Bucklin v. State ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division

2001 WY 101, 33 P.3d 440, 2001 Wyo. LEXIS 121, 2001 WL 1248730
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 2001
DocketNo. 00-325
StatusPublished

This text of 2001 WY 101 (Bucklin v. State ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bucklin v. State ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division, 2001 WY 101, 33 P.3d 440, 2001 Wyo. LEXIS 121, 2001 WL 1248730 (Wyo. 2001).

Opinion

HILL, Justice.

[T1] Appellant, Emily Ann - Bucklin (Bucklin), appeals from an order of the district court that affirmed a determination of the -Medical - Commission - (Commission), which denied most of the worker's compensation benefits Bucklin sought. It is not disputed that Bucklin was injured while at work when a top-heavy file cabinet fell onto her shoulder and arm while she was in a sitting position. As a result of that occurrence, Bucklin sought medical attention. In the course of her treatment, it became evident that there existed a fracture or cancerous lesion in her cervical spine (neck). Because Bucklin had been treated for breast cancer in 1984, the treating physicians considered metastases a possible diagnosis prior to the surgical procedures necessitated by her condition. However, Bucklin needed immediate surgical intervention to stabilize her spine, [441]*441and it was not until the surgery was completed and a biopsy performed that the presence of cancer was confirmed. The treating physicians testified that they could not definitively sort out the interaction of the work-related injury and the metastases, but their testimony was clear that the source of Bucklin's pain and the event that made the surgery an immediate requirement was the on-the-job injury. That is, Bueklin's injury at work, combined with a weakness in her neck, produced a condition that required the treatment provided by Bueklin's physicians. The ultimate conclusion reached by the Commission was that Bucklin had failed to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the treatment and surgery of her neck and shoulder injury stemming from her work injury were not related to a preexisting cancer and were related to her work injury. The district court entertained Bueklin's petition for review of agency action pursuant to W.R.A.P. 12, and it concluded that the Commission's determination was based on substantial evidence.

[¶ 2] We will reverse and remand to the district court for further remand to the Commission, with direction that Bucklin's just claims be paid by the Workers' Compensation Division (Division). ©

ISSUES

[¶ 3] Bucklin poses these issues:

1. Did the Medical Commission err as a matter of law in denying Buceklin's claims for treatment of her work related neck and shoulder injuries?
2. Did Bucklin's employment activities aggravate, accelerate or combine with her pre-existing undiagnosed condition of cancer to result in a compensable injury?
3. Can the Medical Commission make a factual finding regarding causation which is directly contrary to the uncontroverted medical testimony before it?

The Division states a single issue:

Did the Medical Commission correctly conclude that Appellant's surgery was not necessitated by her accident at work?

FACTS

[¶ 4] -On March 24, 1984, Bucklin was diagnosed with breast cancer. She underwent a modified radical mastectomy in March of 1984, and that was followed by two years of chemotherapy. Over the succeeding years, Bucklin did routine semi-annual, and then annual, follow-up visits to her oncologist, Neel Hammond, M.D. (and for the years 1993-1996 to another physician), and all check-ups were negative through and including October or November of 1997.

[¶ 5] On August 18, 1998, while employed as a dispatcher for the Big Horn County Sheriff, Bucklin was injured when a three-drawer file cabinet toppled onto her left arm and shoulder. Bucklin was seated in a rolling desk chair at the time. She felt immediate pain and assumed that she had pulled a muscle "or something of that nature." Buck-lin was able to complete the remaining three and one-half hours of her work shift, but her pain worsened over the following days. On August 24, 1998, Bucklin consulted with R.C. Weeker, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Weeker's notes indicate that Bucklin complained of pain in her shoulder and "in her neck, posterior shoulder, arm and shoulder area". He concluded that Bucklin may have suffered two injuries, one to the shoulder and one to the neck. Therefore, he sent Bucklin to get an MRI of her cervical spine and asked that she return on September 1, 1998, which she did.

[¶ 6] The MRI report contained these "Impressions:" "L. Abnormal marrow signal C7 as well as the transverse process of TI on the left. Neoplastic process such as metastatic disease is considered. There is, however, no evidence of neural impingement. 2. Mild cervical spondylosis C5-6." Dr. Week-er's notes of Bucklin's September 1, 1998 appointment were as follows:

Patient returns today for follow up on injury to her neck and left shoulder. The MRI of the left shoulder was negative for any rotator cuff tear or obvious abnormality, other than slight hypertrophy of the acromicclavicular joint, which is probably not a new finding.

TEST RESULTS:

[442]*442The MRI of her neck however, demonstrated an increased uptake, or abnormal signal intensity, in the body of the C7 vertebrae of the cervical spine, which could represent a fracture vs. some type of bone lesion such as a tumor infiltration, ete. As the patient does have a prior history of carcinoma of the breast with mastectomy performed in 1984 I recommended today that we proceed with a bone sean to evaluate not only her cervical spine, but the total body for a possibility of metastasis vs. fracture of her cervical spine, which may have occurred from this injury. The patient was referred down to the Radiology Dept. where she was injected and a bone sean will be performed yet today so that we can get this evaluated promptly.
The patient had the bone sean performed here in the Thermopolis Hospital today which revealed a localized area of marked increased uptake in the body of the C7 vertebral body, but no other areas of increased uptake were noted on the entire total body bone sean survey, suggesting no other metastatic lesions or the fact that the C7 vertebrae may indeed be a fracture rather [than] a metastatic lesion. Based on this finding, the radiologist suggested that we perform a limited CT sean of the area of C6, 7 and T1, which was performed today to evaluate the possibility of fracture and it appears that the patient has a lytic lesion, or replacement type lesion, of the body and a portion of the pedicle and extending out into the transverse process and posterior lamina of C7, more on the left side, which is consistent with her referred pain being more into the left shoulder area and left posterior neck. The appearance of the CT scan suggests that this was more of a metastatic or evasive type lesion than a fracture, although I suspect that the patient's recent trauma was probably enough to ecause a pathological fracture through the previously weakened area of the C7 vertebral body and was therefore the cause of her sudden increased pain as she had been totally asymptomatic prior to that accident of the file cabinet falling on her.

[¶ 7] Dr. Weeker recommended that Bucklin further consult with her oncologist and a neurosurgeon in Billings, Montana. She saw Fred McMurry, M.D., a neurosurgeon, as well as one of his associates in the practice of neurosurgery, on September 8, 1998. It is evident from Dr. MeMurry's deposition testimony, which was presented to the Commission in the form of a transcript, that he was anxious to get to the heart of the matter:

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Bluebook (online)
2001 WY 101, 33 P.3d 440, 2001 Wyo. LEXIS 121, 2001 WL 1248730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bucklin-v-state-ex-rel-wyoming-workers-safety-compensation-division-wyo-2001.