BARNES, EDWIN v. ELECTROLUX

2025 TN WC 94
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedDecember 23, 2025
Docket2025-60-5786
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 TN WC 94 (BARNES, EDWIN v. ELECTROLUX) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BARNES, EDWIN v. ELECTROLUX, 2025 TN WC 94 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

FILED Dec 23, 2025 08:28 AM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT NASHVILLE

EDWIN BARNES, ) Docket No. 2025-60-5786 Employee, ) v. ) State File No. 28475-2025 ELECTROLUX, ) Employer. ) Judge Joshua Davis Baker )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER

The Court held an expedited hearing on December 18, 2025, on Mr. Barnes’s requests for shoulder surgery and an attorney’s fee payable by Electrolux. Electrolux denied that any benefits are due, asserting that Mr. Barnes did not injure himself at work, but if he did, his shoulder injury preexisted the work accident.

The Court holds that Mr. Barnes is entitled to the surgery but not attorney’s fees at this time.

Claim History

On November 14, 2024, Edwin Barnes saw Dr. David Moore at Elite Sports Medicine because he had pain in his left shoulder for about a year. Mr. Barnes said he had surgery on his shoulder several years back with Dr. Moore, but Dr. Moore did not remember and wrote, “[W]e have no record of that.” After an examination that confirmed pain and weakness in Mr. Barnes’s left shoulder, Dr. Moore recommended an MRI to see if he had a rotator cuff tear. Mr. Barnes’s private insurance denied the MRI pending completion of physical therapy.

Mr. Barnes went to 15 physical therapy sessions, nine more than the prescribed six, and testified that the therapy improved the pain in his shoulder. He then returned to Dr. Moore’s office on April 23, 2025, where a physician’s assistant documented continuing weakness in his shoulder and recommended an MRI “to rule out a rotator cuff tear.” Dr. Moore later reviewed and electronically signed the note.

Page 1 of 5 On April 24, Mr. Barnes was working at Electrolux and found stacked bins of parts blocked his way when he went to change a die. Mr. Barnes tried twice to move the parts. On the second attempt, he said he felt a “significant pop” in his left shoulder. He reported the incident to his supervisor and went to the onsite medical clinic.

At the clinic, Mr. Barnes saw nurse Veronica Paredes Martinez, who completed a report. Ms. Paredes wrote that Mr. Barnes tried to move a stack of containers when he heard a “pop” in the front side of his left shoulder. She further wrote that Mr. Barnes said he had completed physical therapy and had an MRI scheduled for an injury to the same shoulder. She questioned Mr. Barnes about whether he gave medical notes about his “pre- existing shoulder injury” to human resources. Mr. Barnes replied that he did not bring any notes to human resources because he knew that “they don’t allow employees under personal medical restrictions[.]”1

Ms. Paredes also wrote that the explanation of Mr. Barnes’s accident was “under investigation” and the containers Mr. Barnes tried to move require a forklift. However, as Ms. Paredes was a nurse in the onsite clinic and did not testify, it is unclear how she had this knowledge or why it was relevant to her work as a nurse. At trial, Electrolux’s safety manager also said the containers are moved by forklift only and that he did not believe the incident occurred.

After Ms. Paredes reported the injury, Mr. Barnes received a panel of physicians, selected Dr. Roy Johnson, and saw him the next day. Mr. Barnes recounted the incident that led to his injury to Dr. Johnson and told him that he was undergoing physical therapy for an injury to a “different part” of his left shoulder and had an MRI scheduled. He also later told Dr. Johnson that “he could not recall if he had [left] shoulder surgery in the past.” Medical records, however, stated that he had earlier surgery on his left shoulder. When asked about this, Mr. Barnes said he thought he had, but Dr. Moore’s office had no record of any left-shoulder surgery.

About two weeks after his first visit with Dr. Johnson, Mr. Barnes had an MRI that showed a biceps tendon rupture with retraction, a tear of the supraspinatus and infraspinatus tendons, and mild-to-moderate AC joint osteoarthritis. Dr. Johnson reviewed the MRI results and noted that Dr. Moore causally related Mr. Barnes’s injury to his work for Electrolux. Dr. Johnson recommended an orthopedic assessment “for causation and determination of treatment.” Electrolux gave Mr. Barnes a panel, and he selected Dr. Samuel Crosby.

1 Presumably this implied that Mr. Barnes would not be allowed to work, although no proof showed that he was under work restrictions for his shoulder condition.

Page 2 of 5 Mr. Barnes saw Dr. Crosby in July and told him he started having pain in his left shoulder after the work incident. Dr. Crosby diagnosed a traumatic, incomplete left- shoulder rotator cuff tear and a biceps tendon rupture with retraction. Dr. Crosby referred Mr. Barnes to Dr. Moore. Electrolux accepted Dr. Crosby’s referral, but despite that, it declined to provide the surgery, prompting this hearing request.

To support its denial, Electrolux cited Mr. Barnes’s history of shoulder surgeries and problems dating back over 25 years. It also noted that Mr. Barnes had just visited a doctor the day before the incident with pain complaints about the same shoulder. The complaints were so severe that Mr. Barnes was scheduled for an MRI.

Electrolux additionally asserted Mr. Barnes’s lack of candor when reporting the injury and with Dr. Johnson. In short, Electrolux doubted that an incident even occurred and questioned Mr. Barnes’s credibility for allegedly withholding information about his surgical history from Dr. Johnson. It further argued that Mr. Barnes’s lack of candor and credibility made Dr. Moore’s surgical recommendation suspect. Despite the suspicions, Electrolux never denied the claim.

Mr. Barnes testified that Electrolux denied the recommended surgery. However, because it never denied his claim, Mr. Barnes could not use his private insurance for surgery on a work injury, essentially leaving him without a treatment option, since he could not afford to pay for the surgery.

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

To receive benefits at an expedited hearing, Mr. Barnes must prove he is likely to prevail at a final hearing. McCord v. Advantage Human Resourcing, 2015 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 6, at *7-8, 9 (Mar. 27, 2015). The Court holds he met this burden and orders Electrolux to provide the recommended surgery.

Under the Workers’ Compensation Law, an employer “shall furnish, free of charge to the employee, such medical and surgical treatment . . . made reasonably necessary by accident as defined in this chapter.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-204(a)(1)(A) (2025). To receive treatment, the employee must establish through expert medical evidence that the work accident was more than 50% the cause of the need for the recommended treatment. Id. § 50-6-102(12)(C)-(D). Further, any treatment recommended by the authorized treating physician or by referral is presumed reasonable and necessary for treatment of the workplace injury. Id. § 50-6-204(a)(3)(H).

Here, the surgical and injury history of Mr. Barnes’s left shoulder is undeniable. His very recent complaints of pain and the referral for an MRI on that same body part before the work incident are also undeniable. These facts alone, however, do not give Electrolux license to deny reasonable and necessary medical care.

Page 3 of 5 Mr. Barnes selected Dr. Crosby from a panel. Dr. Crosby causally related Mr. Barnes’s injury to his work accident and recommended surgery. He then referred him to Dr. Moore. With the referral, Dr. Moore became the authorized treating physician. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-204(a)(3)(A)(ii).

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Related

§ 50-6-204
Tennessee § 50-6-204(a)(1)(A)
§ 50-6-239
Tennessee § 50-6-239(d)(3)

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Bluebook (online)
2025 TN WC 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-edwin-v-electrolux-tennworkcompcl-2025.