Barr v. Darlington County School District

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedApril 7, 2021
Docket2018-001237
StatusPublished

This text of Barr v. Darlington County School District (Barr v. Darlington County School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barr v. Darlington County School District, (S.C. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Kenneth L. Barr, Claimant, Appellant,

v.

Darlington County School District, Employer, and S.C. School Boards Insurance Trust, Carrier, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2018-001237

Appeal From The Workers' Compensation Commission

Opinion No. 5815 Heard February 2, 2021 – Filed April 7, 2021

AFFIRMED

Preston F. McDaniel, of McDaniel Law Firm, of Columbia; and Gerald Malloy, of Malloy Law Firm, of Hartsville, both for Appellant.

Kirsten Leslie Barr, of Trask & Howell, LLC, of Mount Pleasant, for Respondents.

KONDUROS, J.: In this workers' compensation action, Kenneth L. Barr, Employee, appeals the decision of the Appellate Panel of the South Carolina Workers' Compensation Commission denying his claim for medical and compensation benefits for alleged injuries he argues resulted from exposure to volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in paints he used while working for the Darlington County School District, Employer. We affirm.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY Employee began working as a painter for Employer on May 27, 2009. Before this employment, Employee worked as a commercial painter for a nuclear plant and as a house painter on a self-employed basis, and had other nonpainting jobs. Employee painted both inside and outside Employer's school buildings with a schedule consisting of five eight-hour days during the school year and four ten- hour days in the summer.

Approximately one year after Employee began work for Employer, in June of 2010, he reported to his primary care physician, Dr. Raymond Chapman, he had experienced headaches for the past four weeks. After a CT scan did not reveal an abnormality, Dr. Chapman treated Employee over the course of several years as Employee continued to report headaches, as well as anxiety and other ailments. Dr. Chapman noted Employee was "[a] very complicated patient with numerous medical issues."

Employee reported a specific incident during his employment that occurred on March 16, 2015, in which he experienced a severe headache, dizziness, disorientation, and left hand pain. The incident occurred when Employee had not painted yet that day, but was driving to a store to purchase supplies. He testified he became disoriented, and after returning his work vehicle, his wife drove him to the emergency room and he was admitted to the hospital. A CT scan showed no evidence of an abnormality.

Employee saw various specialists and reported chronic headaches and other health concerns. Employee sought treatment with Dr. Marshall White, a private practice neurologist, in late 2012, for severe headache and back pain. About two years later, Employee again sought treatment from Dr. White, reporting "severe headache, memory loss, fatigue, confusion, and disorientation." On May 21, 2015, Dr. White diagnosed Employee with brain damage related to his exposure to VOCs in the paints he used. In his report dated October 21, 2015, Dr. White stated Employee "suffered an encephalopathic condition which has led to severe permanent brain damage," and Employee "is totally and permanently disabled and unsuited for any rehabilitation that would enable him to re-enter the workforce."

Employer denied Employee had any injury to his brain or nervous system, denied Employee's psychological issues were related to his employment, and stated his working conditions caused neither repetitive nor traumatic injury and that Employee had not shown the required elements of an occupational disease. Employer noted Employee admitted he worked in a ventilated area, used a respirator, and painted with a brush and roller, not a sprayer. Employer asserted Dr. White's opinion of brain damage was unsupported by evidence and speculative. Employer noted Dr. Nicholas Lind, who performed neuropsychological testing on Employee, found no evidence of memory or processing speed deficits. Employer asserted Employee's headaches predated his employment with Employer as did his complaints of fatigue and other psychological issues.

Dr. Paul Pritchard, a neurologist at the Medical University of South Carolina, performed an independent medical examination of Employee on February 2, 2016, and reviewed Employee's medical records on behalf of Employer. Dr. Pritchard did not find evidence of encephalopathy in Employee and stated Employee's neurological exam was normal: "the neurological exam today was normal, including normal scores for orientation, memory, calculations, and language function . . . . [Employee] did not have findings to support a diagnosis of encephalopathy on today's exam."

The records of Dr. William Woodberry, who saw Employee in 2005, approximately four years before Employee began working for Employer, include the following: "[Employee] has had intermittent vertigo for the past four years. . . . He had the sudden onset of dizziness and feeling of imbalance, trouble walking because of that."

Dr. Roland Skinner, a neurologist, opined, in part, that Employee's headaches were tension headaches and noted: "I think a good bit of his problem may be analgesic rebound. He needs to completely stop intermittent Tylenol, Ibuprofen and Goody Powders."

Dr. Joseph Healy, another physician who examined Employee, opined Employee's exposure to VOCs in paint did impact his health, but as one of a number of other factors:

[M]y impression with this guy is that he is a heavy smoker, but to compound his pulmonary problems is his exposure to the VOCs and so he has two pulmonary insults. He has an abnormal blood gas which is essentially his oxygen level was just probably a little bit low, but his carbon dioxide level is too high, so he's retaining carbon dioxide, which you know, causes the brain to not totally function properly. It's a metabolic problem. But I do that think his exposure to the VOCs combined with his [metabolic problem] has caused him to have pulmonary problems which lead [to] other problems.

Dr. Healy also performed a sleep study in April 2016, which revealed "severe obstructive sleep apnea syndrome." Dr. Healy testified: "[H]e had severe sleep apnea,[1] and so, I mean, in anybody that has headaches, you got to correct your sleep, you got to correct breathing and then, too, it showed that he was a kicker."2

In addition, Dr. White, Employee's neurologist, acknowledged in his deposition in 2016 that evidence of brain damage is difficult to show: "Not everything that we can evaluate or see in neurology can be assessed in the living patient." Dr. White further provided: "And since so many people are wanting objective evidence of problems where there's scant objective evidence, unfortunately at this time neuropsych[ological] testing is the best objective measure we have for evaluating patients with encephalopathic conditions." Dr. White also testified he did not know anything about the environment Employee worked in or the personal protective equipment he used. Dr. White noted his opinion was: "[b]ased on [Employee's] history and the fact that I feel that the constellation of symptoms is most consistent with a toxic exposure. . . . So I'm still waiting on the neuropsychological testing, which I think is going to give us a lot more information."

On June 19, 2015, Employee filed a claim with the Commission for benefits and medical treatment, asserting a date of injury of May 21, 2015. On October 1, 2015, Employee filed a second claim and requested a hearing before a single commissioner. In a third Form 50, filed in May 2016, Employee requested a hearing and sought benefits and medical treatment. After a hearing on August 31, 2016, the single commissioner denied medical and compensation benefits, finding the weight of the evidence did not support Employee's claims.

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Barr v. Darlington County School District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barr-v-darlington-county-school-district-scctapp-2021.