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IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
KEITH CURTIS,
:
Petitioner
:
:
v.
:
No. 1271 C.D. 1997
:
Submitted: October 24, 1997
WORKERS' COMPENSATION
:
APPEAL BOARD (BERLEY
:
ELECTRIC COMPANY),
:
Respondent
:
BEFORE:
HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Judge
HONORABLE JIM FLAHERTY, Judge
HONORABLE CHARLES P. MIRARCHI, JR., Senior Judge
OPINION
BY JUDGE FLAHERTY
FILED: April 7, 1999
Keith Curtis (Claimant) appeals from the order of the Workers'
Compensation Appeal Board (Board) which affirmed the Workers' Compensation
Judge's (WCJ) granting of Berley Electric Company's (Employer) Petition for
Suspension which raises for the first time the issue of whether a claimant's total
disability benefits may be suspended under the Pennsylvania Workers'
Compensation Act (Act) when he voluntarily inflicts an incapacitating injury to
himself which prevents the possibility of his returning to the work force.1 We
affirm.

1 The Workers' Compensation Act (Act) is the Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as
amended, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1041.4; 2501-2626.
(Footnote continued on next page...)

On September 27, 1988, while employed as an electrician by
Employer, Claimant sustained a work-related injury to his low back during the
course and scope of his employment and began receiving total workers'
compensation benefits. Claimant developed right leg pain. An MRI scan and
myelogram demonstrated the presence of an L5/Sl disc herination on the right side,
which was excised on December 1, 1988, by Claimant's treating physician, Dr.
Richard G. Traiman.
On or about April 7, 1989, Claimant experienced a significant
increase in his back and leg pain. His treating physician obtained a new MRI scan
of his lumbar spine which demonstrated the presence of a recurrent disc herniation
of the L5/S1 level. Claimant was last seen by Dr. Traiman on October 12, 1989 at
which time Claimant was given the results of the new MRI scan and told by his
treating surgeon that the disc should be excised and, since his disc herniation(s) are
recurring, that a fusion may be required
During this time, Claimant was also being treated for physical and
psychological conditions associated with the disease of alcoholism, including drug

(continued...)
Pursuant to the 1993 amendments to Section 401 of the Act, 77 P.S. § 701, "referees" are
now called Workers' Compensation Judges and the Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board is
now named the Workers' Appeal Compensation Board. See, Act of July 2, 1993, P.L. 190
(commonly known as Act 44).
Even though this case was commenced prior to August 31, 1993, the effective date of the
amendments, and the record uses both the terms "referee" and "judge" for the factfinder, we
shall use the term workers' compensation judge (WCJ) for convenience and consistency.
2

use, alcohol withdrawal syndrome, emotional disturbances from marital difficulties
which began prior to his work-related injury and for emotional distress from his
wife's recent miscarriage.2
On November 21, 23 and 24, 1989, Claimant was brought to Mercy
Catholic Hospital (Hospital) for treatment of the ingestion of alcohol and/or
Phenobarbital. On November 21, 1989 while treating in the Hospital's Emergency
Room (E.R.), Claimant refused further medical treatment and signed himself out of
the hospital against medical advice (AMA). On November 23, 1989 Claimant
again adamantly refused medical treatment and again signed himself out of the
hospital AMA.
On November 24, 1989, E.R. physician, Dr. John Kelly, signed an
application for involuntary examination and treatment under Section 301 of the
Mental Health Procedures Act, 50 P.S. §7301, committing Claimant to a
psychiatric evaluation.3 This evaluation was never completed.
The record reflects that some days later, from around 1:00 p.m. on the
afternoon of December 18, 1989 until the early morning hours of that next day,
December 19, 1998, Claimant, who at that time was living estranged from his wife
and with a companion, Vicki Beaky (Vicki), consumed approximately one case of
beer and a quantity of cocaine. Around 1:30 a.m., Claimant was arguing with

