SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-3340-96T5
JOSEPH PINO,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF TRUSTEES, PUBLIC
EMPLOYEES' RETIREMENT SYSTEM,
Respondent.
______________________________________________________________
Argued February 11, 1998 - Decided March 6, 1998
Before Judges Shebell, D'Annunzio and Rodríguez
On appeal from the Board of Trustees, Public
Employees' Retirement System.
Richard A. Friedman argued the cause for appellant
(Zazzali, Zazzali, Fagella & Nowak, attorneys;
Mr. Friedman, on the brief).
Sherrie L. Gibble, Deputy Attorney General, argued
the cause for respondent (Peter Verniero, Attorney
General, attorney; Mary C. Jacobson, Assistant
Attorney General, of counsel; Ms. Gibble, on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
D'ANNUNZIO, J.A.D.
Joseph Pino appeals from a determination by the Board of
Trustees of the Public Employees' Retirement System (Board) that
he is not entitled to an accidental disability pension because
the incident resulting in his injury and disability was not a
"traumatic event." N.J.S.A. 43:15A-43.
Pino was a school bus driver employed by the Board of
Education. On February 6, 1993, he was operating a school bus
with a capacity of twenty passengers. Approximately fifteen to
eighteen students and coaches were in the bus. It was a snowy
day and the road, Interstate Route 280, was snow-covered and icy.
As Pino reached the bottom of a hill, his school bus was struck
in the left rear by the right front of an Oldsmobile Toronado.
According to Pino, the impact pushed him forward against the
steering wheel and back again against his seat. The impact
propelled the bus at a forty-five degree angle to the right.
Pino gained control of the bus and brought it to a stop. A
finding below that the damage to the bus was minimal is supported
in the record. The most that anyone ever testified to was that
there was a dent in the left rear bumper and perhaps the left
rear quarter panel. No one else on the bus was injured.
Pino did not immediately report an injury to himself and did
not believe that he had been injured until he began to experience
low back pain radiating into his left leg. A hospital record
states that Pino "had no complaints immediately following the
incident, however, the next few weeks he began to have severe low
back pain with radiating pain down the left leg." The evidence
indicates that he first sought medical attention on March 24,
1993, approximately six weeks after the accident, when he saw Dr.
Andrew Weiss. Pino worked until April 27, 1993. The evidence
supports a finding that he sustained a herniated disc at the
level L5-S1, a bulging disc at the level L4-L5, and that he had
pre-existing "degenerative arthritis" in his lumbosacral spine.
He underwent various diagnostic tests and two surgical
procedures, one in May 1993 and another in December 1993.
Initially the Board determined that Pino was disabled, but
that his disability was not the direct result of the February 6,
1993 bus accident and that the bus accident itself was not a
"traumatic event." The Board, therefore, approved an "ordinary
disability" retirement under N.J.S.A. 43:15A-42. Pino appealed,
but before the hearing, the Board reconsidered and determined
that, in fact, his disability was a direct result of the bus
accident. The Board persisted, however, in its determination
that the accident did not constitute a traumatic event.
The matter was heard by an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
and, in his initial decision, the ALJ determined that the
incident did not qualify as a "traumatic event" as that phrase
has been defined by our Supreme Court. The Board adopted the
ALJ's recommended findings and conclusions.
The applicable principles of law are well-settled, and our
Supreme Court restated them most recently in Mazza v. Board of
Trustees,
143 N.J. 22 (1995). To qualify as a traumatic event
the applicant for accidental disability retirement must establish
that the "source of the injury itself was a great rush of force
or uncontrollable power." Id. at 24 (quoting Kane v. Board of
Trustees,
100 N.J. 651, 663 (1985)).
Our scope of review is narrow:
Although sometimes phrased in terms of a
search for arbitrary or unreasonable agency
action, the judicial role is generally
restricted to three inquiries: (1) whether
the agency's action violates express or
implied legislative policies, that is, did
the agency follow the law; (2) whether the
record contains substantial evidence to
support the findings on which the agency
based its action; and (3) whether in applying
the legislative policies to the facts, the
agency clearly erred in reaching a conclusion
that could not reasonably have been made on a
showing of the relevant factors.
[Mazza v. Board of Trustees, supra, 143 N.J.
at 25 (1995) (citing Campbell v. Department
of Civil Serv.,
39 N.J. 556, 562 (1963)).]
Applying this limited standard, the Supreme Court in Mazza
affirmed the denial of an accidental disability retirement to an
Essex County Park Police officer whose "disability arose when the
officer's horse bucked and `reared up,' causing the officer's
body to twist in the saddle and suffer a disabling rupture of
spinal discs. Officer Mazza's body went numb; he slumped over
and lay on the saddle until his horse that `had ridden the trails
for years . . . brought [him] back to the barn.'" Id. at 23.
Although this is a close case, we are persuaded that, in
light of the standard of review, the Board's determination must
be affirmed. The Board's action did not violate any express or
legislative policies. Indeed, the Legislature has not modified
the test for accidental disability in response to the Supreme
Court's definition of traumatic event in Cattani v. Board of
Trustees,
69 N.J. 578 (1976) and Kane v. Board of Trustees,
supra, and despite the Board's restrictive approach to accidental
disability claims. There is substantial evidence supporting the
Board's determination. Damage to the bus was minimal and none of
the passengers was injured. Pino did not sustain an immediately
disabling injury which might have supported an inference that the
source of his injury was a "great rush of force or uncontrollable
power." To the contrary, Pino did not seek medical attention for
six weeks and continued working for two and one-half months.
Although Pino first testified that the Toronado was going fast
when it struck his bus, the testimony has no probative value
because he testified that he did not see the Toronado before it
struck his bus. Pino testified that his bus' speed was twenty-five miles per hour when the Toronado struck it. At best,
therefore, the record establishes only that the Toronado was
traveling in excess of twenty-five miles per hour when it struck
the bus that was traveling in the same direction. The
differential in speed and the concomitant impact could have been
as little as a few miles per hour. Finally, there was no
evidence that the injuries Pino sustained required the degree of
force and power which would have qualified the incident as a
traumatic event. But cf. Fawcett v. Board of Trustees, ____ N.J.
Super. _____ (App. Div. 1998) (holding that appellant who, as a
passenger in a vehicle, was injured when she was thrown against
the back of her seat and then forward against the dashboard,
suffered a traumatic event); Flores v. Board of Trustees,
287 N.J. Super. 274 (App. Div. 1996) (ruling that employee's fall
into trench when roadway collapsed was traumatic event).
Affirmed.