Court Opinion

ID: 2755678
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-11-26 16:06:27.210568+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:26:06.049026
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                  No. 14-0239
                           Filed November 26, 2014

MENARD, INCORPORATED and AMERICAN
ZURICH INSURANCE CO.,
     Petitioners-Appellants,

vs.

ALEN BAHIC,
     Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Michael D. Huppert,

Judge.

      An employer seeks reversal of the district court’s ruling upholding the Iowa

Workers’ Compensation Commissioner’s award of benefits to an employee.

AFFIRMED.

      Charles A. Blades and Cynthia S. Sueppel, of Scheldrup, Blades,

Schrock, Smith, Aranza P.C., Cedar Rapids, for appellants.

      Nicholas W. Platt of Hopkins & Huebner, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee.

      Heard by Mullins, P.J., and Bower and McDonald, JJ.
                                          2

BOWER, J.

       The workers’ compensation commissioner found Alen Bahic suffered a

sixty percent loss of earning capacity and also found Bahic achieved maximum

healing from his injury in October 2012.        The commissioner ordered Bahic’s

employer, Menard, Inc.,1 to commence paying permanent partial disability

benefits in October 2012. The district court upheld the agency action.

       On appeal, Menard claims (1) Bahic’s “healing period terminated in May of

2011” because he was not working in an “accommodated job” or a “light duty” job

but had actually acquired a new permanent job and (2) “any award of permanent

disability should commence” in May 2011. Menard also claims the district court

erred in upholding the commissioner’s industrial disability award.           After our

review, we agree with the district court. Accordingly, we affirm.

I.     Background Facts and Proceedings

       A. Injury and Treatment. Bahic was hired by Menard in February 2008.

He is an immigrant without a high school diploma, and his English-speaking skills

are better than his reading/writing skills. Bahic worked as a laborer in shipping

and receiving—loading and unloading items, running forklifts, and doing manual

lifting, including manually lifting items weighing from 100 to 200 pounds, such as

household appliances. Bahic’s pre-injury work history consisted almost entirely

of physical labor from which he is now precluded as a result of his permanent

work restrictions. On his initial job application Bahic was asked if he had been

1
 Zurich Insurance, Inc., the insurance carrier for Menard, joins Menard in this appeal.
References herein to Menard include the insurance carrier.
                                             3

convicted of a felony. Although he had been, he did not so indicate on the

application form. Menard did not require a background check for this position.

         Over two years into his employment,2 on August 2, 2010, Bahic suffered a

stipulated work injury to his low back while unloading a front-load washer from a

high forklift. When his injury did not improve, Menard sent Bahic to the doctors at

Mercy West, who diagnosed back strain, prescribed medications, and ordered

work restrictions—no lifting over ten pounds. According to Menard’s Exhibit Q, it

paid Bahic temporary total disability benefits from January 6 to January 28,

2011.3

         When Bahic still did not improve, he was referred to an orthopedic

surgeon, Dr. Cassim Igram, who determined surgery was not warranted and who

referred Bahic to a physiatrist (physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist).

Dr. Igram also imposed significant work restrictions—no lifting over twenty

2
   Menard Exhibit P details Bahic’s weekly payment record for the thirteen weeks prior to
his injury and shows he was a hard worker. On top of his regular forty hours, Bahic
worked overtime hours each week from May 8, 2010, to July 31, 2010: six hours on one
week, seven hours on one week, eight hours on two weeks, nine hours on one week, ten
hours on three weeks, eleven hours on one week, twelve hours on two weeks, and
seventeen hours on two weeks—resulting in weekly hours ranging from forty-six hours to
fifty-seven hours.
3
   Iowa Code section 85.33(1) (2011) states an employer “shall pay” temporary total
disability benefits until the earliest of the employee (1) “has returned to work,” or (2) “is
medically capable of returning to employment substantially similar to the employment” at
the time of the injury.
         Temporary and healing-period benefits “refer to the same condition, but have
separate purposes depending on whether the injury leads to a permanent condition.”
Bell Bros. Heating & Air Conditioning v. Gwinn, 779 N.W.2d 193, 200 (Iowa 2010) (citing
Clark v. Vicorp Rests., Inc., 696 N.W.2d 596, 604 (Iowa 2005)). “If the injury results in a
permanent partial disability, payments made prior to an award of permanent partial
disability benefits are healing-period benefits. If the award does not result in permanent
disability, the payments are called total temporary disability benefits.” Id. “Nevertheless,
an award for healing-period benefits or total temporary disability benefits [does] not
depend on a finding of a permanent impairment.” Id.
                                         4

