What is the test for determining the liability of an employer under section 4663 of the Rehabilitation and Accident Compensation Act for an employee's permanent disability as a result of an industrial injury?

California, United States of America


The following excerpt is from Subsequent Injuries Fund of State of Cal. v. Industrial Acc. Commission, 283 P.2d 1039, 44 Cal.2d 604 (Cal. 1955):

Thus, as expressed in Edson v. Industrial Acc. Comm. (1928), 206 Cal. 134, 138-139, 273 P. 572, 'If the employee has suffered permanent disability by injury or disease prior [44 Cal.2d 608] to the injury for which compensation is sought the statute requires that the percentage of disability on account of the latter injury be computed without reference to any injury previously suffered or any permanent disability caused thereby, except that in the case of aggravation of a pre-existing disease such proportion of the disability due to the aggravation of the prior disease as may be reasonably attributed to the later injurt may be considered. * * *'

It follows from these rules that the Fund is correct in its position that its liability should not be fixed by rating the preexisting disability alone and apart from the subsequent industrial injury. On the other hand it would seem that neither does the statute, when its several pertinent parts are read together, contemplate that in a case such as this (where the later disability is a product of prior disease, an industrial injury aggravating the prior disease, and surgical treatment for the condition growing out of the combination of prior disease and industrial injury) the commission must attempt to rate the disability caused by the later industrial injury entirely independently of the prior existing disease and so fix the employer's liability without respect to either the combined disability or the previously existing disability or impairment. Rather, the more reasonable and workable practice, and one conforming with the intent of the statute, appears to be that which the commission seems to have consistently followed in aggravation cases, viz.: to rate the combined disability (whether it be 70 per cent, 80 per cent, 100 per cent, or some other percentage) and then (as provided by section 4663) assign a proportion (such as 1/2, 2/3, 80 per cent, etc.) of the combined disability to the later injury and a correlative proportion to the pre-existing disability or impairment. See, e. g., 19 Cal.Comp. Cases (1954) 29-30, 143, 149, 166-167, 173-175; 18 Cal.Comp. Cases (1953) 242-243; 17 Cal.Comp. Cases (1952) 131; 16 Cal.Comp. Cases (1951) 308-309; 15 Cal.Comp. Cases (1950) 169; 11 Cal.Comp. Cases (1946) 225-226, 238-239; 3 Cal.Comp. Cases (1938) 77-78; 2 Cal.Comp. Cases (1937) 67-68. This was also the method followed by the commission and approved by this court in Tanenbaum v. Industrial Acc. Comm. (1935), 4 Cal.2d 615, 616, 52 P.2d 215, in which the employe's permanent disability, rated at 32 3/4 per cent, was found to have been 'partly caused by preexisting dormant disease (arthritis) and partly by said (industrial) injury,' and an [44 Cal.2d 609] apportionment was made of 33 1/3 per cent to pre-existing disease and 66 2/3 per cent to the industrial injury.

Other Questions


When an employee suffers from a previous permanent disability, and suffers an additional permanent disability from the new injury, can the employer reduce their liability? (California, United States of America)
Does section 2750.5 of the Workers' Compensation Act grant immunity from liability in a personal injury action at law even if the employer's insurer is not responsible for payment of workers' compensation benefits to the injured employee? (California, United States of America)
Is a public entity or a public employee liable under government code section 830.30.6 for injuries sustained by a person who was injured in a motor vehicle accident as a result of injuries sustained while driving under a traffic light? (California, United States of America)
What is the effect of section 4750.5 of the California Labor Code on an employee who sustained a non-compensable injury as a result of a motor vehicle accident? (California, United States of America)
Is an employer liable for payment of workers' compensation to an employee when the employee sustains an injury arising out of and in the course of the employment? (California, United States of America)
Is an employer's claim for reimbursement under section 3852 of the California Motor Vehicle Accident and Accident Compensation Act limited to recovery for damages proximately caused by the accident? (California, United States of America)
Does section 3501 of the Social Security Act discriminate against a female employee who dies as a result of an industrial injury? (California, United States of America)
Does the State Compensation Fund have to re-rate the disability of an employee who sustained two separate injuries at the same time, one of which was sustained in a motor vehicle accident? (California, United States of America)
Is there any case law where a homeowner who hires an unlicensed employee as an employee under section 2750.5 of the California Code of Civil Procedure (i.e. workers' compensation and general liability) is liable to the homeowner? (California, United States of America)
Can an employer be held liable for damages arising out of and in the course of employment for injuries sustained by an employee in a motor vehicle accident? (California, United States of America)
X



Alexi white


"The most advanced legal research software ever built."

Trusted by top litigators from across North America.