Richard J. West v. Boeing Company ( 2024 )


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  •                                                                                              Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    April 2, 2024
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    RICHARD J. WEST,                                                  No. 58162-1-II
    Appellant,
    v.
    BOEING COMPANY AND DEPARTMENT                               UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES OF THE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,
    Respondents.
    LEE, J. — Richard J. West appeals the superior court’s order confirming the decision by
    the Board of Industrial Appeals (Board) to deny West’s worker’s compensation claim. Because
    substantial evidence supports the superior court’s findings, and those findings support its
    conclusion that West did not suffer an industrial injury within the meaning of the Industrial
    Insurance Act (IIA), Title 51 RCW, we affirm the superior court’s order.
    FACTS
    West worked as a machine tool mechanic with Boeing Company for 34 years. West’s
    position as a machine tool mechanic sometimes required heavy lifting. West alleged that in
    September 2018, he was performing maintenance on a machine that required him to move a steel
    lid he estimated weighed 100-130 pounds. West allegedly injured himself by lifting the lid.
    West subsequently filled out an injury report (SIF-2 form) in December of 2018, but he did
    not list a date of injury on the SIF-2 form. In the SIF-2 form, West indicated that he had a strain
    with “‘no real pain’” to the lower part of his body. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 164. The Department
    No. 58162-1-II
    of Labor and Industries (Department) denied West’s injury claim in October 2019, and affirmed
    its decision on May 6, 2020. West appealed the Department’s decision to the Board.
    A.      HEARING BEFORE INDUSTRIAL APPEALS JUDGE
    At a hearing on West’s appeal to the Board before an Industrial Appeals Judge (IAJ), West
    and his wife, Moniegyn West, both testified. West and Boeing1 each submitted depositions from
    their respective medical experts, Dr. Brian Welch and Dr. Daniel Nadig. The only issue before
    the IAJ was “whether [West] suffered an industrial injury in the course of employment.” CP at
    78.
    1.      The Wests’ Testimony
    West testified that in September 2018, he lifted a steel lid about 3/8 inches thick and 24
    inches across while at work. West estimated the lid weighed between 100 and 130 pounds. He
    initially testified that when he lifted the lid he “felt discomfort” on the lower right side of his groin.
    CP at 119. However, West later testified that when he picked up the lid he felt “just a whoosh
    down in [his] lower groin” and no “other symptoms or sensations.” CP at 156. West was able to
    finish the remainder of his shift, and he continued “working and performing normal activities” in
    the weeks and months after the lifting incident; any pain arose “at a later date.” CP at 158.
    West also testified that sometime after the lifting incident, his wife noticed a bump coming
    out of his body. The bump became swollen, and West experienced increasing pain.
    1
    “If an employer insures through the state fund, the Department [of Labor and Industries] pays
    benefits directly to workers.” Boeing Co. v. Doss, 
    183 Wn.2d 54
    , 58, 
    347 P.3d 1083
     (2015).
    However, “[s]elf insured employers . . . pay directly to workers any disability and medical
    benefits” and “are generally responsible for all disability and medical costs associated with their
    workers’ compensation claims.” 
    Id.
     Because Boeing is a self-insured employer, it responded to
    West’s appeal.
    2
    No. 58162-1-II
    In August 2019, West sought treatment from Dr. Robert Wright, who surgically repaired a
    hernia.2 On an intake form, West indicated that there was “a specific incident [West] associated
    with . . . first noticing [his] hernia,” and that it occurred approximately 6-7 months before the
    August 2019 visit. CP at 204. Following surgery, West went to see Dr. Welch because the area
    where his hernia had been was still swollen. As of the date of his testimony before the IAJ (June
    8, 2021), West claimed the area was “still very swollen and . . . red and puss comes out of it.” CP
    at 124.
    On cross-examination, West discussed several visits he made to his primary care physician,
    Dr. David Schumer, between September 2018 and July 2019. West acknowledged that none of
    Dr. Schumer’s chart notes for those visits listed a hernia or groin injury. West also acknowledged
    that Dr. Schumer never prescribed West any medication related to a hernia or groin injury.
    West’s wife, Moniegyn,3 testified that West injured himself in September 2018. According
    to Moniegyn, West came home and “said he’s not feeling good. He lift[ed] something—heavy
    stuff and he felt something’s wrong in his back.” CP at 81. After a couple weeks, Moniegyn
    noticed a bump growing under West’s stomach, on the right side of his body.