pounds and avoidance of repetitive activity.      Bahic continued to work in the

shipping and receiving department at Menard, although on light duty and within

the prescribed work restrictions.

       Menard selected physiatrist Dr. Michael Munhall, who started treatment in

February 2011 and provided Bahic with physical therapy, continued medications,

and work restrictions—no lifting over ten pounds. Store manager Mike Goode

transferred Bahic to the sales department. Bahic testified Menard provided him

with a chair due to his inability to stand for long periods; he answered phones,

helped customers, and helped with the product. Bahic enjoyed talking with the

customers and liked the job. He was trying to work forty hours per week, but with

his ongoing therapy, he was averaging thirty-five to forty hours per week. Bahic

explained he was warned because his hours were not full time: “I was kind of

getting in trouble, too, because—from human resource lady, because if you [are]

not averaging forty hours, you [are] not full time, see, so I did get warned by her a

couple of times.”

       Menard’s answers to interrogatories, Menard Exhibit O, stated Bahic

“worked light duty commencing February 2011 through the date of his

termination July 1, 2011.” Bahic’s light-duty status is also recognized in Menard

Exhibit Q, which shows Menard stopped paying temporary total benefits and

started paying temporary partial benefits to Bahic on January 30, 2011.

“‘Temporary partial benefits’ means benefits payable . . . to an employee

because of the employee’s temporary partial reduction in earning ability as a

result of the employee’s temporary partial disability.”     Iowa Code § 85.33(2).
                                         5

“Temporary partial disability” is the “condition of an employee for whom it is

medically indicated that the employee is not capable of returning to employment

substantially similar to the employment . . . engaged [in] at the time of injury, but

is able to perform other work consistent with the employee’s disability.” Id. §

85.33(2).

       On May 1, 2011, Bahic was formally transferred to the building materials

department as a sales representative. After the transfer Menard continued to

pay Bahic temporary partial disability benefits because his weekly earnings in

this sales position did not equal his weekly earnings at the time he was injured.

Each week, Menard calculated the reduction in earnings and paid Bahic the

difference. The weekly payments to Bahic starting with his May 8, 2011 check

and thereafter were: $66.22, $107.61, $109.40, $26.03, $177.10, $168.42,

$122.29, with a final check before his July 1, 2011 termination of $178.16. See

Mannes v. Fleetguard, Inc., 770 N.W.2d 826, 830 (Iowa 2009) (providing

“[t]emporary benefits are ordinarily established by direct evidence of actual wage

loss.”); see also Iowa Code § 85.33(4) (“The temporary partial benefit shall be [a

statutory] percent of the difference between the employee’s weekly earnings at

the time of injury . . . and the employee’s actual gross weekly income from

employment during the period of temporary partial disability,” i.e., during the

period Bahic is not medically capable of returning to employment substantially

similar to his pre-injury employment).

       When Dr. Munhall’s treatments did not alleviate Bahic’s symptoms, Dr.

Munhall referred Bahic to Dr. Matthew Biggerstaff, a pain management specialist,
                                         6

who started treating Bahic on May 11, 2011.            Over several months, Dr.

Biggerstaff gave Bahic a series of epidural and trigger point injections.

