SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1961-00T3
A-2044-00T3See footnote 11
DIANA BRUNELL,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
WILDWOOD CREST POLICE
DEPARTMENT,
Respondent-Respondent.
______________________________
SAMUEL STANGO,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
LOWER TOWNSHIP POLICE
DEPARTMENT,
Respondent-Respondent.
______________________________
Argued (A-1961-00T3): January 16, 2002 -
Argued Telephonically (A-2044-00T3):
January 10, 2002 -
Decided: February 21, 2002
Before Judges King, Cuff and Wecker.
On appeal from the Division of Workers'
Compensation.
Christine DiMuzio argued the cause for
appellant Diana Brunell (Hoffman, DiMuzio &
Hoffman, attorneys, Kenneth A. DiMuzio, of
counsel; Ms. DiMuzio, on the brief).
Carmine J. Taglialatella argued the cause for
appellant Samuel Stango (Press & Long,
attorneys; Mr. Taglialatella and David K.
Long, on the brief).
Michael S. Affanato argued the cause for
respondents Wildwood Crest Police Department
and Lower Township Police Department (Margolis
Edelstein, attorneys; Mr. Affanato, on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KING, P.J.A.D.
These cases present the problem of when a workers'
compensation claim for post-traumatic stress disorder, with alleged
delayed onset (PTSD-DO), is barred by the two-year period of
limitations in the Workers' Compensation Act. Petitioners contend
they have two years to press these claims from the time the
symptoms allegedly become manifest and a diagnosis is made, similar
to an occupational disease claim. The employers contend that these
claims arise from an accident and must be asserted within two years
of the stress-producing events. We conclude that the employers'
contention is compelled by controlling precedent. Any change in
the law in this respect must come from the Legislature or a
reinterpretation or modification of current precedent by the
Supreme Court.
He said that he was upset because he had
ignored a lot of his post traumatic stress
symptoms for almost six years, but they would
come back to haunt him. This incident last
year with the balloon just brought it back
full force. He had a lot of fears that he may
hurt someone or be killed on the job. He has
a lot of anxiety concerning this and has
developed some stomach trouble. He has
problems making decisions.
Dr. Clinton concluded that petitioner Stango had "an ongoing,
chronic post-traumatic stress disorder with anxiety secondary to a
work-related incident when his partner was shot and Mr. Stango
observed his death." Medication and therapy were recommended.
In April and June 2000 petitioner Stango filed two claim
petitions .. the first premised on the shooting episode in 1994 and
the second on the "pop" of the birthday balloons in February 2000.
Based on these undisputed facts the judge of compensation dismissed
the claims as time-barred and not an occupational disease as to the
1994 claim, and not work-related as to the balloon "pop" in 2000.
At oral argument, counsel advised us that petitioner Stango
has retired on a "traumatic event" accidental disability pension,
see N.J.S.A. 43:16A-7, which requires a dollar-for-dollar
reimbursement to the pension fund for any recovery in this workers'
compensation action. See Conklin v. City of East Orange,
73 N.J. 198 (1977).
. . . She reported that she attempted to gain
as much information as possible at the time
and to get help to the scene. She stated that
at that time, symptoms of anxiety, depression,
nightmares, irritability, fatigue, insomnia,
and exaggerated startle response developed and
became more tense over the months and years.
She appears to also have mild feelings of
guilt and loss of sense of control over what
happened.
Recently, she was seen by Dr. Richard
Cohen, a psychologist on retainer to the
Wildwood Crest Police Department. From there,
she was referred to this office.
It is my opinion that the symptoms that
Ms. Brunell is experiencing [are] the direct
results of the death of the police officer
from the cardiac infarction while the client
was on duty.
It is my opinion that Ms. Brunell is
suffering from the symptoms of Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder. I recommend that she receive
a course of antidepressant medication. I also
recommend that she seek regular psychotherapy
consisting of cognitive restructuring of the
traumatic incident, systematic desensitization
of her reactions to the incident and
supportive psychotherapy to allow her to
develop a more realistic framework in which to
put this incident. It is also my [advice] that
Ms. Brunell should have twelve to fifteen
sessions of psychotherapy, bi-weekly.
Following this, Ms. Brunell should be
reassessed regarding her progress in therapy.
As of July 16, 2000 petitioner Brunell had not returned to work.
Wildwood Crest denied benefits. On January 6, 2000 petitioner
Brunell filed a claim for workers' compensation benefits. Wildwood
Crest moved to dismiss; the judge dismissed the claim for failure
to file a timely petition.
In case of personal injury or death all claims
for compensation on account thereof shall be
forever barred unless a petition is filed in
duplicate with the secretary of the workmen's
compensation bureau, as prescribed by section
34:15-51 of this title.