2 WCJ found Claimant's treating physician, Dr. Suk Chang, Ph.D., M.D., credible. Dr.
Chang testified that as Claimant's family doctor, he had been treating Claimant for alcoholism,
prescribing Librium, Valium, Xanax and Dilantin for Claimant's tremors and other symptoms
which are the result of alcohol withdrawal syndrome.
3 The Mental Health Procedures Act is the Act of July 9, 1976, P.L. 817, as amended, 50
P.S. §§ 7101-7503.
3

Vicki for several hours over the fact that he and Vicki had airline tickets to fly to
Las Vegas the next day and Claimant was not packed. Vicki feared Claimant was
not going to take her with him.
Claimant then walked into the bedroom with a gun. Vicki heard
Claimant emptying the bullets from the gun into what sounded like a glass ashtray.
Claimant then came back into the room. Claimant placed one bullet in the gun,
spun the chamber, put the gun to his head and pulled the trigger. The gun did not
discharge. Claimant then pulled the trigger again and the gun discharged, shooting
himself in the head and leaving him in a vegetative state from which he is unlikely
to ever recover.
On June 4, 1990, Employer filed a Petition to Suspend Compensation
and Review Medical Benefits, alleging disability changes that would have brought
about a partial or complete recovery of Claimant's employment injury and which
would have allowed him to return to light duty employment. Employer also alleged
a voluntary withdrawal from the work force and a refusal of reasonable medical
treatment.
By order dated June 17, 1992, WCJ denied Employers' Suspension
and Review Petitions and ordered that Claimant continue to receive his workers'
compensation benefits. Employer appealed that decision to the Board, and the
Board remanded to the WCJ, requesting additional findings of fact on the issues of
Claimant's refusal of reasonable medical treatment and his voluntary removal from
the work force by a self-inflicted head wound.
WCJ held additional hearings and proceedings and both Claimant and
Employer entered into the record further expert medical testimony and other
evidence. Based upon the additional testimony and evidence entered into the
4

record, the WCJ found the testimony of Employer's witness, E.R. physician Dr.
Kelly, credible and convincing in certain respects.4 Additionally, WCJ found the
testimony of Claimant's witness, Dr. Chang, credible and convincing in certain
respects.5 WCJ further found the testimony of Employer's witness, Dr. Spitz,
credible and convincing in certain respects.6
By Order dated February 13, 1995 the WCJ made additional findings
of fact and conclusions of law, finding that since December 19, 1989 reasonable
medical treatment in the form of disc excision and fusion had been available to the

4 WCJ found Dr. Kelly's testimony credible and convincing regarding the facts
surrounding the repeated incidents of drug and alcohol ingestion and treatment, that Claimant
was suicidal, and that Dr. Kelly treated Claimant for the repeated intoxication episodes, and that
on the day prior to Dr. Kelly involuntarily committing Claimant for psychiatric treatment, that
Claimant had refused treatment and signed himself out of the hospital against medical advice
(AMA). Based on Dr. Kelley's credible and convincing testimony, WCJ further found that
Claimant intentionally inflicted the gunshot wound to his head and that in doing so, Claimant
intended to end his life. (2/13/95 WCJ FOF Nos. 12-22, RR at 4a-5a; supported by N.T. at RR at
135a-207a.)
5 WCJ found credible and convincing that Dr. Chang had been treating Claimant for
alcoholism and marital difficulties since 1987, and that Claimant's marital difficulties increased
as time passed, culminating on August 3, 1989, when Claimant's wife sustained a miscarriage.
WCJ also accepted the negative results of Claimant's brain scan and EEG as credible and
convincing, based on Dr. Chang's testimony. (2/13/95 WCJ FOF Nos. 29-31 at RR 6a)
6 WCJ accepted as credible and convincing Dr. Spitz's testimony (N.T. at RR 39a-134a)
that after a review of Claimant's complete medical condition, there is a very high probability
(95%), within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, that the disc excision and fusion surgery
offered by Dr. Traiman would have brought about a partial-to-total recovery for Claimant's
employment injury and that the surgery would relieve most, if not all, of Claimant's work-related
disability. (2/13/95 WCJ FOF Nos. 23-27 at RR 5a-6a) WCJ found Dr. Spitz credible when
confirming that in Dr. Spitz's opinion, Claimant made numerous attempts to kill himself.
(2/13/95 WCJ FOF No. 28 at RR 6a)
5