       Goode thought Bahic showed promise as a salesperson after his transfer

to the building materials department. When an opening for an outside sales

representative became available, Goode encouraged Bahic to apply because the

job was within Bahic’s physical restrictions4 and would potentially increase his

compensation. For this job Menard required a criminal background check due to

the amount of contact with outside customers.           After Bahic submitted the

paperwork for the background check but before the results came back, Bahic

sought out Goode and told him there “might be a problem” due to his previous

felony conviction.

       Eventually, Menard terminated Bahic’s employment for falsifying his initial

job application. Bahic’s last day was July 1, 2011. Recognizing the change in

Bahic’s compensation status caused by the termination, on July 3, 2011, Menard

changed Bahic’s weekly compensation payments from temporary partial disability

to temporary total disability—an unvarying $427.91 per week.

       Dr. Biggerstaff’s initial injections did not improve Bahic’s condition. After

Bahic’s August 17, 2011 appointment with Dr. Munhall, he opined Bahic had

achieved maximum medical improvement (MMI).                Dr. Igram “apparently”

concurred in this assessment,5 as did Dr. Carlstrom.

4
  While there was some loading and unloading required in the outside sales job, Goode
assured Bahic he would not have to do those tasks because Menard would provide help
for the loading and unloading.
5
  We state Dr. Igram “apparently” concurred because the exhibit supporting this
contention is not included in the administrative record. Nevertheless, Dr. Carlstrom
                                          7

       Based on the medical opinions, Menard stopped paying Bahic temporary

total disability benefits and on August 17, 2011, converted the payments to

permanent partial disability benefits. See Iowa Code § 85.34(1) (stating if an

employee has suffered an injury causing permanent partial disability, the

employer shall pay healing period benefits until “the employee has returned to

work,” or the employee is at MMI, or “the employee is medically capable of

returning to” substantially similar employment as the employee’s time-of-injury

employment, “whichever occurs first”); see also id. § 85.34(2) (“Compensation for

permanent partial disability shall begin at the termination of the healing period.”).

       We note at the hearing, Menard urged the deputy to find the date of

August 17, 2011, was the conversion date for the start of permanent partial

disability benefits. However, Dr. Biggerstaff was still treating Bahic, giving him

another injection in September 2011. When improvement still did not occur, Dr.

Biggerstaff recommended Bahic use a spinal cord stimulator (SCS). In February

2012 Dr. Biggerstaff opined Bahic was at MMI but continued to recommend a

SCS trial, which occurred in March after Menard approved it. Based on the

results, Dr. Biggerstaff concluded further SCS treatment was not warranted.

       At the request of Menard, Dr. Mooney evaluated Bahic in August 2012.

Dr. Mooney opined Bahic had not achieved MMI and suggested additional

courses of treatment. Also in August 2012, Dr. Biggerstaff recommended Bahic

undergo a medical branch block with possible radiofrequency ablation.

stated he reviewed Dr. Igram’s conclusions and agreed with him that MMI occurred on
August 17, 2011. Both the commissioner and the district court decisions note the
missing exhibit but also note Dr. Igram’s opinion is not disputed by Bahic. Also, both
decisions reference Dr. Igram’s opinion.
                                            8

       In a September 2012 letter, Dr. Biggerstaff opined that due to the

intervening treatment, which occurred after his February MMI opinion, Bahic had

not achieved MMI as of September 2012. Dr. Biggerstaff also opined that until

the last treatment modality was done, Bahic would not achieve MMI. Also in

September 2012, Bahic obtained employment selling used cars at Hyundai.

Although he had actively looked for work, this was his first job after his

termination.

       After the final medical procedure was performed by Dr. Biggerstaff, he

opined Bahic was at MMI as of October 8, 2012. Dr. Mooney concurred. At the

hearing, Bahic urged the deputy to find October 8, 2012, was the conversion date

for the commencement of permanent partial disability benefits.

       B. Hearing Report. Prior to the hearing, the parties filled out a hearing

report that stipulated to the matters in agreement and stated the disputed issues.

