    O'Neil twice, Dr. Jakob Steinberg, O'Neil's treating psychologist
    and traumatic stress expert, and Dr. Richard Filippone, the Board's
    medical expert.
    O'Neil testified that he never expected to handle a matter
    involving his family.   O'Neil, who was not a police officer in the
    municipality where his brother committed suicide, was asked to
    respond because the State Police were unable to handle the matter.
    According to O'Neil, he believed it was the department's policy
    not to assign officers to situations involving family members, and
    had the dispatcher known the matter involved his brother, a
    different police officer would have been dispatched.              O'Neil
    testified that since the incident he cannot return to work and
    cannot handle a gun.
    During the hearing, O'Neil presented the testimony of two
    medical experts. Dr. Pilchman testified that while police officers
    are trained to deal with horrific situations, including suicide,
    3                             A-4846-15T3
    the trauma is heightened when the matter is personal to the
    officer.    Dr. Pilchman also testified that witnessing the suicide
    of a family member is vastly different from witnessing the suicide
    of a stranger.      According to Dr. Pilchman, as a result of this
    incident, O'Neil is incapable of returning to work as a police
    officer.    Concurring with Dr. Pilchman, Dr. Steinberg testified
    that O'Neil is totally and permanently disabled.            Contrary to the
    testimony of O'Neil's medical experts, the Board's expert, Dr.
    Filippone, testified that O'Neil suffered only a minor impact from
    the incident and was not disabled.
    The ALJ found that the testimony of O'Neil and O'Neil's
    medical experts was more credible than the testimony of the Board's
    medical expert.     Based on that credible testimony, the ALJ found
    O'Neil   was    permanently   and   totally   disabled     and   awarded   him
    accidental disability retirement benefits.
    The Board rejected the ALJ's recommendation and concluded
    that O'Neil was not eligible for accidental disability retirement
    benefits.      In its decision, the Board adopted the ALJ's fact
    findings    and   agreed   that   O'Neil   was   totally   and   permanently
    disabled.      However, the Board concluded that the ALJ misapplied
    the law and confused the applicable tests requiring that the
    incident be (1) "undesigned and unexpected" under Richardson v.
    Board of Trustees, Police & Firemen's Retirement System, 
    192 N.J. 4
                                  A-4846-15T3
    189 (2007), and (2) satisf[y] the standard for a "mental-mental"
    claim under Patterson v. Board of Trustees, Police & Firemen's
    Retirement System, 
    194 N.J. 29
     (2008).
    "Generally,    courts    afford     substantial   deference    to    an
    agency's interpretation of a statute that the agency is charged
    with enforcing."    Richardson v. Bd. of Trs., Police & Firemen's
    Ret. Sys., 
    192 N.J. 189
    , 196 (2007). "An appellate court, however,
    is 'in no way bound by the agency's interpretation of a statute
    or its determination of a strictly legal issue.'"               
    Id. at 196
    (quoting In re Taylor, 
    158 N.J. 644
    , 658 (1999)).          Courts "apply
    de novo review to an agency's interpretation of a statute or case
    law."    Russo v. Bd. of Trs., Police & Fireman's Ret. Sys., 
    206 N.J. 14
    , 27 (2011).
    A   service   member    is   eligible   for   accidental   disability
    retirement benefits if the member is:
    permanently and totally disabled as a direct
    result of a traumatic event occurring during
    and as a result of the performance of his
    regular or assigned duties and that such
    disability was not the result of the member’s
    willful negligence and that such member is
    mentally or physically incapacitated for the
    performance of his usual duty and of any other
    available duty in the department which his
    employer is willing to assign to him.
    [N.J.S.A. 43:16A-7(1).]
    5                             A-4846-15T3
    As the Richardson Court explained "a traumatic event is
    essentially the same as what we historically understood an accident
    to be - an unexpected external happening that directly causes
    injury and is not the result of pre-existing disease alone or in
    combination with work effort." Richardson, supra, 
    192 N.J. at 212
    .
    In Richardson, the Court set forth the following factors a claimant
    must   prove   to     qualify   for   accidental   disability   retirement
    benefits:
    1. [the claimant] is permanently and totally
    disabled;
    2. as a direct result of a traumatic event
    that is
    a. identifiable as to time and
    place,
    b. undesigned and unexpected, and
    c. caused by a circumstance external
    to the member (not the result of
    pre-existing    disease   that    is
    aggravated or accelerated by the
    work);
    3. that the traumatic event occurred during
    and as a result of the member's regular or
    assigned duties;
    4. that the disability was not the result of
    the member's willful negligence; and
    5. that the member is mentally or physically
    incapacitated from performing his usual or any
    other duty.
