Aqua Leisure Pools, Spas & Patios, Inc. v. Joseph Greene, III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 4, 2020
Docket0620202
StatusUnpublished

This text of Aqua Leisure Pools, Spas & Patios, Inc. v. Joseph Greene, III (Aqua Leisure Pools, Spas & Patios, Inc. v. Joseph Greene, III) 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
Aqua Leisure Pools, Spas & Patios, Inc. v. Joseph Greene, III, (Va. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judge Humphreys and Senior Judge Annunziata UNPUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

AQUA LEISURE POOLS, SPAS & PATIOS, INC., CAROLINA MUTUAL INSURANCE, INC. AND INSURITY, INC. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0620-20-2 JUDGE ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS NOVEMBER 4, 2020 JOSEPH GREENE, III

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

Steven H. Thiesen (Midkiff, Muncie & Ross, P.C., on brief), for appellant.

Philip J. Geib (Philip J. Geib, P.C., on brief), for appellee.

On April 1, 2020, the Workers’ Compensation Commission (“the Commission”), found

that Joseph Greene, III’s (“Greene”) avascular necrosis and post-surgical methicillin-resistant

staphylococcus aureus (“MRSA”) infection resulted from a work-related left hip injury he

sustained after being attacked by a customer’s dog while working for Aqua Leisure Pools, Spas

& Patios, Inc. On appeal, Greene’s employer, along with its insurance carrier and claim

administrator (collectively “Aqua Leisure”), assign error to the Commission’s determination that

Greene’s avascular necrosis and MRSA were causally related to the work-related injury.

I. BACKGROUND

On August 28, 2017, Greene was working for Aqua Leisure as a pool liner installer. As

he entered a customer’s yard, the customer’s dog ran towards him. To get away from the dog,

Greene stepped onto a small brick wall that was about one-and-a-half or two feet off the ground.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. The dog jumped up and bit Greene’s Achilles tendon, causing him to fall off the wall onto a

“hard dirt area.” Greene landed on his left hip, around where his jean pockets were, and his “left

side took all the impact.” Greene sustained two additional bites to his left wrist and left thigh

before he was able to get away. At the time of the dog attack, Greene was thirty-seven years old.

In the days following, Greene only experienced pain related to the bite wounds. He did not

notice any bruising or cuts on his left hip. The bite wound on his ankle eventually developed

MRSA.

On September 26, 2017, Greene gave a recorded statement to the workers’ compensation

insurance carrier explaining the dog attack. In the statement, Greene did not mention falling off

the brick wall. When asked “exactly what parts of [his] body were injured,” Greene responded

that his left heel, left thigh, and left wrist were injured. The carrier’s representative then asked if

those injuries “were all just from bites or did you get injured when you fell or anything like

that?” Greene responded that the injuries were all from bites.

However, sometime in mid-October 2017, approximately two months after the dog

attack, Greene developed pain in his groin. Initially, he thought the pain was a pulled muscle or

hernia. On October 23, 2017, Greene saw his primary care physician for the pain. During the

visit, he described the pain as “some discomfort in the left medial thigh where he was bit,” that

was “[o]ccasionally sensitive to touch” and caused “[a]n uncomfortable sharp pain if he

step[ped] awkwardly.” Greene’s doctor referred him to several other doctors to treat his groin

pain. Throughout this period, the pain was “progressively getting worse and worse.”

On November 2, 2017, the Commission entered an award order providing for temporary

total disability and medical benefits for the dog bites to Greene’s left wrist and ankle. On March

5, 2018, the Commission entered a stipulated order, adding the injury from the bite on Greene’s

left thigh to the medical award.

-2- On July 5, 2018, Greene saw Dr. Peter Jacobson (“Dr. Jacobson”), who diagnosed

Greene with avascular necrosis in his left hip after reviewing Greene’s MRI and CT scans.

Specifically, Dr. Jacobson found that Greene had “avascular necrosis [of the] left femoral head

with a small nondepressed—which means nondisplaced—insufficiency fracture of the

subchondral bone, which is the bone right under the cartilage . . . .” Avascular necrosis is the

death of a bone due to an interruption in blood supply to the bone. As the blood supply comes

back, the bone softens, causing “a lot of pain.”

There are a number of risk factors associated with avascular necrosis, including a

fracture, dislocation, or other trauma to the hip. Usually, young people will only develop

avascular necrosis after a hip dislocation. Because Greene had no other risk factors, no history

of injuries to his hip, and gradually developed pain, Dr. Jacobson determined that the most likely

cause of Greene’s avascular necrosis was the “hard impact injury” Greene sustained after falling

off the brick wall.

Due to the extent of Greene’s avascular necrosis, a hip replacement “was [the] only real

solution.” On September 10, 2018, Dr. Jacobson performed Greene’s hip replacement surgery.

A couple weeks after his surgery, Greene’s incision site from the surgery developed MRSA with

the same antibiotic profile as the MRSA he developed from the dog bite to his ankle. On

October 2, 2018, Dr. Jacobson performed a second surgery to treat Greene’s post-surgical MRSA

infection.

On May 7, 2019, Greene sought to amend his claim for disability to include the injury to

his left hip as a compensable injury as a result of his work-related accident. At the evidentiary

hearing, Greene testified that he did not realize how “in depth” he had to describe the incident to

the insurance carrier. When questioned about telling the carrier’s representative that his injuries

were just from bites, Greene explained, “I mean at the time I did not know I was . . . hurt.”

-3- Dr. Jacobson testified Greene’s delayed onset of pain was consistent with what he would

expect based on Greene’s case of avascular necrosis. A crack in the hip may take “four months,

six months, [or] a year to show up.” Typically, with a subtle, stable fracture like Greene had, the

patient does not “get symptoms until they’re starting to heal and it’s getting loose.”

Although about half of avascular necrosis diagnoses are “idiopathic,” meaning with no

known cause, Dr. Jacobson determined that Greene’s avascular necrosis was “far more likely

than not . . . related to [the fall from the dog attack] because he didn’t have any other reasons for

this to have happened to him.” Moreover, Dr. Jacobson opined that but for the bite wound,

Greene would not have developed the same strain of MRSA pathogen because “he wouldn’t

have had MRSA.” Although Dr. Jacobson testified that Greene “could have been a MRSA

carrier when the dog bit him,” he determined that the dog bite was what introduced the pathogen

to Greene’s system because “the dog bite carried the MRSA through his skin and into his

muscle, and then he got an infection because it was normally on his skin.”

Aqua Leisure proffered its own expert medical opinion from Dr. Daniel R. Cavazos

(“Dr. Cavazos”), who did not treat Greene but conducted a review of his medical records.

Dr. Cavazos opined that, based on the medical records, Greene’s avascular necrosis was more

likely idiopathic than caused by the fall on his hip, because the “fall onto the left greater

trochanter described by Dr. Jacobson would have been a low energy injury which would not

have been sufficient to have resulted in the development of avascular necrosis of the left femoral

head.”

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