Court Opinion

ID: 7959322
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:29:47.337868+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:22.897600
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.
Defendant appeals from a February 10, 1982, decision and order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (WCAB). The sole issue on appeal is whether the WCAB erred in denying defendant’s request for a proportionate reduction in the amount of death benefits payable to plaintiff Lilah Ford for the death of her husband, Clifford Ford, pursuant to MCL 418.431; MSA 17.237(431). Defendant argues that the evidence received by the WCAB established that decedent’s death was due in part to a nonoccupational cause and that the appeal board was required to reduce the benefits pursuant to § 431.
The hearing referee found that decedent’s death was causally related to his employment and awarded death benefits to plaintiff Lilah Ford. Defendant appealed to the WCAB. During oral arguments before the appeal board, one member questioned whether the record was defective because plaintiff had not presented evidence establishing the cause of decedent’s death. With the appeal board’s permission, plaintiff filed a formal petition to reopen proofs to take additional evidence on the causation issue. She sought to introduce the deposition testimony of Dr. Ottaviani, the physician who treated decedent prior to his death and who signed the death certificate. The appeal board denied plaintiffs petition to reopen proofs. On November 30, 1978, the board issued an order reversing the award of death benefits because plaintiff had failed to prove that decedent’s death *330was causally related to his employment with defendant.
Plaintiff’s application for leave to appeal to this Court was granted. A panel of this Court reversed the appeal board’s decision and remanded the case, instructing the board to reopen proofs and permit the introduction of Dr. Ottaviani’s deposition and other evidence and to determine whether decedent’s death was causally related to his employment. 97 Mich App 482; 296 NW2d 78 (1980). On remand, defendant requested for the first time a proportionate reduction of benefits pursuant to MCL 418.431; MSA 17.237(431). The appeal board denied defendant’s request for apportionment and affirmed the award of death benefits to plaintiff. The board determined that apportionment was not appropriate because "there was no showing of interaction between the occupational and nonoccupational causes of death”. Defendant’s appeal from the WCAB’s order is before this Court pursuant to the Supreme Court’s July 21, 1983, order remanding the case for . consideration as on leave granted. 417 Mich 1061 (1983).
Plaintiff asserts that the statutory apportionment issue has not been preserved for appeal because it was not raised until after the initial remand from this Court to the WCAB. Plaintiff’s argument is without merit. Until the introduction of Dr. Ottaviani’s deposition on remand, there was no evidence to support a request for statutory apportionment. The appeal board on remand was permitted to take such action as justice required so long as the action was not inconsistent with this Court’s remand order. We find that the apportionment issue, which arose as a result of Dr. Ottaviani’s deposition testimony concerning the cause of decedent’s death, was timely raised by defen*331dant and has been preserved for appellate review. Plaintiff cites Hahn v Sarah Coventry, Inc, 97 Mich App 389; 296 NW2d 36 (1980), lv den 411 Mich 886 (1981). However, Hahn does not support plaintiff’s position, since in that case defendant never raised the apportionment issue before the hearing referee or the WCAB.
Having found that the issue has been preserved, we now turn to whether the appeal board erred as a matter of law in failing to apportion benefits. MCL 418.431; MSA 17.237(431) provides in pertinent part:
"Where an occupational disease is aggravated by any other disease or infirmity, not itself compensable, or where disability or death from any other cause, not itself compensable, is aggravated, prolonged, accelerated or in any way contributed to by an occupational disease, the compensation payable shall be a proportion only of the compensation that would be payable if the occupational disease were the sole cause of the disability or death as such occupational disease, as a causative factor, bearing to all the causes of such disability or death, such reduction in compensation to be effected by reducing the number of weekly payments or the amounts of such payments, as under the circumstances of the particular case may be for the best interest of the claimant or claimants.”
We find that Dr. Ottaviani’s deposition testimony did establish that decedent’s death was due in part to a nonoccupational cause and that defendant is entitled to a proportionate reduction in benefits pursuant to § 431. Dr. Ottaviani testified that decedent passed away as a result of a cardiac arrest caused by congestive heart failure and that both the right and left sides of the heart failed. The doctor testified that left heart failure was associated with arteriosclerotic heart disease, *332which in this case was not alleged or found to be related to decedent’s employment. The doctor stated that the right heart failure was probably secondary to decedent’s pulmonary fibrosis, a condition which Dr. Qttaviani believed resulted at least in part from the years of inhaling sand and debris while employed by defendant. It was Dr. Ottaviani’s opinion that decedent’s death was contributed to both by his long-time exposure to the work environment and the resulting severe pulmonary condition and by arteriosclerotic heart disease, a nonoccupational disease in this case.
In view of this evidence and the appeal board’s finding on remand, we hold that the board erred as a matter of law in failing to proportionately reduce the death benefits pursuant to § 431. The statute requires apportionment where the disability or death is contributed to by an occupational disease and by a cause which is not itself compensable. Since the evidence indicates the decedent’s cardiac arrest was contributed to by left heart failure due to an arteriosclerotic heart condition, a nonwork related disease, the apportionment provision should have been applied.
The decision of the WCAB denying defendant’s request for apportionment is reversed and the case is remanded for a proportionate reduction in benefits pursuant to § 431.
Reversed and remanded.