Court Opinion

ID: 8405987
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-27 14:02:01.340584+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:47:06.221310
License: Public Domain

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             DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

                                 No. 19-AA-1112

                        SANTINO QUARANTA, PETITIONER,

                                            V.

                           DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                    DEPARTMENT OF EMPLOYMENT SERVICES,
                               RESPONDENT,

                                        and

                 D.C. UNITED and GREAT DIVIDE INSURANCE CO.,
                                INTERVENORS.

                    On Petition for Review of an Order of the
                         Compensation Review Board
                                  (CRB-085-19)

(Argued March 30, 2021                                Decided October 27, 2022)

      Benjamin T. Boscolo for petitioner.

      Sheryl A. Tirocchi for intervenors.

     Karl A. Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, with whom
Loren L. AliKhan, Solicitor General at the time, Caroline S. Van Zile, Principal
Deputy Solicitor General at the time, and Carl J. Schifferle, Deputy Solicitor
General, filed a Statement in Lieu of Brief based on the decision and order of the
Compensation Review Board.
                                          2

      Before MCLEESE and DEAHL, Associate Judges, and KRAVITZ, Associate
Judge, Superior Court of the District of Columbia.∗

      DEAHL, Associate Judge: Santino Quaranta sought to modify a compensation

order denying him wage-loss disability benefits. He claimed that he had experienced

a change of condition concerning his “degree of disability,” owing to a worsening

of his symptoms, sufficient to warrant such a modification. See D.C. Code § 32-

1524(a). He requested an evidentiary hearing on the matter. A Department of

Employment Services Administrative Law Judge dismissed his application,

concluding that Quaranta had not made the threshold factual showing that a change

in condition has occurred to entitle him to such a hearing. See Snipes v. D.C. Dep’t

of Emp’t Servs., 542 A.2d 832, 834-35, 834 n.4 (D.C. 1988). The Compensation

Review Board (CRB) affirmed, and Quaranta now petitions this court for review.

For the following reasons, we affirm.

                                          I.

      Santino Quaranta played professional soccer for D.C. United for about eight

years: first from 2001 to 2006, and then again from 2008 to 2011. During a match

in 2010, he “went blank” and suffered a concussion when a ball struck the right side

      ∗
          Sitting by designation pursuant to D.C. Code § 11-707(a).
                                          3

of his head. A year later, he sustained a more severe concussion when a teammate

accidentally elbowed him in the head during practice.        These injuries caused

Quaranta to miss several games, but he ultimately returned to play the final few

months of the 2011 season, after which his contract with D.C. United expired. While

D.C. United did not offer to renew Quaranta’s contract for the 2012 season, he had

offers from “five or six” clubs to sign him at a comparable salary. Notwithstanding

those offers, in 2012 Quaranta opted to retire from professional soccer and pursue

other ventures, including co-founding the Pipeline Soccer Club, where he coached

and currently serves as vice president.

      Two years later, in 2014, Quaranta filed a claim for permanent partial

disability (PPD) benefits. He contended that he suffered from post-concussive

symptoms that precluded him from playing professional soccer and “at times may

be debilitating and prevent him from performing his job” with Pipeline. As support

for his claim, he produced an April 30, 2013, report from his treating physician, Dr.

Kevin Crutchfield, noting that Quaranta “still gets intermittent dizziness and

unsteadiness with headaches.” He also provided an April 8, 2014, report from Dr.

Crutchfield, opining that Quaranta’s head injuries “have led to a chronic recurrent

inflammatory condition of the occipital nerve.” At that time, Dr. Crutchfield

recommended a series of “trigger point” steroid injections and, if the steroid
                                          4

injections proved unsuccessful, a “simple” occipital nerve release procedure. This

2014 claim was denied on the basis that Quaranta had voluntarily retired for reasons

unrelated to his head injuries, and so could not recoup the salary he voluntarily

walked away from. See D.C. Code § 32-1508(3)(V)(iii). The CRB affirmed, as did

this court. Quaranta v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., No. 17-AA-195, Mem. Op. & J.

at 5-6 (D.C. Apr. 20, 2018) (Quaranta I).