N.J.S.A. 34:15-51 states, in pertinent part:
Every claimant for compensation under Article
2 of this chapter (§ 34:15-7 et seq.) shall,
unless a settlement is effected or a petition
filed under the provisions of 34:15-50 of this
Title, file a petition in duplicate with the
division in Trenton, within 2 years after the
date on which the accident occurred....
In contrast, the occupational disease statute of limitations,
N.J.S.A. 34:15-34, provides that a petition must be filed within
two years of the date when the petitioner first knew of the
disability and its relation to the employment. N.J.S.A. 34:15-34
states in pertinent part:
Notwithstanding the time limitation for the
filing of claims for compensation as set forth
in sections 34:15-41 and 34:15-51, or as set
forth in any other section of this Title,
there shall be no time limitation upon the
filing of claims for compensation for
compensable occupational disease, as
hereinabove defined; provided, however, that
where a claimant knew the nature of the
disability and its relation to the employment,
all claims for compensation for compensable
occupational disease except as herein provided
shall be barred unless a petition is filed in
duplicate with the secretary of the division
in Trenton within 2 years after the date on
which the claimant first knew the nature of
the disability and its relation to the
employment....
Petitioners claim that the judge erred in concluding that
their PTSD-DO arose from an accident. They urge this court to
conclude that their PTSD-DO is an occupational disease with the
period of limitations expressed in N.J.S.A. 34:15-34 controlling,
i.e., "two years after the date on which the claimant first knew
the nature of the disability and its relation to the employment."
An occupational disease is defined as "all diseases arising out of
and in the course of employment, which are due in a material degree
to causes and conditions which are or were characteristic of or
peculiar to a particular trade, occupation, process or place of
employment." N.J.S.A. 34:15-31.
The DSM-IV has these comments with respect to "Specific
Cultural Features" of PTSD:
Individuals who have recently emigrated from
areas of considerable social unrest and civil
conflict may have elevated rates of
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Such
individuals may be especially reluctant to
divulge experiences of torture and trauma due
to their vulnerable political immigrant
status. Specific assessments of traumatic
experiences and concomitant symptoms are
needed for such individuals.
[DSM-IV at 465.]
As to "Prevalence" of PTSD the DSM-IV states:
Community-based studies reveal a lifetime
prevalence for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
of approximately 8% of the adult population in
the United States. Information is not
currently available with regard to the general
population prevalence in other countries.
Studies of at-risk individuals (e.g., groups
exposed to specific traumatic incidents) yield
variable findings, with the highest rates
(ranging between one-third and more than half
of those exposed) found among survivors of
rape, military combat and captivity, and
ethnically or politically motivated internment
and genocide.
[Id. at 466.]
We cannot conclude that PTSD is "characteristic of or peculiar to"
police work, including dispatching. Workers in offices, factories,
and many other places are exposed, as well, to acute and
unpredictable stress in today's environment. Persons in other
circumstances historically are more disposed to the syndrome than
police officers and dispatchers.
Special statutory recognition for occupational hazards was
provided by the Legislature in 1987 for police, fire and rescue
workers suffering strokes or heart attacks when responding to an
emergency, N.J.S.A. 34:15-7.3.See footnote 22 This type of legislative exception
may be a solution to the tendency of PTSD in some cases to reveal
delayed severity but of course, unlike the Legislature, we cannot
create a special category for uniformed public safety workers
claiming PTSD simply because of the emotional appeal of the cases
before us.
The compensation judge understandably found PTSD, by its very
name, "oxymoronic" because post-traumatic means after trauma,
which implies an accident or an incident, while a stress disorder
sounds more like a disease. We think that the compensation judge
sensibly concluded that the legislature wanted to make it "very
clear" it was not adopting, in the overall, the more flexible
"discovery of injury" rule. N.J.S.A. 34:15-35 states in full:
Provisions applicable to occupational
diseases; claim for accident excluded
All provisions of this article and article 3
of this title (§ 34:15-36 et seq.), applicable
to claims for injury or death by accident,
shall apply to injury or death by compensable
occupational disease, except to the extent
that they are inconsistent with the provisions
contained in sections 34:15-30 to 34:15-34
[the occupational disease section] of this
title. The provisions in said sections 34:15-
30 to 34:15-34 shall not apply to any claim
for compensation for injury resulting from
accident. [Emphasis supplied.]
In support of her argument that PTSD-DO should be classified
as an occupational disease as a matter of law, petitioner Brunell
relies upon Biasetti v. City of Stamford,
735 A.2d 321 (Conn.
1999), and Means v. Baltimore County,
689 A.2d 1238 (Md. 1997).
Although both the Connecticut Supreme Court and the Court of
Appeals of Maryland have held that PTSD could be considered an
occupational disease, neither court has held as a matter of law
that PTSD is necessarily in all cases an occupational disease.