Claimant which would have brought about partial to total recovery of Claimant's
work-related back injury but that Claimant had not received the surgery for the
seven months it was offered to him before he rendered himself ineligible to receive
this medical treatment by shooting himself in the head. (RR at 6a.)
In addition, the WCJ made factual determinations surrounding
Claimant's intent when inflicting the wound upon himself. WCJ found that, based
upon the totality of the circumstances, Claimant's intention was NOT to proceed
with medical treatment which would have decreased or eliminated his employment
disability, but rather that Claimant was determined to take his own life. (2/13/95
WCJ FOF No. 32 at RR at 6a) Additionally, "Claimant's intention was NOT to
return to any gainful employment, but rather [sic] to end his life." (2/13/95 WCJ
FOF No. 33 at RR at 6a)
WCJ concluded, 1) that based upon the credible opinion of Dr. Spitz,
the disc excision and fusion offered by Dr. Traiman was reasonable and 2) that
Claimant's repeated suicide attempts (evidenced by the numerous visits to the
Emergency Room for ingestion of drugs and alcohol), along with the final
terminally self-inflicted injury, demonstrated that Claimant did not wish to reduce
or cease his disability, and instead, Claimant intended to end his life. WCJ further
concluded that, therefore, Employer satisfied its burden of proof under Muse v.
Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board and Western Electric Company, 514 Pa.
1, 522 A.2d 533 (1987) that Claimant refused reasonable medical treatment.7

7The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has stated, "Our decision in Muse held that a
claimant's refusal of medical services constitutes a forfeiture of disability benefits under the
Act." Joyce Western Corp. v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Bd. (Fitchtorn), 518 Pa. 191,
197, 542 A.2d 990 (1988).
6

The WCJ, by Order dated February 13, 1995, granted Employer's
Petition to Suspend Compensation Benefits. Claimant appealed this decision to the
Board on the basis that Claimant did not refuse reasonable and necessary medical
treatment, nor did Claimant intend to voluntarily remove himself from the
workplace. The Board affirmed the WCJ's decision that Claimant refused
reasonable medical treatment by not undergoing the surgery and that Claimant
voluntarily removed himself from the workplace. This appeal follows.
Claimant now raises two issues for this Court's review. First,
Claimant asserts that the WCJ erred by concluding Claimant intentionally inflicted
injury to himself and thereby voluntarily removed himself from the work force.
Secondly, Claimant contends that the WCJ erred by concluding that Claimant
refused reasonable medical treatment.
Where both parties have presented evidence, as in this case, the
appellate court's review on appeal is limited to determining whether the necessary
findings of the WCJ are supported by substantial evidence of record, whether an
error of law was committed or whether constitutional rights were violated. Section
704 of the Administrative Agency Law, 2 Pa. C.S. § 704; Moore v. Workers'
Compensation Appeal Board (Reading Paperboard Corp.), 539 Pa. 333, 652 A.2d
802 (1995). Substantial evidence has been defined as such relevant evidence as a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion. Id. Also, the
party who prevailed before the WCJ is entitled to the benefit of all favorable
inferences that can be drawn from the evidence. Id.
In support of his first issue, Claimant asserts that the WCJ erred as a
matter of law in failing to apply the chain-of-causation test when determining
whether such a self-inflicted injury would require forfeit of a right to continue
7

receipt of workers' compensation benefits as required by Globe Security Systems
Co. v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board (Guerrero), 518 Pa. 544, 544 A.2d
953, 957 (1988), citing McCoy v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board
(McCoy Catering Service), 518 A.2d 883 (Pa. Cmwlth 1986).8 Claimant's
argument fails.
In order to prove that the self-inflicted injury occurred during an
episode for which the employee was not legally responsible, Claimant must prove
all three elements of the chain of causation test. Halvorson v. Workmen's
Compensation Appeal Board (Congoleum Corp.), 632 A.2d 973 (Pa. Cmwlth.
1993), appeal denied, 537 Pa. 636, 642 A.2d 488 (1994). The chain-of-causation
test enunciated in Globe is a burden placed upon Claimant to prove that a self-
inflicted injury which is otherwise not compensable under Section 301(a) of the
Act,9 becomes compensable because it was causally related to a pre-existing work-