The parties stipulated to: (1) an employer-employee relationship, (2) the date of

injury (8/2/2010), (3) the “injury is a cause of temporary disability during a period

of recovery,” (4) the “injury is a cause of permanent disability,” and (5) the “injury

is an industrial disability.” The hearing report listed the following issues relevant

to this appeal as issues in dispute:

       1. Is the claimant entitled to either temporary total disability, temporary

partial disability, or healing period benefits from July 1, 2011, through the hearing

date, i.e., current and running benefits?

       2. Is the commencement date for permanent partial disability benefits, if

any are awarded, “the 17th day of August, 2011 per Drs. Munhall, Igram, and
                                         9

Carlstrom” [Menard position] or is the commencement date October 8, 2012, “per

Drs. Biggerstaff and Mooney” [Bahic position]? 6

       3. Did Bahic’s July 1, 2011 termination constitute a refusal of suitable

work under Iowa Code section 85.33(3)?

       C. October 15, 2012 Hearing. Prior to the testimony, the attorneys and

the deputy had a lengthy discussion on the record:

              BAHIC ATTORNEY: . . . The MMI has been reached. I don’t
       think the employer would agree to [Dr. Biggerstaff’s MMI date of
       October 8, 2012.] I don’t know if you would or not, but . . . .
              MENARD ATTORNEY: No. We’d still assert that the MMI
       date should be . . . August 17, 2011, when Dr. Munhall, Igram, and
       Carlstrom said he was at MMI.
              THE DEPUTY: So the only stipulation is that he’s at MMI.
              MENARD ATTORNEY: By one of those two MMI dates.

(Emphasis added.)      The parties presented their witnesses.      At the close of

evidence, the deputy stated: “Okay. We need to probably change this hearing

report, because there is a stipulation—both parties stipulate Claimant at MMI,

date disputed. Right?” Both attorneys concurred. The deputy set the schedule

for post-hearing briefs.

       Consistent with the stipulations in the hearing report, Menard did not claim

in its post-hearing brief that Bahic should be converted to permanent partial

disability benefits in May 2011. Rather, Menard asserted the deputy should set

the conversion date to permanent partial disability benefits on August 17, 2011.

Menard also asked the deputy to follow its October functional capacities

6
 We note the hearing report does not list an issue regarding benefits Menard paid to
Bahic prior to July 1, 2011. Menard now argues its payments should have converted to
permanent benefits as of May 1, 2011.
                                           10

evaluation (FCE)7 and claimed Bahic’s industrial disability was 15-20%. Menard

sought “credit against any permanent disability award for all of the weekly

benefits that have been paid since the August 17, 2011 MMI date.” Finally,

Menard’s brief to the deputy stated:

              [T]hree different physicians—two of them treating
       physicians—have opined that claimant reached MMI as of August
       17, 2011, when defendants converted the payments to permanency
       ....
              . . . With claimant at MMI, this renders moot all issues as to
       whether claimant is entitled to additional healing period benefits.
       Nonetheless, [Menard] contends that claimant is not entitled to
       healing period benefits because he was terminated for misconduct
       [on July 1] that was tantamount to refusal to perform offered work.

(Emphasis added.)

       D.   Agency Decisions.         In his ruling, the deputy noted the parties’

agreement at the hearing that Bahic had achieved maximum improvement:

       When the hearing report was initially submitted to me at hearing,
       claimant was seeking in the alternative a running award or a
       permanency award . . . . After a discussion with the parties, the
       claimant agreed with defendants that claimant had achieved [MMI]
       but the parties disagreed as to when it occurred. The factual issue
       of when claimant achieved maximum healing was then submitted to
       me. Defendants believe the date was August 17, 2011. Claimant
       believes that date to be October 8, 2012.

