Denial Of Firefighter’s Request To Reopen Disability Benefits Determination

Written on 11/07/2025
LRIS

Doug Donovan, a former firefighter for the City of Henderson, Nevada, injured his back on duty and filed a workers’ compensation claim, which the City accepted. In 2021, after treat­ment, he was evaluated and assigned a ten percent permanent partial disability rating. Donovan chose to receive his disability award as a lump sum. Later, after obtaining a second medical eval­uation that assessed his impairment at 32%, he sought to reopen his claim for additional benefits. The insurer denied the request, pointing to a statutory bar on revising the disability percentage once a lump sum payment has been elected. Donovan pursued administrative and judicial review, but both the appeals officer and the district court rejected his claim, and the Nevada Court of Appeals affirmed.

The Court explained that because the appeals officer provided two indepen­dent grounds for its decision — statutory dismissal and an alternative merits ruling — Donovan was required to challenge both on appeal. While Donovan disput­ed the statutory bar, he did not address the appeals officer’s merits finding that the medical evidence did not justify an increase. Under Nevada precedent, failing to contest an alternative basis results in waiver. Because Donovan did not challenge the sufficiency-of-the-evi­dence ruling in his petition for rehearing, petition for judicial review, or opening brief on appeal, the Court held that he had waived the issue. The district court’s denial of judicial review was therefore affirmed.

Donovan v. City of Henderson, 2025 WL 2470437 (Nv. Ct. App. 2025).