    2
    Dr. Nadig explained a hernia as follows: hernias “occur[] when a tissue breaks down over time
    and then develops into a protrusion, a defect in the floor of that canal in the lower abdomen. And
    the tissue pushes through and that is what is referred to as a hernia. So the defect that forms is the
    hernia defect, and then the tissue that protrudes through is called a herniated tissue. And the lining
    of the abdominal cavity protrudes through that hernia defect, and that is called a hernia sac.” CP
    at 282.
    3
    To avoid confusion, we will refer to Richard West by his last name and to Moniegyn West by
    her first name. We mean no disrespect.
    3
    No. 58162-1-II
    2.     Dr. Welch’s Deposition Testimony
    Dr. Welch introduced himself as a general surgeon whose practice includes inguinal hernia
    repair, which accounted for more than 35% of Dr. Welch’s practice. However, Dr. Welch did not
    treat West’s hernia; rather, West came to Dr. Welch in January 2020, after West’s hernia repair
    surgery, complaining of “pain in [the] hernia site.” CP at 241. Based on an ultrasound and physical
    examination, Dr. Welch concluded West no longer had a hernia. Dr. Welch testified that he saw
    West at least twice more following their initial appointment. Dr. Welch recalled West reporting
    an absence of pain but continued swelling during the last appointment. However, Dr. Welch found
    “little to no swelling” upon examination and told West to increase activities since he was no longer
    in pain. CP at 260.
    Dr. Welch described an inguinal hernia as “a hernia through the inguinal canal, meaning,
    in the groins going through the oblique muscles.” CP at 238-39. According to Dr. Welch, inguinal
    hernias can be caused by “a single strenuous lifting event.” CP at 240. The amount of exertion
    required would vary by person and muscle strength, and inguinal hernias could even occur “during
    normal activity.” CP at 240. West did not tell Dr. Welch how his hernia occurred during their
    visits.
    Dr. Welch testified that on a more probable than not basis, a proximate cause of West’s
    inguinal hernia could be “lifting a heavy lid at work with the onset of immediate discomfort, and
    then a noticeable bulge . . . later on.” CP at 248. However, Dr. Welch also admitted that as of
    June 22, 2020, the last day Dr. Welch treated West, Dr. Welch “did not find that Mr. West’s
    surgically treated hernia was proximately caused, aggravated, or worsened by an industrial injury
    in September of 2018.” CP at 260.
    4
    No. 58162-1-II
    Dr. Welch acknowledged that he was not provided with West’s medical records for the
    time period between December 2018 and July 2019. Dr. Welch also testified that prior to his
    conversation with West’s counsel the day before his deposition, he had no document or opinion
    “relating to Mr. West’s surgically treated hernia to any industrial injury or event in September of
    2018.” CP at 261.
    3.      Dr. Nadig’s Deposition Testimony
    Dr. Nadig is a board certified general surgeon whose practice includes hernia diagnosis
    and repair. Dr. Nadig testified that he had repaired “several hundred” hernias over the course of
    his career. CP at 281.
    Dr. Nadig independently evaluated West on July 30, 2019. Dr. Nadig also reviewed
    medical records from West’s other medical providers, including Dr. Schumer and Dr. Wright.
    Like Dr. Welch, Dr. Nadig testified extensively concerning inguinal hernias and their
    potential causes. Dr. Nadig explained that hernias could be congenital or develop over time. He
    also acknowledged that “very serious trauma” could “conceivably” cause an inguinal hernia but
    said such circumstances were “rare.” CP at 281. Dr. Nadig disagreed that there had to be an
    inciting incident or event, like an alleged lifting injury, to create West’s hernia.
    Dr. Nadig stated that the medical literature concerning inguinal hernias did not support a
    conclusion that occupations requiring “lifting, pushing, pulling . . . lead[] to more hernias . . .
    develop[ing].” CP at 296. In fact, Dr. Nadig has seen inguinal hernias in patients “crushed
    between . . . two big objects,” such as a wall and a car. CP at 284. When a traumatic injury causes
    an inguinal hernia, it would “happen[] with a lot of pain” that would be “immediately noticeable.”
    5
    No. 58162-1-II
    CP at 284. Furthermore, an inguinal hernia caused by trauma would result in “a big protrusion”
    and “bruising” “from the very beginning.” CP at 285.