(Emphasis added.) The deputy detailed why he found Bahic to be a credible

witness.    The deputy concluded Bahic achieved medical stability, MMI, in

October 2012. While acknowledging the other opinions as to MMI, the deputy

selected Dr. Biggerstaff’s date because he “was the authorized treating physician

7
  Bahic’s October 5, 2012 FCE showed him capable of working at the light sedentary
level and lifting up to fifteen to twenty pounds, depending on the range of the lift. Dr.
Mooney’s supplemental report agreed with the FCE and stated Bahic could return to full
time work consistent with the FCE restrictions.
                                          11

and his most recent views are controlling.” The deputy ruled Bahic’s work injury

resulted in a permanent physical impairment of between 5-8% to his body as a

whole.

         As for industrial disability, the deputy found the work injury had restricted

Bahic to a “light physical demand level” as shown in Menard’s October FCE.

Thus, Bahic “is capable of light duty work” and “his current limitations are solely

due to the injury at Menard.” The deputy ultimately concluded, based on Bahic’s

unique factors of disability, the work injury had resulted in a 60% loss of earning

capacity. The deputy also ruled:

                Given the finding that claimant achieved maximum healing
         from his injury on October 8, 2012, claimant is entitled to healing
         period benefits from July 1, 2011 [termination] through October 8,
         2012, and permanency benefits shall commence on October 9,
         2012. [Menard’s] argument that claimant’s termination for cause
         constitutes an intentional refusal of suitable work, which bars any
         recovery for healing period benefits [from July 1 to MMI] under Iowa
         Code section 85.33(3) is not current agency precedent.

The deputy order Menard to pay Bahic (1) permanent partial disability benefits

commencing in October 2012 and (2) healing period benefits from July 1, 2011,

until the commencement of permanency benefits in October 2012.

         Menard appealed to the commissioner, challenging “the commencement

date for permanent partial disability benefits.”       Menard asserted Bahic: (1)

“returned to work at Menard’s with restrictions on January 30, 2011”; (2) “started

working full time in the building materials department, in a sales job, a job he did

for six months and which he liked, [h]e was working 35-40 hours a week”; (3) was

“formally transferred” by Menard on May 1, 2011, “into the full time sales position

in the building materials department”; and (4) was placed by Dr. Munhall “at
                                         12

maximum medical improvement as of August 17, 2011.” Menard claimed Bahic’s

industrial disability “cannot be any more than 30 to 35 percent.” Additionally:

       The Commencement Date for Permanent Partial Disability is
       August 17, 2011.
              The commencement date for permanent partial disability in
       this case is the date of maximum medical improvement set by Dr.
       Munhall, and agreed to by Dr. Igram and Dr. Carlstrom, August 17,
       2011. As of this date, no further significant improvement from the
       work injury was anticipated. All conservative treatment measures
       had been exhausted. Ratings of permanent impairment could be
       and were assessed.
              Further, the claimant had by this time returned to work. He
       had been working full time at Menard’s at least since being
       transferred into the sales position in the building materials
       department in May 2011. This return to work terminated the
       healing period. Iowa Code section 85.34(1). To the extent not
       terminated by then, healing period was terminated when Dr.
       Munhall, claimant’s primary treating physician, concluded claimant
       had exhausted all treatment measures and was at MMI.

In August 2013 the commissioner summarily affirmed and adopted the deputy’s

decision as the agency decision.8

       E. District Court. Menard appealed to the district court and advanced

the identical arguments made to commissioner and quoted above. The district

court affirmed the commissioner’s decision:

               The parties agree that Bahic was not eligible for healing
       period benefits after he returned to work on a light duty basis . . . .
       [H]owever, he may have re-qualified for such benefits over a period
       of time after he returned to work, if he once again became
       ineligible. The court is satisfied that this resumption would have
       occurred after Bahic was terminated on July 1, as this termination
       on the part of Menard would equate with an inability on its part to
       offer Bahic suitable work. As of the date Bahic was terminated, it is
       undisputed that no practitioner had concluded that he was at MMI;
       further, there is no dispute that as of July 1, 2011, Bahic was
       unable to return to the work he engaged in prior to his work injury.