8 In Globe, a widow petitioned for fatal claims benefits after her husband became so
despondent from the pain, impotence and emotional distress from the physical effects of his
work-related injury that he committed suicide. Globe held that even though the Act prohibits
the awarding of benefits from a self-inflicted wound, the Commonwealth Court properly applied
the three-prong "chain-of-causation" test enunciated in McCoy to determine whether or not the
self-inflicted wound was causally related to an initial work-related injury. The Globe court
further held that if the self-inflicted injury was causally related to an original work-related injury,
then, in this case, death benefits could be awarded.
It is important to emphasize that the use of the word awarded substantially differentiates
the facts and issues in the case sub judice, since the critical issue in the case before us is not the
awarding of benefits, but is instead, the suspension of benefits.
9 Section 301(a) of the Act, 77 P.S. § 431 states, in pertinent part, that, "no compensation
shall be paid when the injury or death is intentionally self-inflicted...."
8

related injury.10 This standard has been consistently applied to claims for an initial
award of benefits but this is the first time that this concept has been raised with
respect to the suspension of benefits.
Claimant is correct in asserting that in making a determination for
suspending benefits due to a self-inflicted injury or suicide, that the chain-of-
causation test should be applied. However, it is important to note that the WCJ,
the Board or the courts will not reach that issue if the claimant, as in this instance,
does not both allege and prove, to the WCJ, and if appealed, to the Board, the
work-relatedness of the self-inflicted injury or suicide as enunciated in the chain-of
causation test.
Once workers' compensation benefits have been awarded, Section
413 of the Act provides that benefits may only be modified upon the employer

10 Interestingly enough, the Act places the burden of proof on the employer to prove that
the injury was intentionally self-inflicted in order to have the claim for benefits denied under this
provision. Without anything further, once the Employer proves that the injury was intentionally
self-inflicted, benefits under the Act must be denied. Therefore, in order to bring the self-
inflicted injury back into the compensable arena, the burden of proof necessarily shifts to the
employee to prove all three elements of the Globe chain-of-causation test. The three elements of
the chain-of-causation test which render an otherwise non-compensable self-inflicted injury
compensable under the Act are:
1) the Claimant initially suffered a work-related injury as defined by section 301(c) of
the Act, 77 P.S. § 411;
2) the initial work-related injury caused the Claimant to become dominated by a
disturbance of the mind of such severity as to override normal rational judgment; and
3) this mental disturbance resulted in the self-inflicted injury or suicide. Globe at 518
Pa. 552, 544 A.2d at 957.
By meeting the Globe chain-of-causation test and proving that the self-inflicted injury or
suicide was caused by an overriding lack of judgment causally related to an initial work-related
injury, the self-inflicted injury or suicide is then sufficiently connected to a work-related injury
to become compensable under the Act.
9

demonstrating that the disability has changed, or has temporarily or finally
ceased.11 The term "disability" has always meant "loss of earning power." Since
the loss of earning power has only been compensable when it is work-related,
when the loss of earning power is no longer work-related, then disability benefits
under the Act should cease.
The seminal case dealing with the proof requirements for a party
seeking to suspend, terminate or modify benefits was set forth by the Supreme
Court in Kachinski v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board (Vepco
Construction Co.), 516 Pa. 240, 532 A.2d 374 (1987).12 The Court has also held
that the four-prong analysis of Kachinski is not to be rigidly applied to situations in
which an employer seeks to suspend or terminate a claimant's benefits because the
claimant's loss of earning power is no longer caused by the work-related injury.
Banic v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board (Trans-Bridge Lines, Inc.), 550
Pa. 276, 705 A.2d 432 (1997). Under Banic, an employer is only required to
demonstrate those factors which are relevant.13 Id. Banic specifically delineates