Neither case involved delayed filing of claims. In Biasetti
petitioner police officer sought disability benefits alleging that
he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder or combat fatigue
syndrome as a result of a high-speed car chase and ensuing gun
battle with a suspect. Although the Supreme Court of Connecticut
held that under the facts presented, the petitioner's post-
traumatic stress disorder was an occupational disease, it was held
not compensable since it failed to satisfy the statutory definition
of a personal injury. Biasetti, 735 A.
2d at 323-24.
In Means, the petitioner paramedic sought benefits alleging
that she suffered from PTSD-DO as a result of witnessing several
especially gruesome accidents. Maryland's highest court addressed
the issue of whether PTSD should be excluded from compensable
occupational diseases. That court held PTSD may be considered an
occupational disease under Maryland's Workers' Compensation Act
since it "may be compatible with the general character of
occupational disease." Means, 689 A.
2d at 1243. The court
described an occupational disease as "'some ailment, disorder, or
illness which is the expectable result of working under conditions
naturally inherent in the employment and inseparable therefrom, and
is ordinarily slow and insidious in its approach.'" Ibid. (quoting
Foble v. Knefely,
6 A.2d 48, 53 (Md. 1939)).
Although petitioner Brunell correctly states that the Maryland
courts have found that PTSD may be considered an occupational
disease, she overlooks the reality that the Maryland courts have
also found PTSD can constitute an accidental injury. In Belcher v.
T. Rowe Price,
621 A.2d 872 (Md. 1993), petitioner secretary sought
disability benefits alleging that she suffered PTSD after a three-
ton beam crashed through the roof of her office and landed only
five feet from her desk. The Maryland court held that the
petitioner was entitled to compensation because her injuries
resulted from an accidental personal injury. Id. at 890.
Our court also has held that PTSD is compensable under the
"accident" provision when it arises from a single event. Prettyman
v. State,
298 N.J. Super. 580 (App. Div. 1997). The petitioner in
Prettyman filed a petition alleging PTSD as a result of an
interrogation by State Police detectives. Although the main issue
was whether the petitioner's injury arose out of the course of
employment, we determined that "a specific traumatic event,
petitioner's treatment at the hands of the State Police, was the
cause of her psychiatric disability." Id. at 594.
These cases suggest that when a claimant seeks compensation
for PTSD, the claim must be considered in light of the specific
triggering facts. The compensation judge here determined that the
petitioners' PTSD-DO's were caused by a single traumatic event. In
Brunell's case, the petition filed with the Division of Workers'
Compensation alleged "that [p]etitioner sustained an injury by an
accident arising out of and in, the course of [p]etitioner's
employment with [r]espondent...." The petition stated that
"[p]etitioner suffered delayed onset of post-traumatic stress
disorder from 6/2/95 death of officer." In Brunell's case, as in
Prettyman, the petition references a single incident, not a series
of incidents or traumas. Stango's claim petition alleged the
injury arose from a "shooting incident" on February 18, 1994. The
compensation judge correctly concluded that the petitioners' PTSD-
DO's were "not the result of a process but an initiating event."
There was no articulated claim, for example, that the insidious,
stressful effect of day-to-day police work was the source of the
disability.
The petitioners contend that the case law regarding accidental
injuries is inapplicable to their claims since they were not the
victims of an underlying accident. Petitioner Brunell argues that
she did not suffer a personal injury until her PTSD was diagnosed
on August 10, 1999. Petitioner Stango asserts his claim arose on
May 3, 2000 upon Dr. Clinton's evaluation. Petitioners analogize
to Earl v. Johnson & Johnson,
158 N.J. 155 (1999), in support of
their position. In Earl, the claimant filed a petition alleging
that her permanent pulmonary problems were caused by continuous
exposure to irritants at her place of employment. The employer
argued that the statute of limitations began to run when the
claimant became aware of her breathing problems. The Court held
that the claimant actually was not aware of the extent of her
injury until pulmonary function tests were performed and N.J.S.A.
34:15-34's period of limitations did not begin to run until the
date those tests were performed. The Court, adopting the reasoning
of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, stated "an occupational disease
is distinguishable from an accident, because an accident 'rises
from a definite event, the time and place of which can be fixed,
while [an occupational disease] develops gradually over a long
period of time.'" Id. at 164 (quoting Ciabattoni v. Birdsboro
Steel Foundry & Mach. Co.,
125 A.2d 365, 368 (Pa. 1956)).
In the Brunell case, petitioner filed a petition alleging
PTDS-DO stemming from the June 2, 1995 incident. In his letter to
Scibal Associates, Dr. Miley stated that petitioner's symptoms
began directly after the death of Officer Miglio. "She stated that
at that time, symptoms of anxiety, depression, nightmares,
irritability, fatigue, insomnia and exaggerated startle response
developed and became more intense over the months and years. She
appears to also have mild feelings of guilt and loss of sense of
control over what happened." These historical facts show that
petitioner Brunell was not suffering from a disease "of such an
insidious nature that [it did] not become evident until years after
exposure to the cause thereof." Earl, 155 N.J. at 163 (quoting
Panzino v. Continental Can Co.,
71 N.J. 298, 301 (1976)). The same
is true in Patrolman Stango's case where symptoms historically
persisted from the outset.