      A year later, in 2019, Quaranta applied for a modification of the compensation

order denying benefits, claiming a “change of conditions.” See D.C. Code § 32-

1524(a).   His application stated that he was again seeking permanent partial

disability benefits, with little explication. Intervenors D.C. United and Great Divide

Insurance Company requested a Snipes hearing, which is a preliminary hearing

where the applicant bears the burden of producing evidence demonstrating a “reason

to believe that a change of conditions” warranting an award modification has

occurred. Snipes, 542 A.2d at 835. A hearing before a Department of Employment

Services Administrative Law Judge followed.

      During the Snipes hearing, as evidence of a change in condition, Quaranta

submitted a report and referral that Dr. Crutchfield completed after a June 19, 2019,

visit. It looked much like the 2013 and 2014 reports that Quaranta submitted in
                                           5

support of his initial claim. Namely, the 2019 report indicated, like the prior reports,

that Quaranta continued to experience headaches, dizziness, and other symptoms.

The 2019 report, like the ones years before, also recommended an “occipital nerve

release procedure if” Quaranta was not responsive to the steroid injections, and it

included a referral to a doctor for that potential procedure. Beyond Dr. Crutchfield’s

report, Quaranta made a proffer of facts about his condition as of the hearing date.

The proffer was brief and follows (as recounted by his counsel) in its entirety:

             Mr. Quaranta is here, and I’ll proffer to testify that over
             the last few years his post-concussion or cervico-cranial
             symptoms have deteriorated to the point where even his
             sedentary work at the computer, anything with lots of
             stimulus, whether it’s loud noise, loud sound, too many
             things going on around the same time, causes a recurrence
             of his symptoms. At this point, he’s not even capable of
             playing soccer recreationally, which is a change in
             condition from 2018 and it’s on the basis of both medical
             change in condition and his abilities in the workplace, in
             the job that he’s doing now, that have caused us to file this
             application for a change in condition.

      There was no mention of Quaranta suffering any wage loss in his post-soccer

career due to his recurring symptoms, or any forecast of such a diminution in salary.

While his counsel at one point supplemented the proffer by implying that Quaranta

would elect the surgery recommended by Dr. Crutchfield (which he had apparently

forgone in the years since it was first suggested), there was no mention in Dr.

Crutchfield’s report or Quaranta’s proffer of the surgery involving a recuperation
                                          6

period that would cause him any wage loss. Quaranta asked that the modified period

of disability begin running as of about a month earlier, from his June 2019 visit with

Dr. Crutchfield, when he received some treatment (“steroid injections with occipital

nerve blocks”) and was prescribed some medications. Quaranta also orally amended

his PPD benefits claim to one for temporary partial disability (“TPD”) benefits, with

the explanation that “[p]erhaps the surgery will completely resolve [Quaranta’s]

symptoms . . . [we] don’t know.”

       ALJ Gwenlynn D’Souza rejected Quaranta’s request for an evidentiary

hearing and dismissed his application. The ALJ opined that Dr. Crutchfield’s 2019

medical report was “in substance . . . no different” than his 2014 medical report, so

Quaranta failed to meet his evidentiary burden of demonstrating changed conditions.

She further opined that the “law of the case” established that Quaranta’s “post-

concussion injuries did not cause wage loss after” he voluntarily took a lower paying

job.

       Quaranta again sought review by the CRB. In his application for review, he

stressed that he was no longer seeking PPD benefits (as in the prior action), but TPD

benefits for a “[distinct] period of temporary disability occasioned by the

deterioration of his physical symptoms.” He also highlighted that he was now
                                         7

electing the surgical procedure that he had previously rejected, as more evidence of

a change in condition. Quaranta further noted that the ALJ did not even mention his

factual proffer in her roughly one-page ruling, leading him to conclude that she

“gave no consideration to his proffered testimony.” The CRB affirmed. While it

agreed with Quaranta that the ALJ erred in not expressly referencing his factual

proffer, it declined to infer from that omission that she did not consider it.

Regardless, the CRB found that the error was harmless, because it was “law of the

case” that “the causal link between [Quaranta’s] work injury and his new claim for

wage loss occurring in 2019 has been severed.” Quaranta now petitions this court

for review of that decision.

