Acme Standex v. WCAB (Gomez and Roma Aluminum Co. Inc.)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 20, 2018
Docket1397 C.D. 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of Acme Standex v. WCAB (Gomez and Roma Aluminum Co. Inc.) (Acme Standex v. WCAB (Gomez and Roma Aluminum Co. Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acme Standex v. WCAB (Gomez and Roma Aluminum Co. Inc.), (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Acme Standex, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1397 C.D. 2017 : Submitted: March 9, 2018 Workers’ Compensation Appeal : Board (Gomez and Roma : Aluminum Co. Inc.), : Respondents :

BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON FILED: November 20, 2018

Petitioner Acme Standex (Acme) petitions for review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board), which affirmed the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ). The WCJ granted Freddie Gomez’s (Gomez) claim petition and denied Acme’s petition to join Roma Aluminum Company, Inc. (Roma) as an additional defendant. For the reasons that follow, we affirm. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND A. Employment Gomez worked for Acme as a sheet metal machine operator. Starting in 2010, Gomez began to experience pain in his right knee and both of his thumbs. Gomez’s pain gradually worsened, and, on October 5, 2012, Gomez told Acme’s owner that he could no longer work there. Within a month of leaving his employment with Acme, Gomez began working for Roma, a window company, where he worked until September 8, 2014, when Gomez underwent surgery on his right knee. On November 3, 2014, Gomez filed a claim petition under Pennsylvania’s Workers’ Compensation Act (Act)1 against Acme, seeking workers’ compensation benefits starting October 5, 2012. The WCJ held hearings starting on January 15, 2015. Because the testimony bears on the ultimate outcome of this case, we begin by recounting the relevant testimony in some detail. B. Testimony Before the WCJ 1. Gomez Gomez testified that he worked for Acme for 25 years. (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 13a.) The position entailed about 55 hours a week of lifting heavy bundles of metal pipe and coils, weighing up to 70 pounds. (R.R. at 14a.) Pertinent to his workers’ compensation claim, Gomez testified that his position also required him to climb onto and jump down from Acme’s machinery. (R.R. at 14a, 17a.) The work for Acme caused him pain in both his knees, with the right knee being worse, and pain in his thumbs when his thumbs would “lock up.” (R.R. at 16a.) In 2010, when he began to experience pain, he reported his injuries to his supervisors and asked to be moved to a seated position, but his supervisors rejected his request. (R.R. at 17a.) He also requested that Acme send him to Acme’s workers’ compensation clinic or to a doctor, but his supervisors responded by telling him to “wait a while and see” if he continued to have issues with his knees and thumbs. (R.R. at 17a-18a.)

1 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1041.4, 2501-2708.

2 Gomez testified that the pain became bad enough that he decided to see a doctor on his own, rather than wait for Acme’s assistance in seeking treatment. (R.R. at 17a-18a.) He received cortisone shots in his knees, which helped to alleviate some of the pain. (R.R. at 19a, 20a.) He later went to Acme’s workers’ compensation clinic and received cortisone shots in his thumbs. (R.R. at 20a.) He used all of his sick days and vacation days trying to recover. (R.R. at 20a.) The cortisone shots provided only temporary relief, and his symptoms returned after he returned to work. (R.R. at 20a-21a.) He continuously complained to his supervisors that he was experiencing pain and repeatedly requested a seated position. (R.R. at 21a.) His pain worsened after Acme downsized in 2011-2012, which resulted in an increased workload for him. (R.R. at 21a.) He decided to stop working for Acme on October 5, 2012, because the pain became too great to continue working there. (R.R. at 22a.) Gomez testified that he started working for Roma, a window company, shortly after leaving Acme. (R.R. at 23a.) Initially, the workload at Roma was lighter than his workload with Acme. (R.R. at 23a-24a.) The work picked up after about a year, however, and Roma required him to lift heavier and heavier pieces of glass. (R.R. at 23a-24a.) As the work at Roma became more strenuous, his ailments slowed him down, and he needed frequent breaks. (R.R. at 24a.) He was only able to work at Roma for about a year and a half before he informed Roma’s owner that he needed to stop working and undergo surgery.2 (R.R. at 23a, 223a-24a.)

2 At several points in Gomez’s testimony, the attorneys in this case questioned Gomez about the pain he was experiencing when he left his position at Acme relative to the pain he was experiencing when he left his position at Roma. Gomez gave varying answers that fell into three categories: (1) the pain was the same when he left Acme as when he left Roma; (2) the pain was worse when he left Roma, as evinced by the fact that he needed surgery when he left Roma; and (3) the pain levels went up and down with such frequency that he could not pinpoint the times

3 Gomez testified that on September 8, 2014, Ira Sachs, M.D., performed surgery on his right knee. (R.R. at 25a.) The surgery did not improve his right knee pain. (R.R. at 26a-27a, 230a.) Following the surgery, he received physical therapy, and Dr. Sachs prescribed him pain relievers. (R.R. at 26a.) He did not receive treatment for his thumb pain and left knee pain. (R.R. at 26a.) He testified that after surgery, he began to experience low back pain and that, due to that pain and his continued knee pain, he is unable to sit or stand for long periods of time. (R.R. at 217a, 235a-36a.) Gomez further testified that Dr. Sachs did not release him to return to work. (R.R. at 26a.) Moreover, Gomez did not believe, based on his ailments, that he would ever be able to work in his former position for Roma. (R.R. at 26a-27a.) Gomez has not worked since 2014. (R.R. at 231a.) Finally, pertinent to the instant appeal, Gomez testified that his knee injuries had a gradual onset and that there was no specific incident that he believed caused his injuries. (R.R. at 222a-23a.) 2. Dr. Lipton Andrew Lipton, D.O., testified on behalf of Gomez. He began treating Gomez in the Spring of 2015. At that time, Gomez complained of bilateral knee pain that worsened with sitting, standing, and walking, and that interfered with his sleep. (R.R. at 58a.) Dr. Lipton diagnosed Gomez with “bilateral[] knee pain with status post-arthroscopy of the right knee and low back pain.” (R.R. at 60a-61a.) Dr.

when the pain was worse. In their briefs, the attorneys both express frustration at the discrepancy or selectively quote the portions of Gomez’s testimony that most benefit their arguments. We need not examine these discrepancies, however, because, as explained in the legal discussion below, in a workers’ compensation case, the resolution of conflicts in evidence is left to the WCJ. Williams v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd. (USX Corp.-Fairless Works), 862 A.2d 137, 143-44 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004).

4 Lipton testified that he reviewed an MRI of Gomez’s right knee from July 8, 2010 (2010 MRI). (R.R. at 61a.) Regarding that 2010 MRI, Dr. Lipton testified: “[T]he biggest impression was tear of the body of the posterior horn of the medial meniscus, likely a complex flap tear. Possibly a ganglion versus a parameniscal cyst, bursitis, and small popliteal cyst.”3 (R.R. at 62a.) Dr. Lipton testified that Dr. Sachs performed surgery on Gomez “to treat his medial meniscus tear and flap, and it was an arthroscopy and synovectomy and a partial meniscectomy from my recollection.” (R.R. at 63a.) Dr. Lipton ordered an MRI to evaluate the knee for a “possible surgical reevaluation or re-intervention.” (R.R. at 61a.) His testimony continued: Q. What was significant, if anything, about the second MRI? A.

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