Bollinger v. Coast to Coast Total Hardware

995 P.2d 346, 134 Idaho 1, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 5
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 2000
Docket25034
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 995 P.2d 346 (Bollinger v. Coast to Coast Total Hardware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bollinger v. Coast to Coast Total Hardware, 995 P.2d 346, 134 Idaho 1, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 5 (Idaho 2000).

Opinion

KIDWELL, Justice.

Douglas Bollinger appealed from the Industrial Commission’s decision denying his worker’s compensation claim for a back injury. We affirm.

I.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Douglas Bollinger, a resident of Pinedale, Wyoming, worked for Hometown Hardware Coast to Coast (Coast to Coast) in Soda Springs, Idaho, from spring 1992 until July 1993. On February 3, 1993, Coast to Coast employees were unloading freight, using rollers to slide the stock off the truck. A box weighing approximately seventy-five pounds started sliding off the edge of the rollers. Bollinger caught the box and carried it fifteen yards into the store. He continued unloading freight until the end of the shift. When Bollinger returned home, he felt stiff, took some ibuprofen, and went to bed.

The following morning, Bollinger could barely straighten up when he first arose. He went to work, but told his employer, Chad Christensen, of his back pain. Christensen suggested that Bollinger consult Dr. Ryan Anderson, a Soda Springs chiropractor. Dr. Anderson examined Bollinger that day and diagnosed acute lumbosacral strain. Dr. Anderson performed electrotherapy on Bollinger, ordered a back brace, and recommended specific exercises and stretches.

Bollinger returned to Dr. Anderson for additional treatments on February 6, 8, and 10. Dr. Anderson released Bollinger to light duty work on February 8. On February 10, Dr. Anderson noted that Bollinger was feeling good and playing basketball. He recommended that Bollinger start an exercise regime and come three times a week to his office to exercise. Bollinger testified that he did not comply with the recommendation because he could not afford to pay for any therapy.

After a few weeks of light duty, Bollinger returned to full duty at Coast to Coast. Christensen testified that he never saw Bollinger experience any physical difficulties after he returned to full duty, never heard Bollinger complain about back problems, and never received a request for follow-up care after the initial injury.

On March 24, 1993, Dr. Anderson produced a final report on Bollinger’s industrial injury. The report noted that Bollinger had responded well to treatment and that he had returned to work with no restrictions. The report also indicated that Bollinger had failed to comply with rehabilitation and the office had lost contact with him. Based on his February 10 findings and Bollinger’s lack of communication, Dr. Anderson closed the worker’s compensation ease.

After his injury, Bollinger played basketball on two local teams and went four-wheeling for recreation. Bollinger returned to Dr. Anderson on May 18,1993, for neck and back pain he suffered while playing basketball. He testified that he told Dr. Anderson that his lower back still bothered him after he worked a long time standing on his feet. Dr. Anderson’s notes confirm that Bollinger complained of lower back pain. After a second treatment on May 20, however, Bollinger never consulted Dr. Anderson again.

In July 1993, Christensen fired Bollinger. Despite the firing, Bollinger and Christensen remained on good terms. Over the next two years, Bollinger visited Christensen several times. Bollinger did not mention back problems or request follow-up care from Christensen until June 1995, nearly two years after his termination.

In the four months after he left Coast to Coast, Bollinger worked as a laborer for two road construction companies. Between Octo *3 ber 1993 and June 1994, Bollinger worked for Rocky Mountain Traffic Control where he regularly moved traffic-control barrels weighing seventy pounds. He never told his employers he had back pain. During this period, Bollinger testified, he never suffered job-related injuries but his back hurt in the morning and evening, especially when he had been on his feet all day. Bollinger testified that he treated himself with aspirin and ibuprofen and wore a back brace on the job but did not have the money or time to visit a doctor for back pain. On the two occasions that Bollinger sought emergency medical care in 1994, he did not mention back pain to the treating practitioner.

For the next half year, Bollinger worked as night manager of a pizza parlor in Pine-dale. He moved to Missouri in February 1995 and worked at the Sonic Drive-In for four months. Bollinger testified that he did not have any job-related injuries but that his back would hurt when he stayed on his feet for a long time. He said that his lower back progressively got worse and he tried to alleviate the pain with stretching exercises, aspirin, and ibuprofen.

Bollinger testified that he returned to Pinedale in June 1995 “to figure out why I was having so much pain, why my legs were numb.” He consulted with Pinedale chiropractor Andrew Nelson on June 8. Dr. Nelson took X-rays but did not treat Bollinger. Instead, he referred Bollinger to Kenneth Lambert, an orthopedist in Jackson, Wyoming. Dr. Lambert assessed Bollinger as having chronic lumbar and cervical strain during his first examination in July 1995. He ordered an MRI, which showed central disc protrusion at L5-S1 and degenerative disc change at L3-L4 and L5-S1.

After the MRI, Bollinger moved back to Missouri and took a job washing dishes. On October 7, 1995, when Bollinger grabbed a fifty-pound “tote” of dishes, he felt a pain in his back so sharp that he dropped the dishes. Bollinger did not file a worker’s compensation claim for this incident. The following day, he quit his job and returned to Wyoming. Six days later, Bollinger went to the emergency room of St. John’s Hospital in Jackson, Wyoming, complaining of pain in his lower back and legs. In giving the medical history, Bollinger discussed the February 1993 back injury but not the previous week’s incident.

Bollinger consulted Dr. Lambert again in late October. Dr. Lambert told him that surgery was not necessary but he needed an intense program of physical fitness, muscle strengthening, and dietary consultation. The doctor referred Bollinger to Susan M. Holz, a physical therapist in Pinedale. Bollinger underwent regular physical therapy for two months. By the end of this regime, he had lost weight, increased in strength, and decreased his lower back pain. In January 1996, Dr. Lambert noted that Bollinger no longer had significant complaints of pain. He diagnosed Bollinger’s condition at that time as “[vjery mild cervical strain, resolving.”

Orthopedist Richard Knoebel prepared an evaluation of Bollinger for Coast to Coast in February 1996. Dr. Knoebel characterized Bollinger’s complaint as “subjective complaints” of “slight constant pains.” Dr. Knoebel concluded that Bollinger’s symptoms in 1995 “were not caused, contributed too [sic], or permanently aggravated by the 02-03-93 incident.” He attributed Bollinger’s symptoms to a non-industrial incident occurring in the summer of 1995.

Orthopedist James Champa prepared a worker’s compensation impairment rating of Bollinger in March 1996. He concluded that Bollinger had a 5% whole person impairment of the lumbosacral spine. Dr. Champa concurred with Dr. Lambert’s restrictions on physical activity. He noted that, after therapy, Bollinger had “moderate resolution of his symptoms.”

Bollinger took a job in the fall of 1996 which required a pre-employment physical. Occumed Corporate Occupational Health Services (Occumed) performed the physical.

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Bluebook (online)
995 P.2d 346, 134 Idaho 1, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bollinger-v-coast-to-coast-total-hardware-idaho-2000.