Bishop v. Perdue Farms, Incorporated

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedAugust 30, 1995
DocketI.C. No. 259064
StatusPublished

This text of Bishop v. Perdue Farms, Incorporated (Bishop v. Perdue Farms, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop v. Perdue Farms, Incorporated, (N.C. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

The Full Commission has reviewed the prior Opinion and Award based on the record of the proceedings before Deputy Commissioner Lawrence B. Shuping, Jr., and the briefs and oral arguments before the Full Commission. The appealing party has not shown good ground to reconsider the evidence, receive further evidence or to amend the Opinion and Award.

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This matter involves an admittedly compensable claim for bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome that was the subject of prior Industrial Commission Awards compensating plaintiff for her resulting total and permanent disabilities. Prior to the hearing before Deputy Commissioner Shuping, the parties entered into a Pre-Trial Agreement, which is hereby incorporated by reference as if fully set out herein and where the parties agreed to a number of jurisdictional and other factual stipulations, including as part thereof a package of medical records. The prior Industrial Commission Awards in this matter are hereby incorporated by reference as if fully set out herein.

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The Full Commission adopts the findings of fact found by the Deputy Commissioner and enters the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff is an unemployed, forty-three (43) year-old female who is currently receiving Social Security disability benefits, has not looked for work since being terminated from defendant's employ in April of 1994 and is not motivated to look for work, but nonetheless still retains the capacity to perform the type of modified part-time light duty work defendant-employer had been providing since her return to work on 8 October 1993. Plaintiff quit school in the eleventh grade, but has since obtained both welding and sewing certificates as a result of separate eight week courses taken at Roanoke-Chowan Community College and is only a quarter short of her cosmetology degree. Plaintiff's prior work experience has included driving a taxi, working as a waitress, bartender and cashier at the VIP Club and as a hotel maid.

2. In August of 1985 plaintiff became employed by defendant Perdue, Inc. as a breast/wing grader responsible for taking breasts and wings from bins in front of her and placing the good ones in trays on a moving conveyor that similarly ran in front of her and the bad ones, either in tanks behind her or a box in front of her dependent upon whether breasts or wings were involved.

3. Due to the repetitive hand movement required by her regular breast/wing grader's job on or about 1 April 1992 plaintiff developed the admittedly compensable occupational disease disabling bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome that was subject of the Industrial Commission's prior awards of total and partial disability benefits manifested by bilateral hand and wrist pain and numbness and resulting in her initially becoming disabled by the same disease on or about 24 August 1992 when she underwent a right carpal tunnel release and thus the date of injury for the purpose of determining the beginning of the 300 week period under the provisions of G.S. § 97-30.

4. After initially being treated by Dr. Clayton plaintiff was referred to an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Joseph Bloem of Rocky Mount, who also attempted a conservative course of treatment consisting of medication, physical therapy, injections and allowing her to perform the modified light work that no longer involved the type of repetitive hand movements required by her regular breast/wing grader's job, including the styling job described of record and other low risk ones similarly not requiring repetitive hand movement.

5. On 24 August 1992 when plaintiff's condition did not improve with conservative treatment Dr. Bloem performed a right carpal tunnel release and she concurrently began receiving benefits under the Industrial Commission's original award during her resulting period of total disability.

6. Although having then neither reached maximum medical improvement and/or the end of the healing period from and following her bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome and corrective surgery necessitated thereby nor able to return to her regular breast/wing grader's job or other work similarly involving repetitive hand motion; by 8 October 1992 she had sufficiently recovered from the same condition so as to be able to return to lower paying modified part-time light duty work involving working four hours a day in a low risk job in the premises mezzanine area. There plaintiff was merely responsible for guiding moving boxes of product on a conveyor, which neither required repetitive hand motion nor significant lifting and she concurrently began receiving benefits at a rate of $81.31 under the Industrial Commission's last award for her resulting partial disability, was then bound by the same award that she was only partially incapacitated by her bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome and remains capable of performing the same job or similar non-repetitive work.

7. Although Dr. Bloem originally recommended bilateral carpal tunnel releases, when plaintiff's condition did not improve after undergoing the right carpal tunnel release, plaintiff elected not to undergo one on her left hand and is not a candidate for further surgery in view of her failure to improve with the original surgery, the non-related generalized complaints involving her neck, shoulder, back, legs and feet and that she continues to complain and her emotional reaction to the whole situation.

8. Since her return to modified light duty work in October of 1992 plaintiff has reached maximum medical improvement and/or the end of the healing period from and following her bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome and as a result thereof retains eight percent permanent-partial disabilities of each hand.

9. Although because of her permanent hand injuries plaintiff is unable to return to her regular breast/wing grader's job or similar repetitive work, she has remained capable of performing the type of modified part-time light duty work she returned to on 8 October 1992 and could have continued to perform to date had she not been terminated from defendant's employ in April of 1993 for reasons unrelated to her occupational disease, which are more fully hereinafter described.

10. After returning to modified part-time light duty work on 8 October 1992 plaintiff developed generalized pains in her neck, shoulders, back and legs as well as numbness in her feet and in November of 1992 sought treatment for the same symptoms, which were not work-related, from her family physician, Dr. Flood, who not only began treating plaintiff for her resulting cervical and lumbar strains, but as part thereof referred her to a number of specialists for evaluation. Initially Dr. Flood referred plaintiff to Dr. Ann Reading, a neurologist associated with the Southeastern Neurology Group, for an evaluation of her leg pain, who subsequently obtained an MRI indicating a disc bulge at the C5-C6 level of her cervical spine. As a result Drs. Flood and Reading referred plaintiff to Dr. Ira Harding for neurosurgical evaluation; however, the bulging C5-C6 disc shown on MRI did not involve a clinically significant lesion requiring treatment much less surgery; but rather, represented minor degenerative disc disease at the same level that was not compressing the nerve roots or spinal cord; while the rest of her complaints of neck, back and leg pain were due to the previously described non-work-related cervical and lumbar stains originally diagnosed by Dr. Flood.

11. In the interim on 28 January 1993 plaintiff returned to one of Dr. Reading's partners, Dr.

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Bishop v. Perdue Farms, Incorporated, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-perdue-farms-incorporated-ncworkcompcom-1995.