    In Dr. Nadig’s opinion, West’s hernia was not the type of hernia “typically caused by a
    single traumatic event or lifting event.” CP at 281. Rather, Dr. Nadig opined that West’s hernia
    was the “type . . . that occurs when a tissue breaks down over time and then develops into a
    protrusion.” CP at 282. The tissue break down could have been the result of aging; Dr. Nadig
    noted that for American men, “hernia[s] increase[] proportionately with years of life.” CP at 283.
    With regard to the whooshing sensation West allegedly experienced when he lifted the lid, Dr.
    Nadig testified that the whooshing sensation could have been the result of a fatty mass moving
    through an extant hernia. Thus, Dr. Nadig testified that West’s “right inguinal hernia on a more
    probable than not basis [was] unrelated to industrial injury o[n] September 9th, 2018.” CP at 294.
    Dr. Nadig also opined that there was no temporary or permanent aggravation of any pre-existing
    condition.
    4.      IAJ’s Proposed Decision and Order
    The IAJ issued a written proposed decision and order (proposed order). In the proposed
    order, the IAJ affirmed the Department’s order affirming its earlier denial of West’s claim,
    concluding it was “correct.” CP at 30. This was because, as the IAJ concluded, “West did not
    sustain an industrial injury within the meaning of RCW 51.08.100 on or about September 9, 2018.”
    CP at 30.
    The IAJ found that both Dr. Welch and Dr. Nadig were “very well qualified, and both gave
    an excellent explanation of what is an inguinal hernia.” CP at 29. The IAJ recognized that Dr.
    Welch was a “treating provider.” CP at 29. However, the IAJ also found that Dr. Welch “simply
    6
    No. 58162-1-II
    did not have an adequate foundation for his opinions regarding causation. Dr. Nadig, on the other
    hand, did have an excellent understanding of Mr. West’s prior history.” CP at 29.
    B.     APPEAL TO THE BOARD AND SUPERIOR COURT
    West filed a petition for review of the IAJ’s proposed order with the Board, asking that the
    Board “reverse and remand the [IAJ’s proposed order].” CP at 11. The Board denied West’s
    petition for review and adopted the IAJ’s proposed order as its own decision and order. West then
    appealed the Board’s decision and order to the superior court.
    The superior court held a bench trial on February 24, 2023, and issued a written judgment
    and order affirming the Board’s decision. The superior court found that West “did not sustain an
    injury in the course of his employment . . . on or about September 9, 2018,” and concluded that
    West “did not sustain an industrial injury within the meaning of RCW 51.08.100 on or about
    September 9, 2018.” CP at 461. West subsequently filed a motion for reconsideration, which the
    superior court denied as untimely. The superior court also stated that even if the court were to
    consider the motion for reconsideration on its merits, the court would deny the motion.
    West appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    A.     LEGAL PRINCIPLES
    Under the IIA, workers injured on the job are entitled to compensation for their injuries.
    RCW 51.32.010. The IIA defines “‘injury’” as “a sudden and tangible happening, of a traumatic
    nature, producing an immediate or prompt result, and occurring from without, and such physical
    conditions as result therefrom.” RCW 51.08.100. RCW 51.08.100 “provides an objective test by
    which it is necessary to relate the injury to some identifiable happening, event, cause or occurrence
    7
    No. 58162-1-II
    capable of being fixed at some point in time and connected with the employment.” Spino v. Dep’t
    of Labor & Indus., 
    1 Wn. App. 730
    , 733, 
    463 P.2d 256
     (1969), review denied, 
    77 Wn.2d 962
    (1970).
    A workplace injury is compensable if the injury occurs during the course of employment
    and the worker can establish a causal relation between the injury and the condition for which
    compensation is sought. Masco Corp. v. Suarez, 7 Wn. App. 2d 342, 347, 
    433 P.3d 824
    , review
    denied, 
    193 Wn.2d 1015
     (2019). The causal relationship must be “established by sufficient
    medical testimony.” Goyne v. Quincy-Columbia Basin Irrig. Dist., 
    80 Wn. App. 676
    , 682, 
    910 P.2d 1321
     (1996).
    When a claimant appeals the superior court’s decision on an IIA claim, “‘review is limited
    to examination of the record to see whether substantial evidence supports the findings made after
    the superior court’s de novo review, and whether the court’s conclusions of law flow from the
    findings.’” Rogers v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 
    151 Wn. App. 174
    , 180, 
    210 P.3d 355
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (quoting Ruse v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 
    138 Wn.2d 1
    , 5, 
    977 P.2d 570
    (1999)), review denied, 
    167 Wn.2d 1015
     (2009). Evidence is substantial “if it ‘convince[s] an
    unprejudiced, thinking mind of the truth of that to which the evidence is directed.’” Street v.
