Buford v. Standard Gravel Co.

5 S.W.3d 478, 68 Ark. App. 162, 1999 Ark. App. LEXIS 788
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 1, 1999
DocketCA 99-491
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 5 S.W.3d 478 (Buford v. Standard Gravel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buford v. Standard Gravel Co., 5 S.W.3d 478, 68 Ark. App. 162, 1999 Ark. App. LEXIS 788 (Ark. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Sam Bird, Judge.

Roger Buford appeals a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission denying his claim for additional benefits for permanent total disability. He argues that the decision of the Commission is not supported by substantial evidence. We agree and reverse and remand for an award of permanent total disability benefits.

Buford, forty years old and a high-school graduate, has an employment history of heavy labor. He was trained as a telephone-cable splicer while in the Air Force. After an honorable discharge, Buford was employed as a truck driver, a “derrick hand” in the oil fields, an electrician, a cable-TV installer, and, most recently, a journeyman welder. In September 1981, Buford was working high on an oil derrick when a chain binder broke, struck Buford in the throat, and his larynx was crushed. As a result, he speaks with rough-sounding hoarseness and cannot speak loudly, but he was never given a permanent-impairment rating for that injury.

In October 1988, Buford was working for appellee Standard Gravel Company as a welder when he sustained a herniated disk and was found to have six lumbar vertebrae, instead of the normal five. On November 10, 1988, Dr. Zachary Mason, a Little Rock neurosurgeon, performed a laminectomy and diskectomy at the L4-5 level on the left. On January 12, 1989, Buford returned to Dr. Mason and requested that he be released to return to work. In a letter to Dr. Gary Bevill, Buford’s family physician in El Dorado, Dr. Mason said Buford had a ten-percent permanent-impairment rating. Dr. Mason also said he had cautioned Buford against stressing his back and specifically to avoid lifting objects weighing greater than forty pounds and to avoid repeated bending and stooping. Buford returned to work for appellee.

In 1991, Buford again injured his back at work and returned to Dr. Mason. An MRI showed a very large herniated disk, and a myelogram revealed nerve root compression at the L5-6 level on the left. On August 14, 1991, Dr. Mason performed another lumbar laminectomy to remove the ruptured disk. Following the second injury Dr. Mason again restricted Buford from repetitive bending, stooping, and lifting objects weighing more than forty to fifty pounds, and assigned him a permanent-impairment rating of fifteen percent to the body as a whole. Buford was released to return to work on November 4, 1991.

In February 1993, Buford again returned to Dr. Mason complaining of low back and bilateral leg pain. Dr. Mason stated in a letter to Dr. Bevill dated February 11, 1993, that working as a welder Buford had been unable to strictly follow the restrictions placed upon him and, while lifting heavy pipe, began to have severe back pain to the extent that he was unable to work. Dr. Mason referred Buford to Dr. Austin Grimes, a Little Rock orthopedist. On May 27, 1993, Dr. Grimes performed another lumbar dis-kectomy at the L4-5 level and a fusion. Buford has not been able to work since. After extensive physical therapy and rehabilitation efforts, Buford endured a series of epidural steroid injections on July 13, 1995, but continued to have severe pain in his lower back and legs.

On February 27, 1997, Healthworks Outpatient Physical Therapy at JRMC, reported to Dr. Grimes that it had performed a functional capacity evaluation on Buford. The summary stated that Buford had a seventy-five percent validity criteria indicating consistent effort and there was no observed symptom exaggeration or inappropriate illness behavior. It recommended:

Mr. Buford is not capable of working for an eight hour day. His functional abilities deteriorated during this evaluation. Due to the length of time since the injury, and the extent of the injmy, it would appear that Mr. Buford would not benefit from any type of rehabilitation program. [Emphasis added.]

At the hearing on Buford’s claim for additional benefits, he testified that he lives in a house provided rent free by his in-laws, and he draws social security disability of only $1,300 a month for himself, his wife and a child. He said he cannot sit, stand, sleep, drive, or walk for more than just a few minutes or carry anything over forty pounds. He can do minor maintenance on things like a vacuum cleaner, he sometimes does the dishes, and occasionally makes the beds, but he can do only minor yard work and gardening, although he admitted that he has mowed the yard a few times. He said he had also fished in a bass tournament and gone camping once a year.

Buford also testified that he has friends who live next door and down the street who are disabled like he is, and he walks to visit them. They talk, drink beer, watch television, and listen to music. Buford said he is not on regular pain medication because the insurance company has refused to cover it, and he cannot afford to pay for the prescriptions himself. He said the only thing he has to deaden the pain is beer.

Buford has been evaluated by two rehabilitation companies. One wanted him to become a welder instructor, but they sent him, a journeyman welder, to school to learn basic welding. There is no training in El Dorado that a journeyman welder can take to learn to become an instructor. Furthermore, Buford cannot speak to a class for thirty to forty minutes at a time because of his throat injury, and he can only talk loud enough for a class to hear him “if they were quiet.”

The second rehabilitation company forwarded approximately twenty-three job “opportunities” to Buford, and he filled out applications with those employers “honest.” Buford explained that if the application had a question about disability on it, he answered truthfully because he is disabled, but if the application did not specifically ask for the information, he did not volunteer it.

The administrative law judge awarded appellant a thirty percent anatomical impairment and a twenty percent wage-loss disability, to be paid by the Second Injury Fund. The Commission affirmed and adopted his opinion. The Second Injury Fund has not appealed its liability. On appellate review, we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the findings of the Commission and give the testimony its strongest probative force in favor of the action of the' Commission. Boyd v. General Indus., 22 Ark. App. 103, 733 S.W.2d 750 (1987); McCollum v. Rogers, 238 Ark. 499, 382 S.W.2d 892 (1964). Our standard of review on appeal is whether the decision of the Commission is supported by substantial evidence. Boyd v. General Indus., supra; City of Fayetteville v. Guess, 10 Ark. App. 313, 663 S.W.2d 946 (1984). Substantial evidence is such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion. Boyd v. Dana Corp., 62 Ark. App. 78, 966 S.W.2d 946 (1998); Wright v. ABC Air, Inc., 44 Ark. App. 5, 864 S.W.2d 871 (1993). We do not reverse a decision of the Commission unless we are convinced that fair-minded persons with the same facts before them could not have arrived at the conclusion reached. Silvicraft, Inc. v. Lambert, 10 Ark. App.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.3d 478, 68 Ark. App. 162, 1999 Ark. App. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buford-v-standard-gravel-co-arkctapp-1999.