Boise Cascade Corp. v. Jackson

997 So. 2d 1026, 2007 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 298, 2007 WL 1300707
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 4, 2007
Docket2051041
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 997 So. 2d 1026 (Boise Cascade Corp. v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boise Cascade Corp. v. Jackson, 997 So. 2d 1026, 2007 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 298, 2007 WL 1300707 (Ala. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

In this workers' compensation case, Boise Cascade Corporation ("the employer") appeals from a judgment of the Clarke Circuit Court awarding workers' compensation benefits to Tommie L. Jackson ("the employee"). In its judgment, the trial court determined that the employee had sustained a nonscheduled injury that resulted in a permanent total disability and calculated the amount of disability benefits due the employee. On appeal, the employer asserts that the trial court erred in treating the injury as nonscheduled; in considering evidence of vocational disability; and in failing to reduce the disability benefits due by the amount of the employee's attorney's fees. We reverse and remand.

I.
The material facts pertinent to this appeal show that on October 30, 2001, while in the course of his employment, the employee jumped off a ladder to avoid hot ashes. He landed hard on his left foot on a concrete floor. He heard a crushing noise in his left foot at the time, but he did not experience any immediate pain or other symptoms in any part of his body at the time of his accident.

The next day, Dr. John McAndrew, an orthopedic surgeon, admitted the employee into the hospital. Dr. McAndrew diagnosed the employee with a severely comminuted fracture of the calcaneus, i.e., a broken left heel bone. Because the fracture fragments appeared well-aligned, Dr. McAndrew did not recommend surgery. Instead, he placed a compression bandage on the left heel, splinted the left foot, and prescribed rest, pain medication, elevation *Page 1028 of the foot, application of ice, and the use of crutches; Dr. McAndrew discharged the employee from the hospital on November 2, 2001.

Dr. McAndrew followed the employee for the next four months. By December 18, 2001, the employee's fracture had healed as expected, so the doctor issued him a walking boot and the employee commenced physical therapy. The treatment significantly improved the employee's range of motion and weight-bearing ability. It also reduced, but did not eliminate, the pain and swelling in the employee's left foot and ankle. Dr. McAndrew placed the employee at maximum medical improvement on March 12, 2002. He assigned a 37% anatomical permanent-impairment rating to the employee's left lower extremity and ordered the employee to undergo work-hardening therapy.

After a period of work hardening, the employee reported back to Dr. McAndrew on April 3, 2002. On that visit, the employee complained of pain not only in his left heel and foot, but also in his back. The employee had experienced previous lower-back problems in 2000 that had resulted in his missing work for three or four months until January 2001. The employee testified that this prior back problem had caused spasms. The employee further testified that following his October 30, 2001, accident, he suffered constant back pain and that the pain was different than his prior back problem.1

Dr. McAndrew informed the employee's nurse case manager that he did not believe the back pain was causally related to the left-heel fracture. On May 6, 2002, he wrote the following: "If the back pain was [secondary] to original injury then he would have complained about it at the outset and had ongoing problems. It would not show up as a problem months later." In his deposition, the doctor ex-pounded at length that he did not believe the employee's back complaints were credible or that they related to his foot injury. Accordingly, Dr. McAndrew did not treat the employee's back.

Based on a functional-capacity evaluation conducted on April 11, 2002, Dr. McAndrew established physical and hourly work restrictions for the employee. Thereafter, the doctor reviewed a video-tape made by the employer of a job that the employer believed fit the restrictions set out by Dr. McAndrew. Dr. McAndrew asked to reexamine the employee before releasing him to perform that job. On October 29, 2002, the doctor recorded that he observed the employee walking bare-foot in his office. Dr. McAndrew found no swelling and no antalgic gait.2 The doctor also recorded that the employee did not complain of pain while walking. Thus, the doctor found no objective evidence to prevent the employee from returning to work in the job depicted on the videotape.

The employee returned to work for the employer on October 30, 2002. Initially, he worked three hours, took a two-to two-and-one-half-hour break, and then worked another three hours, performing the job. The employee complained to Dr. McAndrew on November 22, 2002, that his work activities increased the pain in his left heel and foot. Dr. McAndrew found no objective worsening of the foot, such as swelling, *Page 1029 on physical examination, so the doctor maintained the same work restrictions. The employee continued working under those restrictions for the next year and a half.3

While still working for the employer, the employee underwent an evaluation by Donald Blanton, a licensed professional counselor, on October 28, 2003. The employee informed Blanton that he experienced daily pain in his left heel and in his back. Blanton sent the employee for a physical-work performance evaluation that showed that the employee was "unable to perform" any physical work due to "quite a lot of pain in the left foot and ankle" with increased activities that subsided with stationary activities. The evaluation indicated that the employee was "strong other than his left foot and ankle."

After that evaluation, the employee continued to work for the employer. On May 6, 2004, the employee underwent another functional-capacity evaluation that revealed he could lift in the medium to heavy category of work. During that evaluation, the therapist recorded the employee's complaints of left-foot pain but documented that the employee had stated that his foot was pain-free at rest. Based on that functional-capacity evaluation, Dr. McAndrew increased the employee's work load to eight hours per day. The employee then worked 4 hours in the morning, followed by a 2- to 2 and 1/2-hour break, then worked 4 hours in the afternoon, for the next 10 months.

Dr. McAndrew testified that, for one year, the injury to the employee's heel had extended to the employee's leg because of swelling but that, after that period, the injury had not affected any part of the employee's body other than the area below the employee's left ankle. The impairment rating Dr. McAndrew assigned related solely to the deformity of the calcaneus bone after healing.

Dr. McAndrew testified that a calcaneus fracture is a chronically painful injury. He stated that, even after the bone heals, it leaves scarring in the joint that restricts motion and causes pain. As a result of the fracture, Dr. McAndrew expected that the employee would always have some degree of pain in his left heel and that the pain in the employee's left heel would increase with prolonged standing and walking. As Dr. McAndrew put it, "[t]he pain is proportionate to the amount of stress and strain the bone has to take and how long without rest it has to do it and so forth." The doctor stated that the level of pain the employee would experience would be im-possible to determine. Swelling in the foot is an indicator of pain, but Dr. McAndrew found no objective evidence of swelling due to physical activity during the May 6, 2004, functional-capacity evaluation or in repeated clinical examinations. Nevertheless, he gave the employee the benefit of the doubt that he was experiencing pain due to the nature of his injury.

On March 11, 2005, while still working for the employer, 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 So. 2d 1026, 2007 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 298, 2007 WL 1300707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boise-cascade-corp-v-jackson-alacivapp-2007.