    Weyerhaeuser Co., 
    189 Wn.2d 187
    , 205, 
    399 P.3d 1156
     (2017) (alteration in original) (quoting
    Ehman v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 
    33 Wn.2d 584
    , 597, 
    206 P.2d 787
     (1949)). “Credibility
    determinations are solely for the trier of fact and cannot be reviewed on appeal.” Cantu v. Dep’t
    of Labor & Indus., 
    168 Wn. App. 14
    , 22, 
    277 P.3d 685
     (2012).
    When the superior court confirms “the Board’s decision . . . it is unnecessary for the
    superior court to make its own findings. The superior court can make its own findings or reach a
    8
    No. 58162-1-II
    different result only if the judge finds by a preponderance of the evidence that the Board’s findings
    and decisions are erroneous.” Harder Mech., Inc. v. Tierney, 
    196 Wn. App. 384
    , 391, 
    384 P.3d 241
     (2016). If the superior court “confirms the Board’s findings and decision, the Board’s findings
    survive and provide the basis for substantial evidence review by the appellate court.” Id. at 392.
    Here, the superior court confirmed that the Board’s decision was correct. The superior
    court entered its own order; however, the superior court’s order included findings of fact and
    conclusions of law that mirrored the IAJ’s proposed order, which was adopted by the Board.
    B.     SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE SUPPORTS THE FINDING AND CONCLUSION THAT WEST DID NOT
    SUFFER AN INJURY WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE IIA
    West argues that the superior court erred by adopting and affirming the Board’s conclusion
    that his injury was not compensable. We disagree.
    On appeal, the parties dispute whether West sustained an injury in the course of his
    employment. The point of contention is whether the lifting incident at Boeing on September 9,
    2018 was the proximate cause of West’s hernia.
    Here, West acknowledged telling his surgeon that the “specific incident” he “associated
    with . . . first noticing [his] hernia” occurred 6-7 months before the August 2019 medical visit,
    meaning the incident occurred in January or February 2019, several months after the lifting
    incident. CP at 204. West also testified that besides the whooshing sensation, he experienced no
    “other symptoms or sensations” after lifting the lid in September 2018 and was able to finish the
    remainder of his shift. CP at 156. Moniegyn corroborated the delayed onset of West’s symptoms,
    testifying that she noticed a bump a “[c]ouple weeks” after the lifting incident. CP at 84.
    9
    No. 58162-1-II
    Dr. Nadig testified that the lifting incident did not cause West’s hernia nor did it aggravate
    a pre-existing condition. Specifically, Dr. Nadig stated that inguinal hernias are rarely caused by
    trauma and that West’s lifting incident was not the kind of extreme trauma Dr. Nadig would expect
    to cause such a hernia. According to Dr. Nadig, a trauma induced inguinal hernia would cause
    immediate pain and “a big protrusion” “from the very beginning.” CP at 285.
    Substantial evidence supports the finding that the lifting incident in September 2018 did
    not cause West’s hernia. And this finding supports the conclusion that West did not suffer a
    compensable injury within the meaning of the Act.
    Both West and Boeing dedicate substantial portions of their briefs to arguments regarding
    West and the experts’ credibility. However, we do not review credibility determinations. Cantu,
    
    168 Wn. App. at 22
    . Thus, we do not address the parties’ credibility arguments; the triers of fact
    below already addressed the relative weight of each expert’s testimony and found Dr. Nadig more
    persuasive than Dr. Welch.
    C.     RAP 14.2 COSTS REQUEST
    Boeing requests reasonable costs pursuant to RAP 14.2. RAP 14.2 allows the “award [of]
    costs to the party that substantially prevails on review.” Because Boeing is the prevailing party,
    we award Boeing its reasonable costs; costs will be determined by the court commissioner.
    CONCLUSION
    Substantial evidence supports the superior court’s finding and that finding supports the
    conclusion that West did not suffer a compensable injury within the meaning of the IIA. Therefore,
    we affirm the superior court’s order.
    10
    No. 58162-1-II
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW 2.06.040,
    it is so ordered.
    Lee, J.
    We concur:
    Glasgow, J.
    Cruser, C.J.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 58162-1

Filed Date: 4/2/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/2/2024