Avery v. Phelps Chevrolet

626 S.E.2d 690, 176 N.C. App. 347, 2006 N.C. App. LEXIS 535
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 7, 2006
DocketCOA05-562
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 626 S.E.2d 690 (Avery v. Phelps Chevrolet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avery v. Phelps Chevrolet, 626 S.E.2d 690, 176 N.C. App. 347, 2006 N.C. App. LEXIS 535 (N.C. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

MARTIN, Chief Judge.

Defendants appeal from an order of the North Carolina Industrial Commission (“Commission”) awarding plaintiff (1) temporary total disability for time missed from work, (2) costs for medical treatment related to his injury, and (3) attorneys’ fees. For the reasons which follow, we affirm.

*349 The evidence before the Commission tended to show that plaintiff, who had a high school education, began working as a mechanic for defendant Phelps Chevrolet (“Phelps”) in 1987. On 3 January 1996, plaintiff fell backwards while stepping off of a stool, striking his back and right shoulder on a concrete block. Plaintiff felt “major pain” in his neck and shoulder as soon as he fell, and he could not move his shoulder. He received immediate medical attention at “Med Center One” where x-rays were taken and his shoulder was put in a sling. Plaintiff continued to return to Med Center One for six months where he received physical therapy and a steroid shot in his right shoulder. When he failed to improve, he was recommended to Dr. Steven L. Wooten, a board-certified orthopaedist.

Dr. Wooten first saw plaintiff in March of 1996. At that time, Dr. Wooten stated plaintiff “had good motion in his shoulder. His muscle strength was good, but due to his persistent pain I [recommended] an MRI scan of his shoulder.” Plaintiff scheduled an appointment for the MRI, but he was too large to fit into the MRI scan. Instead, Dr. Wooten obtained an arthrogram to determine if plaintiff had a tear of his rota-tor cuff. The arthrogram indicated a large tear of the rotator cuff, which Dr. Wooten recommended plaintiff undergo surgery to repair. In April 1996, the injury to plaintiffs right shoulder was accepted as compensable, and he was paid temporary total disability beginning 30 April 1996.

Plaintiffs rotator cuff surgery took place on 23 April 1996. After surgery, plaintiff testified that when he turned his neck, he felt “like it was pulling the shoulder in two.” Dr. Wooten continued to send plaintiff to therapy, and he recommended plaintiff not use his right hand and keep his right arm in a sling while at work. When Dr. Wooten saw plaintiff on 24 May 1996, plaintiff continued to have “tightness over his neck in that same area, but it was improving.” A month later, Dr. Wooten found plaintiff’s neurologic exam to be normal. However, plaintiff continued to have pain in the right side of his neck and down his arm into his hand. Dr: Wooten believed the pain was a result of either (1) the nerve block administered to plaintiff during surgery, (2) a herniated cervical disk in plaintiffs neck, or (3) continued pain from the rotator cuff tear.

A subsequent arthrogram indicated plaintiff had a “persistent or recurrent rotator cuff tear.” However, Dr. Wooten stated that “[m]ost people with a rotator cuff tear won’t have neck pain or pain below the elbow,” leading him to believe that an additional cause of plaintiff’s pain might be a herniated cervical disk. Dr. Wooten *350 first considered the possibility that a herniated disk was the cause of plaintiffs pain in August of 1996, seven months after plaintiffs accident. Although he stated that symptoms of a cervical disk herniation generally appear sooner than seven months after an injury takes place, he believed it was “possible” the injury caused the cervical disk herniation.

Dr. Wooten recommended plaintiff see Dr. William J. Mallon, an expert in the field of orthopedic surgeries with a sub-specialty in shoulder and elbow surgery. Dr. Mallon treated plaintiff between 19 June 1997 and 12 June 2001 and performed two surgeries on plaintiffs shoulder. The first surgery was to repair his rotator cuff, after which plaintiff improved briefly. However, because plaintiff continued to have pain, Dr. Mallon performed a second surgery on 15 January 1999. During this surgery, Dr. Mallon removed a portion of plaintiffs distal clavicle, or collar bone, at the joint where the collar bone meets the shoulder blade. Plaintiff again improved briefly then later regressed. In May of 1999, plaintiff told Dr. Mallon he was “50 percent better than before ... but not normal yet and [his injury] continued to hurt him a fair amount.”

On 26 May 1999, plaintiff was “pulling on an air conditioning part” at work when he lost his grip and “developed a sharp shooting paih in his shoulder.” Dr. Mallon indicated he thought plaintiff had “intrinsic tendonopathy,” meaning his tendon was intact but weaker than normal, and some activities that were not previously painful now caused pain in the tendón. Dr. Mallon restricted plaintiff from raising his right arm above shoulder level, lifting more than ten pounds, and standing on ladders or unrestricted heights. When Dr. Mallon saw plaintiff on 6 November 2000, plaintiff was complaining of pain radiating up into his neck muscles. At that point, Dr. Mallon felt the best course of action for plaintiff was to go to a pain clinic. On 12 June 2001, Dr. Mallon referred plaintiff to Dr. Lynn Johnson at the Greenville Pain Clinic.

Dr. Johnson practices in pain management and is board-certified in anesthesiology and pain medicine. He first saw plaintiff on 1 October 2001, at which time plaintiff complained of neck, shoulder, and arm pain in his right side. Dr. Johnson observed the following symptoms in plaintiff: (1) limited right shoulder range of motion; (2) pain and tenderness of the right shoulder; (3) nerve root irritation of the wrist and elbow; (4) tenderness in the neck; and (5) tenderness and decreased sensitivity to light touch in his right arm. Dr. Johnson recommended plaintiff have an EMG, which is a nerve conduction study *351 of the arm, and a cervical MRI scan of his neck. Having lost a significant amount of weight since 1996, plaintiff was able to obtain the MRI scan. The MRI indicated multilevel disk protrusions between the C3 and C7 disks, a potential herniation at C7-T1, and a herniation at C5-6. The EMG revealed some problem with the nerves in plaintiffs right wrist and arm, but it did not indicate a nerve root irritation. Despite this, Dr. Johnson believed there was nerve root irritation, stating that EMGs are “relatively insensitive to the wide spectrum of nerve problems” and do not pick up small or sensory nerve problems readily. Dr. Johnson prescribed pain medication and performed a nerve root block of the C6 nerve on plaintiff’s right side, but when plaintiff did not improve, he referred him to Dr. Kurt Voos, an expert in the field of orthopaedic surgery.

Dr. Voos first saw plaintiff on 11 March 2002. At that time, plaintiff complained of “[s]hooting pain into the right shoulder, forearm, thumb, index finger, along with numbness and tingling.” Plaintiff described his pain as an eight on a scale of one to ten. Dr. Voos reviewed plaintiffs MRI, which revealed a herniated disk at C5-6 and C6-7. He recommended plaintiff receive a cervical epidural steroid injection, which Dr. Johnson’s associate performed on 17 June 2002. When asked whether he believed the disk herniation could or might have been caused by the 3 January 1996 injury, he replied, “I think it could have been, yes.” Upon reviewing Dr. Wooten’s records indicating plaintiff had symptoms of disk herniation in August of 1996, Dr. Voos stated that the herniation was “likely to be related to the injury.” (Emphasis added). Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
626 S.E.2d 690, 176 N.C. App. 347, 2006 N.C. App. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-phelps-chevrolet-ncctapp-2006.