                                         II.

      This court plays a “limited role” in reviewing workers’ compensation

decisions of the CRB. Hawk v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 244 A.3d 1018, 1021

(D.C. 2021) (citation omitted). We will uphold the CRB’s ruling so long as

“‘substantial evidence’ supports each factual finding and its legal conclusion ‘flows

rationally’ from those findings,” D.C. Pub. Schs. v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 262

A.3d 213, 219 (D.C. 2021) (citation omitted), and reverse “only if we conclude that
                                          8

the decision was arbitrary, capricious, or otherwise an abuse of discretion and not in

accordance with law,” Hawk, 244 A.3d at 1021 (citation omitted).

      We agree with the ALJ and the CRB that the wage-loss claim Quaranta

presented to them is precluded by the law of the case. Lynn v. Lynn, 617 A.2d 963,

969 (D.C. 1992) (“It is the ‘law of the case’ principle which precludes reopening

questions resolved by an earlier appeal in the same case.”). In reaching that

conclusion, it is important to understand just what Quaranta’s claim was before the

agency, and what it was not, because it has since morphed considerably on appeal

(as discussed below).

      In order to justify the modification of a compensation order that Quaranta

sought, he had to provide some threshold “reason to believe that a change of

conditions ha[d] occurred which raises issues concerning . . . [t]he fact or the degree

of disability.” D.C. Code § 32-1524(a). That is not an exacting standard, but it does

require an applicant to produce evidence or at least a proffer “which could establish,

if credited, changed conditions” that might alter their disability award. Bowser v.

D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 129 A.3d 253, 258 (D.C. 2015), as amended (Feb. 25,

2016). A disability, as that term is used in the Workers’ Compensation Act, is an

economic concept—it refers to an “injury which results in the loss of wages.” D.C.
                                          9

Code § 32-1501(8) (emphasis added). So, in short, Quaranta was required to come

forward with some evidence (or proffer) that he had suffered (or would suffer) some

relevant wage loss beyond what had already been resolved against him in his prior

case. He failed to do that.

      Quaranta never claimed before the ALJ that he had suffered a relevant wage

loss since he retired from professional soccer, i.e., that his salary with Pipeline

Soccer Club had been or would be diminished as a result of his post-concussive

symptoms. While he did assert that certain aspects of his current job had “cause[d]

a recurrence of his symptoms,” the symptoms themselves are not compensable, and

he made no assertion that those recurring symptoms led to any loss in wages. 1 To

the extent he was seeking to recoup the diminution of salary that he voluntarily

visited upon himself when he retired from professional soccer—which is the only

      1
        For the first time at oral argument, Quaranta’s counsel asserted that Quaranta
missed “some limited period of time right after the injection,” in an apparent
reference to Quaranta missing work after the June 19, 2019, steroid injections. There
was no evidence, or proffered evidence, of that before the ALJ, nor was there so
much as a claim (even at oral argument) of any attendant wage loss. So we disregard
that assertion. There was also the vague assertion in Quaranta’s proffer that his
symptoms affected “his abilities in the workplace,” but that is no different from his
evidence in the prior action, that his post-concussive symptoms “at times may be
debilitating and prevent him from performing his job” with Pipeline. Thus, that
alone cannot supply the requisite evidence of a change in condition, because it is no
change at all.
                                        10

wage loss there is evidence of—that claim was clearly precluded by the law of the

case. Quaranta I, Mem. Op. & J. at 5-6.

       Quaranta now rebrands the claim he raised before the agency. While it is not

entirely clear from his brief, by the time of oral argument Quaranta’s claim had

morphed into one for temporary total disability (TTD) benefits, neither the PPD nor

the TPD benefits he sought from the agency. Perhaps to address the deficiency with

his prior claims, Quaranta’s position at oral argument was that he will be entirely

without wages as he recovers from the anticipated occipital nerve release procedure,