The compensation judge, in discussing the claims made by
petitioners Brunell and Stango, accurately concluded "there were
specific traumatic or upsetting events, and both petitioners knew
they were upset on that day." In Schwarz v. Federal Shipbuilding
and Dry Dock Co.,
16 N.J. 243 (1954), the Court discussed the
applicability of N.J.S.A. 34:15-51 when the claimant was aware that
he had suffered an injury, but was unaware of the extent of the
injury until after the statute barred the claim. The Court stated
that N.J.S.A. 34:15-51 requires that a petition shall be filed
within two years of the date of the accident, and "we are asked to
construe this to mean 'two years after the date the injury was
discovered.' This we cannot do." Id. at 251. The Court
concluded that N.J.S.A. 34:15-51 is an "accident" statute, not an
"injury" statute. "Our courts have found no indication of a
legislative purpose to suspend the running of the statute until the
injury becomes manifest. It was so held in Cristo v. Standard Oil
Co.,
98 N. J. L. 871 (E. & A. 1923), and there has been no
legislative action since to modify the statute as so construed."
Ibid. The Court concluded by stating "such a change in the statute
is a problem for the Legislature...." Ibid. See also Riccioni v.
American Cyanamid Co.,
26 N.J. Super. 1, 9 (App. Div.), certif.
denied,
13 N.J. 289 (1953) ("We are sympathetic, but the judiciary
is not at liberty in matters of jurisdiction to subordinate the
requirements of the law to the natural influences of sentiment and
benevolence.").
In these cases before us, the compensation judge made the
correct determination, i.e., that Brunell's and Stango's PTSD-DO's
were caused by a single traumatic event or accident. The
petitioners' arguments, that the so-called "discovery rule,"
through adoption of the occupational disease theory should apply,
is a valiant but ultimately unpersuasive attempt. The statute of
limitations prescribed by N.J.S.A. 34:15-51 is "a jurisdictional
requirement and the petitioner must establish compliance
therewith." Schwarz, 16 N.J. at 248. The compensation judge
properly determined that the petitioners' PTSD-DO's were the result
of single traumatic events and their claims were governed by
N.J.S.A. 34:15-41 and N.J.S.A. 34:15-51.
As stated, we have no doubt that PTSD can be a compensable
disorder under our workers' compensation act. Prettyman correctly
so concludes. In these cases before us, if the claims had been
brought within two years and proven as alleged, they surely would
have been compensable. Indeed, these two cases really do not
involve "delayed onset" or even an invidious or pernicious onset
and development. Petitioners' psychological and mental problems
existed from the very outset according to their histories. These
are unfortunate cases of delayed filings, four and six years after
the traumatic events.
We cannot make exceptions from the general law for these cases
even though our holding here may prompt increased filings of minor
claims to protect against the two-year time-bar. Legislative
action or Supreme Court reinterpretation of the Compensation Act
are available, of course. But we are bound by Schwarz.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1These appeals calendared back-to-back are consolidated on
the court's motion for purposes of opinion only.
Footnote: 2 2N.J.S.A. 34:15-7.3 states:
1. a. For any cardiovascular or
cerebrovascular injury or death which occurs
to an individual covered by subsection b. of
this section while that individual is engaged
in a response to an emergency, there shall be
a rebuttable presumption that the injury or
death is compensable under R.S. 34:15-1 et
seq., if that injury or death occurs while the
individual is responding, under orders from
competent authority, to a law enforcement,
public safety or medical emergency as defined
in subsection c. of this section.
b. This section shall apply to:
(1) Any permanent or temporary
member of a paid or part-paid fire or police
department and force;
(2) Any member of a volunteer fire
company;
(3) Any member of a volunteer first
aid or rescue squad; and
(4) Any special, reserve, or
auxiliary policeman doing volunteer duty.
c. As used in this section, "law
enforcement, public safety or medical
emergency" means any combination of
circumstances requiring immediate action to
prevent the loss of human life, the
destruction of property, or the violation of
the criminal laws of this State or its
political subdivisions, and includes, but is
not limited to, the suppression of a fire, a
firemanic drill, the apprehension of a
criminal, or medical and rescue service.