Adrienne Mallard v. Next Day Temps Inc. and Accident Fund General Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 14, 2019
Docket0028184
StatusUnpublished

This text of Adrienne Mallard v. Next Day Temps Inc. and Accident Fund General Insurance Company (Adrienne Mallard v. Next Day Temps Inc. and Accident Fund General Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adrienne Mallard v. Next Day Temps Inc. and Accident Fund General Insurance Company, (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Huff, O’Brien, and Senior Judge Haley UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia

ADRIENNE MALLARD MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0028-18-4 JUDGE GLEN A. HUFF MAY 14, 2019 NEXT DAY TEMPS INC. AND ACCIDENT FUND GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

Adrienne Mallard, pro se.

Esther King (Amanda Tapscott Belliveau; McCandlish Holton Morris, P.C., on brief), for appellees.

Adrienne Mallard (“claimant”) appeals the decision of the Virginia Workers’

Compensation Commission. Claimant suffered a compensable injury by accident on June 6,

2014, while working for Next Day Temps (“employer”) and filed a number of claims in early

2016, which were adjudicated by an opinion from Deputy Commissioner Plunkett on July 20,

2016. She filed additional claims in June, July, and October of 2016, and February 2017. Those

claims were heard by Deputy Commissioner Kennard whose opinion was affirmed by the full

Commission. Claimant now appeals to this Court and alleges that the Commission erred by:

1. Denying her claim for complex regional pain syndrome in her left lower extremity.

2. Denying her claim for depression, anxiety, and agoraphobia.

3. Not considering/including testimony from Dr. Herman Zarate.

4. Not considering “years of the [employer’s] harmful behavior.”

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 5. Denying her claim for chondromalacia patella of the left knee.

6. Denying her claim for lost wages compensation

7. Omitting documents from the record filed on appeal

Because the errors alleged by claimant are questions of fact, or deal with the credibility of

witnesses and weight to be assigned to evidence, and the findings of the Commission are

supported by credible evidence, this Court affirms the ruling of the full Commission.

I. BACKGROUND

“On appeal from a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission, the evidence

and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from that evidence are viewed in the light most

favorable to the party prevailing below.” Artis v. Ottenberg’s Bakers, Inc., 45 Va. App. 72, 84

(2005) (en banc). In this case the medical evidence is voluminous and claimant has filed an

extensive series of claims. This opinion summarizes only the evidence applicable to the claims

before this Court: complex regional pain syndrome/reflex sympathetic dystrophy (CRPS/RSD)

in the left ankle, depression and anxiety, chondromalacia patella in the left knee, and lost wages.

Appellant suffered a fall at work on June 6, 2014. Emergency room doctors diagnosed

her with a broken left ankle. She began treatment with Dr. Phillip Omohundro on June 9, 2014,

who prescribed a boot for her left ankle and further diagnosed a right ankle sprain requiring a

brace. Claimant performed physical therapy and was kept out of work through September 2014.

By October of 2014 she had greater tolerance for activity and was walking without assistance.

Claimant continued to have pain in her left ankle and leg through early 2015. Dr. Omohundro

recommended continued physical therapy for her left ankle range of motion. By summer of 2015

claimant had some limitations in range of motion in her left ankle but was working regular duty.

In September and October of 2015 claimant was evaluated by other doctors in

Dr. Omohundro’s practice. Because of her continuing complaints of pain in her ankle, the

-2- doctors ordered a CT scan that showed a healed fracture and moderate generalized osteopenia

(reduced bone density). The doctors attributed her continued pain to neuritis and gave her a

prescription for Gabapentin. The doctors’ notes from that time showed she was capable of

working regular duty.

Claimant had an independent medical exam (IME) with Dr. Steven Neufeld in December

of 2015. Dr. Neufeld diagnosed essentially the same conditions that Dr. Omohundro had

documented, although he opined that the tendinitis she had developed was not causally related to

her original injury. He agreed that there was osteopenia in her fibula that might have resulted

from the ankle injury, but did not believe that it would cause disability or permanent impairment.

He recommended a brace, orthotics, and physical therapy.

Claimant filed a series of claims for medical benefits and temporary total disability

payments. Those claims were adjudicated after a hearing before Deputy Commissioner Plunkett.

In an opinion dated July 20, 2016, he found that claimant suffered an injury by accident and was

entitled to medical benefits for injuries to her left leg, left foot, left ankle, right ankle, left and

right wrist, and left knee. Deputy Commissioner Plunkett denied claims for injury to the left hip,

right elbow, and CRPS/RSD to the left ankle because they were not supported by medical

evidence and not causally related to the original injury. The award included temporary total

disability benefits for lost wages from June 7, 2014 through September 28, 2014, but denied

further wage loss benefits because claimant did not produce evidence of sufficient efforts to

market her residual work capacity. Claimant did not request review of Deputy Commissioner

Plunkett’s opinion by the full Commission.

Throughout 2016 claimant saw Dr. Omohundro a number of times for continued pain in

her ankle. His notes from a visit in May of 2016 show that he suspected “nerve sensitivity for

the foot/ankle pains [and] no structural damage [was] noted” and that “she has many complaints

-3- for which no specific pathology is identified.” His office notes from a December 2016 visit

report that claimant was “still having multiple pain issues related to her June 6, 2014 injury

[including] . . . range of motion issues as well as depression. These are all causally related to the

June 2014 injury.”

Claimant filed a social security disability claim and was examined one time by Dr. Bruce

Neeritz in June 2016 pursuant to that claim. He opined that some of her ongoing symptoms

“could be considered CRPS or RSD.” Claimant was also seen by Dr. Memanatu Bangura the

same month, as part of her social security claim. She reported experiencing depression

symptoms for about a year, but no previous psychiatric history. Dr. Bangura performed a mini

mental status exam and claimant scored within normal limits. Dr. Bangura diagnosed her with

major depressive disorder, single episode, with anxious distress, moderate, but did not address

the cause of her depression symptoms.

On December 21, 2016 claimant had another IME; this one with Dr. Kevin Fitzpatrick.

She reported that she was having moderate to severe pain in her left foot and ankle and that she

had been prescribed Wellbutrin but had not started taking it yet. Dr. Fitzpatrick found full range

of motion in her left ankle and both hips, some tenderness and pain in her left foot, ankle, and

knee, but no sensory loss or weakness. He stated that none of his findings supported a diagnosis

of CPRS/RSD but that she had neuralgia and tendinitis related to the original injury.

Dr. Fitzpatrick also opined that “it seems unlikely that the injury about 2.5 years ago would be

the cause of her current multifocal pain.”

Claimant saw a podiatrist, Dr. Zarate, whom she located through her own research, on

January 4, 2017. Dr.

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