    [Id. at 212-13.]
    6                           A-4846-15T3
    The factor at issue is whether the traumatic event experienced
    by O'Neil qualified as "undesigned and unexpected."          In this case,
    during the course of his police duties, O'Neil was unexpectedly
    confronted with his brother's suicide.        While O'Neil had responded
    to other horrific situations in the performance of his duties, he
    had never been called to a scene involving a family member, and
    ordinarily would not have been given such an assignment.
    Contrary to the Board's position, there is nothing ordinary
    or expected about responding to the suicide of a family member.
    There is no evidence in the record establishing that personal
    tragedies are expected to occur during the performance of police
    work or that that officers are prepared for the occurrence of
    personal tragedies.    Training that might be provided to a police
    officer regarding a stranger's suicide would not prepare an officer
    encountering the suicide of a family member.          See e.g. Thompson
    v. Bd. of Trs., Teachers' Pension & Annuity Fund, 
    449 N.J. Super. 478
    , 503 (App. Div. 2017), certif. granted,                N.J.     (2017)
    (incident undesigned and unexpected because there was no evidence
    that the special education teacher was trained to handle violent
    special needs students).
    The   Board     failed   to       appreciate   the     idiosyncratic
    circumstances in this case.     This was not a routine call for an
    officer to respond to a suicide.            The situation involved the
    7                              A-4846-15T3
    suicide of O'Neil's brother.           For the Board to equate the two
    situations improperly focused on O'Neil's every day duty as a
    police officer and ignored the reality that O'Neil was unexpectedly
    dispatched to the scene of his brother's suicide.                Because the
    incident in this case uniquely involved a close family member, the
    Board erred in determining that O'Neil's discovery of his brother's
    suicide was not "undesigned and unexpected."
    Next,   we   examine   whether       O'Neil's   injury   met    the   test
    established in Patterson.      Under Patterson, "the disability must
    result from direct personal experience of a terrifying or horror-
    inducing event that involves actual or threatened death or serious
    injury, or a similarly serious threat to the physical integrity
    of the member or another person."            Patterson, supra, 
    194 N.J. at 34
    .   This "assure[s] that the traumatic event . . . is objectively
    capable of causing a reasonable person in similar circumstances
    to suffer permanent, disabling mental injury."           
    Ibid.
       These cases
    are "so-called mental-mental" cases, "in which a purely mental
    stimulus results in emotional or nervous injury."                    Brunell v.
    Wildwood Crest Police Dep't, 
    176 N.J. 225
    , 243 (2003).                The Board
    concluded that O'Neil did not satisfy the Patterson test because
    he was not subjected to the threat of death or serious injury and
    did not witness his brother discharge the gun.
    8                                A-4846-15T3
    We disagree with the Board's determination that O'Neil failed
    to satisfy the Patterson test.         The facts in this case "must be
    viewed with a wider lens than the one the Board applied."               Moran
    v. Bd. of Trs., Police & Firemen's Ret. Sys., 
    438 N.J. Super. 346
    ,
    354 (App. Div. 2014).
    The facts in this case are distinctive.           O'Neil reported to
    the bar's parking lot and discovered his brother had killed himself
    using a shotgun.    O'Neil saw his brother slumped over in the car
    with a gaping hole in his chest.          As such, O'Neil's discovery of
    his   brother's   body   was   a   "direct   personal   experience"     under
    Patterson.    In addition, the incident involved            the death of
    O'Neil's brother, not a stranger.         The circumstance qualifies as
    a "horror-inducing event" as described in Patterson.
    The Board found that O'Neil did not meet the Patterson test
    because he witnessed only the aftermath of his brother's suicide.
    O'Neil suffers from a serious injury, PTSD, directly attributable
    to the discovery of his brother's death by suicide. The limitation
    imposed by the Board, that the violence must be threatened or
    undertaken in the claimant's presence, is nowhere expressed in
    Patterson.   Instead of following Patterson, the Board relied on
    unpublished decisions that are not on point here.
    The Court's holdings in Richardson and Patterson compel an
    award of accidental disability retirement benefits under the rare
    9                               A-4846-15T3
    and unique circumstances presented in this case.   Accordingly, we
    reverse the Board's decision and remand to the Board to grant
    accidental disability retirement benefits to O'Neil.
    Reversed and remanded.   We do not retain jurisdiction.
    10                           A-4846-15T3