8
 The commissioner corrected scrivener’s errors. This correction was noted and adopted
by the district court. The correction is not at issue in this appeal.
                                          13

       Accordingly, the only issue regarding healing period benefits
       appears to be not whether they properly resumed after he was
       terminated, but through what date they should run. This, in turn, is
       dependent on what date the commissioner determined Bahic to
       have achieved MMI; as long as that date is supported by
       substantial evidence, the fact that other earlier dates are possible is
       not grounds for reversal.

(Citations omitted and emphasis added.) This appeal followed.

II. Scope and Standards of Review

       “The Iowa Administrative Procedure Act requires the district court to

review agency action when a party invokes the district court’s jurisdiction.” Gits

Mfg. Co. v. Frank, ___ N.W.2d ___, 2014 WL 5286513, at *2 (Iowa 2014). Upon

the district court’s review, it “may reverse or modify an agency’s decision if the

agency’s decision is erroneous under a section of the Act and a party’s

substantial rights have been prejudiced.” Id. When this appellate court reviews

a district court decision reviewing an agency action, our task is to determine if we

would reach the same result as the district court in applying the Act. See id. “If

our conclusions align, we affirm; otherwise we reverse.”           Dunlap v. Action

Warehouse, 824 N.W.2d 545, 554 (Iowa Ct. App. 2012).

       In resolving the “issue of whether substantial evidence supports the

agency’s findings,” the district court and this appellate court “can only grant relief”

when “a determination of fact by the agency ‘is not supported by substantial

evidence in the record before the court when that record is viewed as a whole.’”

Gits, 2014 WL 5286513, at *2 (quoting Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(f)). “Substantial

evidence supports an agency’s decision even if the interpretation of the evidence

may be open to a fair difference of opinion.” Id. (citing Arndt v. City of Le Claire,
                                        14

728 N.W.2d 389, 394-95 (Iowa 2007) (“It is the commissioner’s duty as the trier

of fact to determine the credibility of the witnesses, weigh the evidence, and

decide the facts in issue.”)). Accordingly, the district court and this appellate

court “should not consider the evidence insubstantial merely because the court[s]

may draw different conclusions from the record.” Id. (reversing the lower court’s

ruling that substantial evidence did not support the agency’s finding); see Arndt,

728 N.W.2d at 394 (“Making a determination as to whether evidence ‘trumps’

other evidence or whether one piece of evidence is ‘qualitatively weaker’ than

another piece of evidence is not an assessment for the district court or the court

of appeals to make when it conducts a substantial evidence review of an agency

decision.”).

       Further, we recognize the “[a]pplication of workers’ compensation laws to

facts as found by the commissioner is clearly vested in the commissioner.” See

Midwest Ambulance Serv. v. Ruud, 754 N.W.2d 860, 864 (Iowa 2008).

Therefore, we reverse only “upon a showing the commissioner’s application of

law to the facts of this case meets the demanding ‘irrational, illogical, or wholly

unjustifiable’ standard of section 17A.19(10)(m).” Id. at 865.

III.   Healing Period Benefits and Conversion to Permanency Benefits

       Despite the stipulations in the hearing report, the statements of counsel on

the record, and the statements of the deputy clarifying the hearing issues both

before and after the evidence, on appeal Menard claims (1) Bahic returned to

work full time in May of 2011 and thus his “healing period terminated in May of

2011,” and (2) “any award of permanent disability should commence” in May
                                         15

2011. Menard also claims the commissioner’s ruling commencing permanency

benefits in October 2012 “represents an irrational, illogical, or wholly unjustifiable

application of law to facts.”

       A. Applicable Law.       “Normally, an industrial disability gives rise to a

period of healing accompanied by loss of wages.” Gwinn, 779 N.W.2d at 200.

During the period of healing, “temporary benefits are payable to the injured

worker.” Id. In general, the temporary benefits attempt to replace lost wages

and to provide medical care. Id.