and it is for that period that he should be able to recoup his lost wages as TTD

benefits. 2

       That might be a viable wage-loss claim if what Quaranta seeks to recover is

only the amount by which his already-voluntarily-reduced wages from Pipeline are

further diminished as a result of an upcoming surgery, rather than what he would

       2
        Claims for disability benefits covering recuperation periods tend to seek
TTD benefits, which contemplate a claimant who will lose all wages for a temporary
period. See, e.g., Battle v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 176 A.3d 129, 131-32 (D.C.
2018); Children’s Def. Fund v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 726 A.2d 1242, 1244-45
(D.C. 1999).
                                          11

have made as a professional soccer player. 3 But we do not confront that question

here because: (1) there is nothing in the record, including the proffer, that Quaranta

would in fact suffer such a wage loss, 4 and (2) this theory of TTD disability benefits

is a new one and was never argued before the agency. See Cannon v. Igborzurkie,

779 A.2d 887, 888 (D.C. 2001) (“Questions not properly raised and preserved during

the proceedings under examination, and points not asserted with sufficient precision

      3
          Quaranta has never specified what he believes the baseline for his wage-loss
claim is, be it his D.C. United salary or his reduced Pipeline salary. Assuming he is
seeking to recover only his losses as measured against his Pipeline salary, that would
raise a tricky legal question. We have at least one precedent suggesting that once an
employee voluntarily leaves an employer for reasons unrelated to an injury, they
have forever “severed” the “causal link” with that employer, even if an injury
suffered under their former employer causes a subsequent diminution of salary with
a new employer (an involuntary diminution of the voluntarily diminished wages, as
it were). Franklin v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 709 A.2d 1175, 1177 (D.C. 1998).
But we would be reticent to read Franklin to support so broad a proposition, because
it is rather counterintuitive; one would think an employee could recover any amounts
that stemmed from their injury, i.e., the amounts beyond what they voluntarily
relinquished. To foreclose such a recovery would be particularly surprising in the
context of the Workers’ Compensation Act’s “remedial” and “humanitarian”
purposes, Poole v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 77 A.3d 460, 468 (D.C. 2013), where
we apply a “presumption” of compensability for work-related disabilities, Upchurch
v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Servs., 783 A.2d 623, 627 (D.C. 2001). Ultimately, we have
no cause to resolve this question, because Quaranta never so much as asserted before
the agency that he had suffered or would suffer any wage loss at Pipeline.
      4
        At oral argument, counsel stated that his proffer included that Quaranta
would be out of work (and, perhaps one could infer from that, wages) as he recovered
from the anticipated surgery. Counsel was mistaken; his proffer to the ALJ
contained no such claim.
                                           12

to indicate distinctly the party’s thesis, will normally be spurned on appeal.” (citation

omitted)).

      In fact, this late-breaking claim for TTD benefits runs contrary to how

Quaranta’s counsel argued his claim before the agency. Recall that, at the Snipes

hearing, counsel orally amended the original request for PPD benefits to one for TPD

benefits, running from about a month earlier (his June 19, 2019, visit with Dr.

Crutchfield). Counsel’s explanation for that shift was that he “[did]n’t know how

the surgery is going to go.       Perhaps the surgery will completely resolve the

symptoms . . . .” Far from seeking TTD benefits for a limited recuperation period—

what counsel described as “the gravamen” of his claim at oral argument before this

court—the transcript makes clear that counsel was seeking only partial benefits for

a period beginning months before any anticipated surgery, and potentially in

perpetuity unless Quaranta’s symptoms remitted. He never sought total disability

benefits at all. Put simply, Quaranta never alerted the ALJ or the CRB to the claim

that he now presses for the first time on appeal.

      On the limited questions that were presented to the agency, the ALJ was

correct that Quaranta failed to meet his threshold evidentiary burden of providing

reason to think changed conditions would justify a modification of the underlying
                                         13

compensation order. He neither presented nor proffered any evidence of wage loss

after his voluntary retirement from professional soccer. Like the CRB, we conclude

the ALJ’s failure to expressly consider Quaranta’s proffer was harmless, both

because (1) even taking the proffer into account, there was no evidence of wage loss

beyond the one Quaranta visited upon himself when he retired from professional

soccer, and (2) as to that wage loss, the CRB was correct that the law of the case and

our precedents foreclose any claim that Quaranta might have to recover those wages.

      The order of the Compensation Review Board is affirmed.

                                                    So ordered.