Carter v. Wireless

757 S.E.2d 528, 407 S.C. 641
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 29, 2014
DocketAppellate Case No. 2012-212924; No. 5191
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 757 S.E.2d 528 (Carter v. Wireless) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Wireless, 757 S.E.2d 528, 407 S.C. 641 (S.C. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

CURETON, A.J.

After the Appellate Panel of the Workers’ Compensation Commission (Appellate Panel) denied Jacqueline Carter (Claimant) benefits for an alleged change of condition to her injured knee, the circuit court reversed. Verizon Wireless Southeast and American Home Assurance Company (collectively Employer) appeal, arguing the circuit court erred in reversing the Appellate Panel’s determinations concerning a change in Claimant’s condition, intervening causes,1 and future medical treatment. Employer further argues the form of the circuit court’s order adversely affected its ability to comply with appellate court rules. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

FACTS

On December 27, 2006, Claimant suffered a work-related injury to her left knee. After Dr. Walter Grady performed surgery on her knee in June 2007, Claimant reached maximum medical improvement (MMI) on March 3, 2008. At that time, Dr. Grady assigned Claimant an 18% impairment rating.

In February 2009, Claimant fractured her right ankle and returned to Dr. Grady for care. She was wheelchair-bound for six to eight months while it healed. At her October 2009 workers’ compensation hearing, Claimant stated her right ankle had healed completely. On December 3, 2009, Commissioner Barden awarded Claimant workers’ compensation [644]*644benefits for a 25% permanent partial disability to her left lower extremity, including causally-related medical care and treatment. Commissioner Barden found Claimant “had preexisting advanced degenerative joint disease.” Additionally, Commissioner Barden concluded Claimant was “entitled to causally-related future medical treatment that may tend to lessen her period of disability, as recommended by the authorized treating physician, including Darvocet or comparable medication.”2 (emphasis added).

In the summer of 2010, Claimant claimed to have noticed increased pain and swelling in her left knee. On November 4, 2010, she returned to Dr. Grady, who examined her and increased her impairment rating from 18% to 42%. On November 29, 2010, Claimant filed a Form 50, alleging she needed additional medical treatment due to a change of condition.

I. Testimony

On February 3, 2011, the parties deposed Dr. Grady. Dr. Grady testified he typically told patients that if their pain level was constantly above a level five, they should consider a knee replacement. Although Claimant’s pain level was constantly at level five or above in 2008, Dr. Grady did not recommend knee replacement to her at that time because (1) she was only forty-nine years old and (2) he believed a patient knew better than anyone else when he or she reached the point of needing a knee replacement. According to Dr. Grady, Claimant was eligible for a knee replacement going back to 2008, but whether or when to undergo the surgery was up to Claimant.

Dr. Grady opined that from the last time he saw Claimant in January 2008 to the date of his deposition, her knee had “materially worsened” due to natural degeneration of her arthritic condition. Based on his November 2010 examination, Dr. Grady determined Claimant’s knee had materially worsened because her joint space had narrowed, the medial tibial femoral joint compartment had collapsed, and she reported increased pain. He calculated her increased disability level [645]*645based solely upon the two-millimeter narrowing of her joint space.

Dr. Grady testified he lacked sufficient information to determine whether any of Claimant’s new complaints originated before or after the October 2009 hearing. Nonetheless, he stated his medical opinion, “within a reasonable degree of medical certainty,” was that Claimant experienced “a natural progression of her disease process from the time that [he] did surgery on her until the time that [he] saw her on November 4th, 2010.” He agreed that Claimant’s worsening condition was “more of a degenerative[,] insidious, slow problem” rather than “acute in nature.” Dr. Grady acknowledged his opinion was influenced by the nature of the exercise routine Claimant was participating in at the time she realized her knee pain was increasing. However, although Dr. Grady conceded her exercise possibly could have accelerated the deterioration in her condition, he believed the end result would have been the same, whether she exercised or not.

On February 16, 2011, the parties appeared before Commissioner Wilkerson. Claimant testified she was working as a bank teller and was able to sit or stand as needed to do her job. Claimant explained that after her right-ankle fracture healed and she was released from the wheelchair, she began exercising at the gym in order to lose weight and strengthen her knee. She became aware of increased problems with her left knee in June of 2010, after she started water aerobics. Claimant chose water aerobics over other exercise options because it limited the pressure on her knee, and Dr. Grady had recommended it for her after her surgery.

Claimant denied ever injuring herself while doing water aerobics. She was still doing water aerobics at the time of the hearing, despite the pain in her knee, and had lost forty-eight pounds since the previous summer. Claimant’s pain level was an eight on a ten-point scale at the time of the hearing. Because Darvocet was no longer available, Claimant’s family physician prescribed Tramadol for her. Claimant testified Tramadol did not adequately handle her pain. Claimant admitted the following statements from her 2009 hearing remained true: (1) she felt pain every day and every night, (2) the pain was “an uncomfortable throbbing feeling” that wors[646]*646ened the more she worked, (3) she was unable to sleep without prescription medication, (4) she had difficulty walking long distances, (5) she could not walk more than about ten minutes without problems, and (6) she could not maneuver stairs without support.

However, according to Claimant, several of her complaints at the time of the hearing differed from her 2009 complaints. Specifically, the pain she felt at the time of the hearing was “[ajbsolutely” worse than the pain she felt in 2009, having risen from a five to an eight on a ten-point scale. She had crepitus on flexion and extension, evident by the crunching sound in her knee. Finally, her leg would not bend or flex as much as it had in 2009, and she had fluid on her left knee.

In an order dated April 18, 2011, Commissioner Wilkerson denied Claimant’s request for benefits, finding she “did not sustain a compensable change of condition with regard to her left knee.” He found “at least two intervening causes— Zumba [classes] as well as a broken right ankle in February of 2009 ... caused [Claimant] to place more weight on her left knee” and her “current problems are not related to her 2006 accident with Verizon.” Furthermore, Commissioner Wilkerson concluded Commissioner Barden’s order of December 3, 2009, entitled Claimant “to causally-related future medical treatment that may tend to lessen her period of disability, as recommended by the authorized treating physician, specifically restricted to Darvoeet or a comparable medication.” (emphasis added).

II. Appeals

Claimant appealed, and the Appellate Panel affirmed Commissioner Wilkerson’s order in its entirety.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
757 S.E.2d 528, 407 S.C. 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-wireless-scctapp-2014.