       “An employee is entitled to receive temporary partial benefits when the

employee is temporarily, partially disabled and accepts suitable work consistent

with [his] disability.” Mannes, 770 N.W.2d at 830. Employers pay temporary

partial benefits “‘because of the employee’s temporary partial reduction in

earning ability as a result of the employee’s temporary partial disability.’” Id.

(quoting Iowa Code § 85.33(2)).

               Permanent benefits and temporary benefits are very
       different. Temporary benefits compensate the employee for lost
       wages until he or she is able to return to work, whereas permanent
       benefits compensate . . . a loss in earning capacity (industrial
       disability). Permanent partial industrial disability benefits measure
       the extent to which the injury impairs the employee in the ability to
       earn wages. Conversely, temporary partial benefits are designed
       to reimburse the employee while he or she was temporarily
       disabled and still working for the employer (albeit in a different
       position). Temporary benefits are ordinarily established by direct
       evidence of actual wage loss.
                . . . There is no need to apply case law on permanent
       disability benefits from section 85.34 to define “temporary partial
       reduction in earning ability” under section 85.33. Section 85.33
       clearly defines the purpose of temporary partial benefits and
       subsection (4) sets forth a formula for calculating temporary partial
       benefits, based on actual reduction of income. Thus, as a matter of
                                         16

       law, temporary partial benefits cannot be awarded where there has
       been no reduction in income.

Id. at 830-31 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).

       “Any disability that remains after stabilization of the condition gives rise to

either a permanent partial or a permanent total award. In other words, maximum

physical recovery marks the end of the temporary disability benefits, and at that

point, any permanent disability benefits can be considered.” Gwinn, 779 N.W.2d

at 200.

       B. Analysis. Menard contends “the district court like the commissioner

failed to recognize that [Bahic,] at the time of his termination, was not working in

a temporary “light duty” job or an “accommodated” job, but had actually acquired

a new permanent job.

       As recognized by the district court, Bahic did not claim entitlement to

healing period benefits for the time he worked in the sales department. See Staff

Mgmt. v. Jimenez, 839 N.W.2d 640, 658 (Iowa 2013) (“Healing period benefits

are not payable when an employee returns to work.”). However, it is undisputed

“an employee may receive temporary partial disability benefits if he or she

returns to work and receives a reduction in wages from what he or she earned

prior to the injury.”9   Id. (citing Mannes, 770 N.W.2d at 830).        This is what

happened when Bahic returned to work, including the weeks after May 1, 2011.

9
  Bahic testified he had averaged fifty hours per week when he was in shipping and
receiving. After the injury, Menard cut the fifty-cent-per-hour bump he had earned for
running the forklift because he could not run the forklift. As expected, the amount of
Bahic’s weekly check for temporary partial benefits varied. Iowa Code section 85.33(4)
required Menard to pay a set percent of “the difference between the employee’s weekly
earnings at the time of injury” and “the employee’s actual gross weekly income from
employment during the period of temporary partial disability.”
                                       17

Menard’s payment log fully confirms this reality—Bahic was entitled to and

received temporary partial disability benefits.   In fact, Menard’s answers to

interrogatories and payment records rebut its own argument and show Menard

recognized Bahic was, in fact, in a job with a reduction in wages in May and June

2011—Menard paid Bahic temporary partial disability benefits during that time

because he was “entitled to receive temporary partial benefits when [he was]

temporarily, partially disabled and [had accepted] suitable work consistent with

[his] disability.” See Mannes, 770 N.W.2d at 830. Each week from February

through June 2011, Menard calculated its payment of temporary partial benefits

based on Bahic’s reduced income as compared to his pre-injury income. See id.

(stating temporary benefits are “established by direct evidence of actual wage

loss”). In conclusion, the reduction in Bahic’s wages entitling him to temporary

partial disability benefits clearly shows Bahic worked in a job with reduced wages

in May and June 2011.

       C. Commencement Date for Permanent Disability Payments. Menard

argues “any award of permanent disability should commence as of” May 1, 2012.