11 77 P.S. § 771.
12 In order to meet the requirements for a modification of benefits under Section 413 of
the Act, 77 P.S. §§771-774.2, Kachinski outlines the shifting burden to determine a modification
of benefits:
1) Employer's proof of medical evidence of a change in the Claimant's condition;
2) Employer's proof of evidence of a referral to a then open job within the Claimant's
functional capacities;
3) Claimant's demonstration that he has made a good faith effort to follow up on the
referred jobs; and
4) If the referral fails to result in the job, the Claimant's benefits should continue.
13 Where, for instance, medical proof of a change in condition is not required when that is
not the basis for seeking a decrease in benefits, Dillon v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal
Board (Greenwich Collieries) 536 Pa. 490, 640 A.2d 386 (1994).
10

that where an employer seeks suspension of benefits because the claimant has
voluntarily withdrawn from the workforce, an employer does not need to
demonstrate that a claimant is physically able to work or that available work has
been referred to a claimant. Id.
The Supreme Court has also held that, "it is clear that disability
benefits must be suspended when a claimant voluntarily leaves the labor market
upon retirement.... For disability compensation to continue following retirement, a
claimant must show that he is seeking employment after retirement or that he was
forced into retirement because of his work-related condition." Southeastern
Pennsylvania Transportation Authority [SEPTA] v. Workers' Compensation
Appeal Board (Henderson), 543 Pa. 74, 78 669 A.2d 911, 913 (1995)
[compensation benefits suspended where the claimant voluntarily left the labor
market by retiring].
This rationale clearly articulates the test for determining a proper
suspension of benefits when Claimant has removed himself from the workforce in
any instance, including when he has inflicted a wound upon himself which renders
him unable to continue working in any capacity at any job. In such an instance,
when a claimant voluntarily removes himself from the labor market, i.e., when he
intends an act that will preclude him from the possibility of earning income, such
as retirement, or in this instance, rendering himself totally disabled, then, for
disability compensation to continue, it is Claimant that must demonstrate that he is
seeking employment after it is proven that he removed himself from the labor
market, or, in the alternative, that he was removed from the labor market because
of his work-related injury.
11

On this appeal, Claimant does not indicate, nor can the court find any
instance in the very complete and voluminous record, where Claimant raised
before the Board, and therefore preserved for appeal, the work-relatedness of
Claimant's self-inflicted gunshot wound which was the culmination of a night of
binge drinking and cocaine use. (See Claimant's Appeal to the Board at RR 32a-
33a.) Claimant, therefore, is precluded from asserting this argument for the first
time in this appeal. Pa. R.A.P. No. 1551.14
However, in its review of whether or not benefits were properly
suspended, the Court will consider whether or not Employer met its burden of
proving conditions for a suspension, and then consider whether or not Claimant has
met its burden to prove compensability. There is substantial evidence in the record
that Employer met its burden of proof for a suspension of benefits, when it proved
that the injury was self-inflicted. Claimant clearly presented no evidence,
however, that Claimant's self-inflicted injury was causally connected to his work-
injury.
Because the petition upon which the WCJ and the Board are acting is
a petition to suspend benefits and not a petition to award benefits, in order for the
chain-of-causation test to be applied by either the WCJ or the Board, once
Employer meets his burden of proof for a suspension petition by proving Claimant
voluntarily removed himself from the work force by a self-inflicted injury, then it

