Bond v. American Air Filter

692 S.W.2d 638, 1985 Tenn. LEXIS 530
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 692 S.W.2d 638 (Bond v. American Air Filter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bond v. American Air Filter, 692 S.W.2d 638, 1985 Tenn. LEXIS 530 (Tenn. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

FONES, Justice.

This is a worker’s compensation case in which the trial court awarded plaintiff temporary total disability benefits, permanent partial disability benefits of 60% to the body as a whole, and medical expenses.

Appellee, Joe Bond, was employed as a forklift operator by American Air Filter on March 10, 1983, when, while transferring approximately 70 pounds of galvanized metal on a pallet, he injured his foot after the material fell across the top of his foot. Bond immediately reported his work-related injury to the company nurse, Ruth Masters, as required by the company rules. After examining Bond’s foot, she applied an ice pack for about two hours and told Bond that he could return to work. When Bond attempted to resume his duties, his foot began to swell again, and he requested to see a doctor. The nurse, neglecting to inform plaintiff of his choice of available physicians, took plaintiff to see Dr. Clarey Dowling, a local general practitioner. After examining Bond, Dr. Dowling prescribed pain medication to be taken at night and released plaintiff to return to work, concluding the injury was a minor soft tissue trauma.

On March 25, 1983, Bond again insisted that he needed further medical attention for the persistent pain and swelling that he was experiencing. Mrs. Masters again took Bond to see Dr. Dowling, who continued to express his feelings that the injuries were not significant and that Bond could return to work.

Following his second visit to Dr. Dowl-ing, Bond told the company nurse that he was not satisfied with the treatment provided by Dr. Dowling and requested permission to leave work to see his personal physician, who referred plaintiff to an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. John Janovich.

Doctor Janovich first saw Bond on March 25, 1983, the same date on which plaintiff was examined by Dr. Dowling for the second time. Doctor Janovich’s findings on this date, however, sharply contrasted the diagnosis by Dr. Dowling of Bond’s injury as a minor soft tissue trauma. Doctor Janovich described the injury as a “crush injury with a lot of soft tissue reactivity secondary thereto.” Doctor Janovich testified that he found a large cystic mass on the anterior aspect of the foot near the toes, suggestive of a post-traumatic neuro-ma, which he defined as an injury to a nerve as a result of compression from soft tissue scarring and fibrous tissue. In addition, he noted a dysfunction or abnormal conduction of the tibial nerve into the medial forefoot and on the plantar or bottom of the foot. Doctor Janovich noted plaintiff’s complaint of tenderness over this nerve at the level of the tarsal tunnel, which is a tight sheath enclosing the tibia! nerve in the ankle. Doctor Janovich then stated, within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, that the post-traumatic swelling had been responsible for the compression of the tibial nerve in the area of the tarsal tunnel, causally connecting the problems with the back of the foot in the tarsal tunnel with the injury sustained at work.

On this March 25 examination, Dr. Jano-vich also evaluated plaintiff’s complaints of back pain, noting a tenderness in the inter-vertebral area of the lumbosacral junction [640]*640which Dr. Janovich treated with a compressive wrap and a prescription for Naprosyn.

When Dr. Janovich next saw plaintiff on April 1, he observed that Bond’s foot was not progressing satisfactorily. Doctor Ja-novich, therefore, performed additional tests, which, together with the results of nerve-conduction tests administered by Dr. Huffman, a specialist to whom plaintiff was referred by Dr. Janovich, conclusively confirmed that plaintiff did have a tibial nerve entrapment and encroachment at the level of the tarsal tunnel. He thus recommended surgical release of the tarsal tunnel and scheduled plaintiff for this operative procedure.

When Mr. Bond returned to work he advised the company nurse of the scheduled surgery but, later the same day, plaintiff was requested by company management to see another doctor. Mr. Bond agreed and an appointment was scheduled for the next week, causing Bond to postpone the surgery. However, on the date of this scheduled appointment, someone in personnel told plaintiff that his appointment had been cancelled. After he was unable to get an explanation for the can-celled appointment, and still experiencing such pain in his foot that he could barely walk, Bond had the surgical release of the tarsal tunnel performed by Dr. Janovich on April 25, 1983.

Appellant insists that there is no material evidence on which the trial court could predicate an award of disability to the body as a whole. This assertion, however, simply ignores the conclusions of Dr. Janovich, the treating physician and surgeon who operated on plaintiff’s foot, whose testimony the chancellor specifically accredited. As stated in Hinson v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 654 S.W.2d 675, 676-77 (Tenn.1983), “it is within the discretion of the trial judge to conclude that the opinion of certain experts should be accepted over that of other experts and that it contains the more probable explanation.”

Here, the chancellor concluded that the testimony of Dr. Janovich was more persuasive than that of Dr. Calandruecio and Dr. Dowling. Doctor Dowling, a general practitioner, acknowledged on cross examination that he could not rule out the possibility of tarsal tunnel syndrome in Bond’s foot as a result of the injury sustained at work. He also testified that a definitive diagnosis of this condition required specialized testing and that an orthopedic surgeon would be the appropriate physician to accurately diagnose and treat plaintiff’s injuries.

Doctor Janovich’s findings were contradicted by Dr. Calandruecio, an orthopedic surgeon who had been requested by appellant to independently evaluate plaintiff and who concluded that Bond had only suffered a contusion to the foot which did not result in serious injury. Thus, the chancellor had to choose from conflicting opinions expressed by qualified medical expert witnesses, and it was within his discretion to conclude that Dr. Janovich’s opinion should be accepted over those of the other expert and that it contained the most probable explanation in view of the known facts. Combustion Engineering, Inc. v. Kennedy, 562 S.W.2d 202, 204 (Tenn.1978).

There is material evidence to support an award for permanent partial disability to the body as a whole. Doctor Janovich, based upon twenty-three opportunities to observe, six days of hospitalization and surgery, and the results of tests ordered by him as part of the diagnostic and treatment process, testified that the symptoms present in Bond’s foot were caused by his work-related injury. Doctor Janovich also stated that plaintiff had complained of back problems since his initial visit and that the back problems were causally connected to the March 10 injury. Doctor Janovich stated that although he initially treated plaintiff’s back problems “somewhat conservatively,” the condition of Bond’s back had progressively deteriorated to the extent that this problem overshadowed the injury to the foot. He further testified that the condition of Bond’s foot had aggravated his back problems by creating an abnormal gait problem.

Doctor Janovich also testified that Bond needed further surgical procedures [641]

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Bluebook (online)
692 S.W.2d 638, 1985 Tenn. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bond-v-american-air-filter-tenn-1985.