       Whether an employee has a permanent disability cannot be determined

until the employee has reached maximum medical improvement. Gwinn, 779

N.W.2d at 201. Stabilization of the employee’s medical condition “is the event

that allows a physician to make the determination that a particular medical

condition is permanent.” Id. at 200.

       At hearing, Menard’s counsel asked the deputy to find Bahic’s condition

stabilized on August 17, 2011, with Menard’s accompanying obligation to pay
                                          18

permanency benefits starting on that date.10 The manner in which the parties

conducted the hearing is consistent with the deputy’s understanding that the

issue before him was whether the commencement date for permanent partial

disability benefits is “the 17th day of August, 2011 per Drs. Munhall, Igram, and

Carlstrom” [Menard position] or October 8, 2012, “per Drs. Biggerstaff and

Mooney” [Bahic position]. See Jimenez, 839 N.W.2d at 657. Menard did not

present any evidence that permanency benefits should commence at a date

other than the date it claimed Bahic reached MMI and no doctor found Bahic’s

condition had stabilized in May of 2011. Menard’s payment record shows it, in

fact, converted Bahic to permanency benefits in August 2011 and not in May

2011. Therefore, we find no merit to Menard’s claim permanent benefits should

commence in May 2011.

       Accordingly, we agree with the district court’s decision (1) substantial

evidence supports the commissioner’s determination Bahic reached MMI in

October 2012, and (2) “finding another date for MMI on this record would

constitute an improper weighing of the evidence.” See Westling v. Hormel Foods

Corp., 810 N.W.2d 247, 254 (Iowa 2012). Finally, we are not persuaded the

commissioner’s ruling represents an irrational, illogical, or wholly unjustifiable

application of law to facts.

10
   At hearing, Menard’s counsel asked the deputy to find that Bahic’s termination
constituted a refusal of suitable work and for that reason, healing period benefits were
not owed on and after Bahic’s July 1, 2011 termination to the point of MMI and
permanency on August 17, 2011.
                                           19

IV. Industrial Disability

       Menard claims the district court erred in upholding the commissioner’s

finding of sixty percent industrial disability, contending the commissioner’s

determination must be reversed because it is not supported by substantial

evidence and involves an irrational, illogical, and wholly unjustifiable application

of law to fact. It contends (1) Bahic’s motivation to return to work is questionable,

(2) the commissioner “ignored the overwhelming evidence that [Bahic’s]

employment status after July 2011 was primarily attributable to his criminal

record,” and (3) the commissioner also ignored the fact Bahic “was employed in a

new job position in which he was particularly well suited” before his criminal

record was uncovered.

       Bahic responds the commissioner appropriately evaluated his job

prospects according to the consistent and extensive job search he performed.

Thus, even if his “short experience in building sales would qualify him for other

similar jobs, he was unable to find one of those jobs for over fourteen months

even while exhibiting high motivation to work.” Thus, Menard’s speculation as to

a possible and conceivable job market for Bahic “should not receive any

consideration when compared to the actual facts of the case and the actual

difficulty” he “had in finding a job.”      Second, Bahic notes the district court

correctly and succinctly addressed this issue by noting the conviction was a

factor he brought to the workplace before the work injury and cannot be used as

a reason to mitigate industrial disability after the injury.
                                       20

          Turning to the district court’s ruling, we note its conclusion: “The

commissioner’s determination [Bahic] sustained a 60% loss of earning capacity

from his work injury was both supported by substantial evidence and not the

result of irrational or illogical reasoning.” When we combine our review of the

record with Menard’s challenges, Bahic’s responses, and the district court’s well-

reasoned opinion, we agree with the district court.    See Gits Mfg., 2014 WL

5286513, at *2 (“The reviewing court only determines whether substantial

evidence supports a finding according to those witnesses whom the

commissioner believed.”); Dunlap, 824 N.W.2d at 554 (stating if our conclusions

align with the district court, we affirm). No purpose would be served by restating

the district court’s thoughtful and comprehensive analysis.      Accordingly, we

affirm.

          AFFIRMED.