Carolyn Love v. Shelby Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 18, 1998
Docket02A01-9803-CV-00053
StatusPublished

This text of Carolyn Love v. Shelby Co. (Carolyn Love v. Shelby Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carolyn Love v. Shelby Co., (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE, AT JACKSON

_______________________________________________________

) CAROLYN MARTIN LOVE, ) Shelby County Circuit Court ) No. 80298 T.D.

VS. Plaintiff/Appellee. ) ) ) C.A. No. 02A01-9803-CV-00053 FILED ) November 18, 1998 SHELBY COUNTY, TENNESSEE, ) ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. Defendant/Appellant. ) Appellate C ourt Clerk ) ______________________________________________________________________________

From the Circuit Court of Shelby County at Memphis. Honorable George H. Brown, Jr., Judge

Carroll C. Johnson, Memphis, Tennessee Attorney for Defendant/Appellant.

Joseph Michael Cook, Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellee.

OPINION FILED:

AFFIRMED AND REMANDED

FARMER, J.

CRAWFORD, P.J.,W.S.: (Concurs) HIGHERS, J.: (Concurs) Defendant Shelby County appeals the trial court’s judgment which awarded

Plaintiff/Appellee Carolyn Martin Love $123,991.22 in benefits under the County’s on-the-job injury

policy. Most of the trial court’s judgment represented permanent disability benefits and was based

upon the court’s finding, after conducting a bench trial, that Love had sustained a one hundred

percent (100%) permanent disability to each of her arms as a result of her on-the-job injuries. We

affirm.

The dispute in this case focused on the extent of Love’s disability from carpal tunnel

syndrome and related problems. At trial, Love testified that she was fifty-three years of age and had

a high school (GED) education. Love began working for the Shelby County Circuit Court as a

deputy clerk in 1987. Prior to that time, Love’s work experiences were primarily clerical. In January

1994, Love was promoted to the position of principal court clerk in Division VIII. Among other

duties, this position required Love to operate a computer and to lift large docket books weighing as

much as forty pounds. Approximately forty percent of Love’s job duties involved lifting.

In July or August 1994, Love began to notice a tingling sensation in her hands. Love

first sought treatment from Dr. Stanley Patterson, who treated Love for carpal tunnel syndrome. Per

the County’s instructions, Love was evaluated by an occupational medicine doctor, A. Ritchie Lewis,

in November 1994. The report of Dr. Lewis indicated that he believed Love to have “right upper

extremity MusculoSkeletal Disorder.” Dr. Lewis noted that Love had symptoms of carpal tunnel

syndrome but that she also had symptoms involving the other two nerves of the right upper

extremity. Dr. Lewis did not believe that carpal tunnel surgery alone would completely correct the

problem. In addition to recommending a course of treatment to include an anti-inflammatory agent,

a mild diuretic, and wrist splints to be worn at night, Dr. Lewis recommended that Love not be

required to do any data entry work or work with docket books during her treatment.

Love testified that, over a period of time, her hand and arm problems made it

increasingly difficult for her to perform her job duties, which required her to copy, staple, stamp, and

file documents, to operate a computer, and to retrieve and carry the large docket books. As Love’s

condition worsened, she had to use both hands to operate a stapler. In August 1995, she was referred

to Dr. Riley Jones, who began treating Love for carpal tunnel syndrome and tendinitis. Dissatisfied with her progress under Dr. Jones’ care, however, Love eventually sought treatment from Dr. Joseph

Boals in April 1996. In December 1996, Love underwent surgery performed by Dr. Boals’ partner,

Dr. Owen B. Tabor, to correct the carpal tunnel syndrome in Love’s right arm.

Despite the corrective surgery, Love testified that she continued to experience pain

in both arms, beginning in the hands and “running up the forearms” to the elbow and even the

shoulder. Love gave the following description of her condition at the time of trial:

I have . . . pain on a daily basis. . . .

....

Pain that comes down through here and this thumb, this whole part of the thumb, this last little finger, I have pain in the wrist, both sides of the wrist here, the forearms, it runs up the forearms and then this part of the elbow is where it hurts on both arms, then I have the shoulder -- where it runs up here, I don’t know if that is a muscle or what in there right at the neck on both sides but the right being the predominant, more pain so than the left.

As for her ability to perform her job duties, Love testified that:

I can’t lift anything with any weight to it, I can’t use a stapler, I can’t do things that you take for granted. There is no way I could lift those docket books, use a computer, typewriter. Things that I thought nothing of before in my workplace of doing, I can’t do anymore.

Love also testified that her condition had affected her ability to perform simple tasks at home:

There is a lot of things I can’t do at home anymore. My husband does the majority of anything done there. I can’t do the mopping, the vacuuming, the buying -- well I buy the groceries, I go to the grocery store, but he has to be there to unload them. When I go, if I sit down on the couch or recliner, how most people do when they get up, they use their hands to put the weight to bring their arms up to help lift them up, I can’t do that. I have to get on the edge of a couch and use sort of my arm to help raise me up. I can’t use -- I can’t put the weight on my wrist and hands in order to get up from a couch or recliner, anything soft like that.

Love’s husband, Bobby Love, corroborated this testimony, stating that, throughout

the day, he was required to come to Love’s assistance any time she needed something of any weight lifted or moved, even if the object weighed only a few pounds, such as a pot of soup. Because of

Love’s condition, her husband also performed the household chores, such as vacuuming and

gardening. Prior to Love’s injury, she and her husband enjoyed playing tennis, bicycling, fishing,

and boating. Love’s husband testified that Love no longer could participate in any of these activities.

Love’s testimony was corroborated further by her coworkers, who testified that they observed Love

experience difficulty in using the computer and in lifting and carrying file jackets, blotters, and

docket books.

Three expert witnesses testified by deposition. Orthopedic surgeon Riley Jones

testified that he treated Love from August 1995 to February 1996. After the initial examination, Dr.

Jones diagnosed Love as having (1) biceps tendinitis, (2) tendinitis at the wrist and mild carpal

tunnel, and (3) chondromalacia of the knee. Dr. Jones treated Love with medications, wrist splints,

and “a prescription for a computer rest.” A November 1995 EMG performed at Dr. Jones’ request

revealed “a very slight carpal tunnel on the right, normal on the left.” During Love’s last visit in

February 1996, however, Dr. Riley noted that she was “doing much better” and was “having no real

pain.”

Joseph C. Boals, III, another orthopedic surgeon, testified that he treated Love at the

Office of Bone and Joint Surgery beginning in April 1996. At that time, Love related generalized

complaints of “wrist pain and numbness consistent with carpal tunnel syndrome,” as well as

complaints of “forearm soreness” and “tenderness in the posterior left shoulder and into her neck.”

Dr. Boals diagnosed Love has having (1) incidental finding of mild cervical arthritis, (2) incidental

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