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Vitti v. Milford

Conn.August 24, 2020No. SC20350Cited 5 times
Defendant WinMilford

Case Details

Judge(s)
Robinson; Palmer; McDonald; D’Auria; Mullins; Kahn; Ecker
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Excerpt

The plaintiff appealed from the decision of the Compensation Review Board, which affirmed the decision of the Workers' Compensation Commis- sioner awarding the plaintiff benefits pursuant to statute (§ 31-308 (b)) for a 23 percent permanent partial disability on the basis of the functional capacity of his transplanted heart. While employed as a police officer for the named defendant, the city of Milford, the plaintiff was diagnosed with giant cell myocarditis and underwent a heart transplant. The plain- tiff thereafter filed a claim for benefits pursuant to the statute (§ 7-433c) governing compensation for municipal police officers with hypertension or heart disease. The commissioner issued a finding and award, determining that the plaintiff had reached maximum medical improve- ment approximately three years after receiving the transplant and that he was entitled to benefits for a 23 percent permanent partial disability of the transplanted heart. In affirming the commissioner's finding and award, the board concluded that the commissioner had properly consid- ered the function of the transplanted heart in awarding benefits rather than awarding the plaintiff 100 percent permanent partial disability bene- fits on the basis of the removal and complete loss of his native heart. On the plaintiff's appeal from the board's decision, held that the board properly considered the functionality of the transplanted heart after a finding of maximum medical improvement, rather than the total loss of the plaintiff's native heart, in fashioning the specific indemnity award because the plaintiff had not suffered a complete loss of that organ within the meaning of § 31-308 (b): although the language of § 31-308 (b) was ambiguous with respect to whether permanent partial disability benefits were to be based on the complete loss of a native organ or the loss of use of a transplanted organ, the legislative history surrounding § 31-308 (b) evinced an intent to balance the goals of protecti

What This Ruling Means

**Vitti v. Milford: Police Officer Wins Workers' Compensation for Heart Condition** This case involved a police officer in Milford, Connecticut, who developed a serious heart condition called giant cell myocarditis while working and needed a heart transplant. After the surgery, he applied for workers' compensation benefits, claiming his heart problems were work-related and left him with permanent disabilities. The Workers' Compensation Commissioner initially awarded the officer benefits for a 23% permanent partial disability based on how well his transplanted heart could function. This decision was later upheld by the Compensation Review Board when the case was appealed. **What This Means for Workers:** This ruling is significant because it shows that workers' compensation can cover serious medical conditions that develop on the job, even when they require major treatments like organ transplants. The case demonstrates that workers can receive benefits not just for obvious injuries like broken bones, but also for complex medical conditions that may be linked to their work environment or job stress. For public safety workers like police officers, this precedent helps establish that job-related health problems can qualify for compensation based on the actual functional limitations they cause, rather than just the initial diagnosis.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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