14 Pa. R.A.P. No. 1551, pertaining to review of governmental determinations and relating
to "Scope of Review," provides that "review of quasijudicial orders shall be heard by the court
on the record. No question shall be heard or considered by the court which was not raised before
the government unit except questions involving the validity of a statute, the jurisdiction of the
government unit over the subject matter or question which the court is satisfied that the
petitioner, by the exercise of due diligence, could not have raised with the lower tribunal.
12

is up to Claimant to, first, assert the work-relatedness of the self-inflicted injury
and then to prove all three elements of the chain-of-causation test.
In the present instance, the record contains substantial evidence to
support the conclusion that Claimant's gunshot wound was self-inflicted.
Claimant argues that the WCJ, in making his findings of fact,
addressed activities which demonstrated that Claimant did not intend to reduce or
cease his disability, but simply intended to end his life. This argument is not
persuasive, especially since it is within the WCJ's responsibility as fact finder to
determine both the intent of Claimant and causation.
A claimant's workers' compensation disability benefits must be
suspended, even where the defendant has shown no work availability, where it has
been established that the claimant has removed himself from the job market or has
voluntarily retired. SEPTA (Henderson).
In the present case, the WCJ found that by inflicting a gunshot wound
to his head which rendered him into a vegetative state, it was "the Claimant's
intention NOT to return to any gainful employment, but rather to end his life."
(Finding of Fact No. 33, R.R. at 6a.) By finding that Claimant intended not to
return to any gainful employment, the WCJ essentially found that on December 19,
1989 Claimant had voluntarily removed himself from the job market.
Claimant maintains that it was Claimant's September 27, 1988 work-
related back injury which caused Claimant to inflict the gunshot wound to his head
and, therefore, under the chain-of-causation rule, Claimant did not voluntarily
remove himself from the job market or forfeit his right to compensation benefits.
Claimant waived the chain-of-causation issue, however, by raising the
issue for the first time in this Court. In the present case, Claimant did not raise that
13

issue to the WCJ or during his appeal to the Board. Instead, the first time Claimant
raised the issue that his self-inflicted head injury and resulting vegetative state was
causally related to his September 27, 1988 work-related back injury was in his
brief before this Court.
Legal issues and facts not presented to the WCJ or raised in an Appeal
before the Workers' Compensation Appeal Board must be deemed waived and
cannot be raised on appeal. Smith v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board
(Concept Planners & Designers), 543 Pa. 294, 670 A.2d 1146 (1995).
In any case, Claimant presented no medical evidence (including no
psychiatric evidence) that there was any chain-of-causation that the September 27,
1988 work injury to his lower back directly caused Claimant to become dominated
by a disturbance of mind of such severity as to override normal rational judgment.
While it is Employer's burden to prove intentionally self-inflicted injury, Garcia v.
Workmen's Compensation Appeal Bd., 503 Pa. 342, 469 A.2d 585 (1983), it is
Claimant's burden to prove that the intentionally self-inflicted injury occurred
during an episode for which he is not legally responsible, i.e. to prove the chain-of-
causation test. McCoy, supra.
The evidence accepted as credible by the WCJ is substantial and
supports the WCJ's finding that Claimant's self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head
and resulting vegetative state was related to Claimant's problems with alcohol,
marital problems and argument with his live-in girlfriend on December 19, 1989,
and not to any pain or other sequellae of his injuries. The only evidence of record
is that Claimant, without any complaint of pain or coercion, voluntarily loaded a
gun, placed it to his head and squeezed the trigger not once, but twice. Employer
has thus met its burden that the injury was self-inflicted.
14

On the other hand, Claimant has offered no credible evidence to
support his burden that the self-inflicted injury occurred during an event for which
he was not legally responsible. Therefore, under Section 301(a) of the Act, 77 P.S.
§ 431, no compensation shall be paid to Claimant because his injury was self-
inflicted. It is not necessary to address Claimant's second issue.
Consequently, we affirm the WCJ and the Board who were not in
error by concluding that Claimant forfeited his right to future compensation when
he put himself into a vegetative state by a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

JIM FLAHERTY, Judge
Judge Leadbetter did not participate in the decision in this case.

15

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
KEITH CURTIS,
:
Petitioner
:
:
v.
:
No. 1271 C.D. 1997
:
WORKERS' COMPENSATION
:
APPEAL BOARD (BERLEY
:
ELECTRIC COMPANY),
:
Respondent
:
O R D E R
NOW, April 7, 1999, the decision of the Workers' Compensation
Appeal Board, No. A95-0655, dated April 28, 1997, is affirmed.

JIM FLAHERTY, Judge


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