Caseco, LLC v. Dingman

65 So. 3d 909, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 392, 2010 WL 5130630
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 17, 2010
Docket2090461
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 So. 3d 909 (Caseco, LLC v. Dingman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caseco, LLC v. Dingman, 65 So. 3d 909, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 392, 2010 WL 5130630 (Ala. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

THOMAS, Judge.

In April 2001, Matthew Dingman was employed by Caseco, LLC, as an iron worker, working on a construction project in Huntsville. On April 18, 2001, Dingman was injured when approximately 3,000 pounds of bar joists fell on his left leg and ankle, pinning him to the floor. Dingman was freed from the bar joists by his fellow employees and taken by pickup truck to the hospital. At the emergency room, Dingman’s leg was x-rayed; the X-rays revealed a fracture of his ankle.1 Ding-man was given pain medication and his leg and ankle were immobilized by a “boot”; he was instructed to use crutches and to elevate his leg. He was also instructed to see an orthopedic physician in one week.

Dingman left Huntsville after the accident and went to recuperate at his mother’s home in Arcadia, Florida. On April 27, 2001, Dingman began treatment with Dr. Ronald Heromin, an orthopedist in Florida. Dr. Heromin’s medical records indicate that Dingman had a “nondisplaced trimalleolar fracture, left ankle.” Dr. He-romin placed Dingman’s lower left leg in a cast, instructed Dingman to place no weight on that leg, and prescribed Vioxx, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medication, and Vicoprofen, a combination of hydroeo-done and ibuprofen.

After removing Dingman’s cast on July 6, 2001, Dr. Heromin permitted Dingman to return to work. Dr. Heromin’s notes indicate that the ankle fracture was healing well and “show[ed] good consolidation.” Over the next nine months, Dingman visited Dr. Heromin on two occasions and reported pain and swelling at those office visits. Dr. Heromin’s notes indicate that X-rays showed “the [ankle] mortise to be intact and show[ed] the fracture to be in good position and alignment with good consolidation throughout” and that Dr. He-romin concluded that Dingman had “a mild effusion with synovitis in the left ankle.” To address Dingman’s symptoms, Dr. He-romin administered steroid injections in Dingman’s ankle on December 21, 2001, and April 4, 2002. Dr. Heromin’s notes also indicated that Dingman “was a very courageous man doing what he does eon-[912]*912sidering his ankle pain” and noted that Dingman had “worked through the pain.”

By October 11, 2002, Dingman was complaining to Dr. Heromin that his ankle caused him persistent pain and that the pain had been increasing and prevented him from sleeping. According to Dr. He-romin’s notes, X-rays of the left ankle showed a complete consolidation of the fracture; however, Dr. Heromin’s notes also reflected that those X-rays revealed posttraumatic moderate to moderately severe degenerative joint disease, which had resulted in narrowing through the ankle and of the ankle mortise. Dr. Heromin’s physical examination revealed that Ding-man’s arcs and ranges of motion in his ankle were decreased and that Dingman had severe swelling in his ankle. Dr. He-romin administered another steroid injection. His notes reflect that Dingman should remain off of work because he could not comfortably ambulate. Dr. Heromin prescribed icing and elevation of the ankle and indicated that a follow-up appointment should be made in three to four months.

When Dingman returned to Dr. Hero-min’s office on December 16, 2002, Ding-man continued to complain of “severe constant weight-bearing pain” in his left ankle. Dr. Heromin noted that the X-rays of Dingman’s ankle continued to show “degenerative osteoarthritic changes correlating with chronic posttraumatic moderate to moderately severe degenerative joint disease” and revealed another fracture in Dingman’s ankle. Dr. Hero-min ordered that Dingman have an MRI and a CT scan to further investigate the fracture Dr. Heromin noticed on the X-ray. He also administered another steroid injection.

On January 24, 2003, Dingman returned to Dr. Heromin for a follow-up appointment after his MRI and CT scan. Both tests, according to Dr. Heromin’s notes, revealed that the fracture in Dingman’s ankle, although just discovered on the X-ray, was an old fracture. At that point, only around a month after Dingman’s fourth steroid objection, Dingman reported that he was doing well; the physical examination performed by Dr. Heromin revealed only slight pain with palpation and a good range of motion in the ankle.

On September 23, 2003, Dingman again saw Dr. Heromin. In Dr. Heromin’s notes, he remarked that Dingman continued to complain of “some markedly elevated pain in his left foot especially after his walking around for a period of time during the daytime.” Dingman returned to Dr. Heromin one month later, on October 20, 2003; Dr. Heromin’s notes on that date indicate that Dingman suffered “increasing chronic pain to where he is now taking anti-inflammatories and pain medication on a regular basis.” Dr. Heromin’s notes also reflect that a recent MRI of Dingman’s left ankle “is pretty demonstrative in the destruction of his left ankle and notes [sic] why he is having so much pain.” The records state that the MRI “shows arthro-sis of the left ankle with subchondral marrow changes within the subtalar area,” “a chronic deltoid partial tear,” “a chronic ATF tear,” and “arthrosis of the anterola-teral aspect of the talus secondary to rubbing of the fibula.” Dr. Heromin referred Dingman to Dr. Roy Sanders for a second opinion.

Dr. Sanders’s medical records are exhibits to the record; he did not testify. Dr. Sanders performed three surgeries on Dingman’s left ankle. The first surgery, performed in February 2004, was an arthroscopic debridement and ligament reconstruction. After the surgery, Dingman healed well and was returned to work without restrictions on June 15, 2004. On July 13, 2004, however, Dr. Sanders’s notes indicate that Dingman was complaining of a considerable amount of pain in the [913]*913ankle and foot. After a CT scan confirmed the existence of arthritis in Dingman’s ankle that was the cause of the pain Ding-man suffered, Dr. Sanders informed Ding-man that a subtalar fusion of the ankle would be necessary in the near future; however, Dr. Sanders recommended that Dingman not have surgery right away and Dingman agreed. Dr. Sanders continued to prescribe anti-inflammatory medication and prescribed no narcotic pain relievers.

Dr. Sanders again discussed the possibility of an ankle-fusion surgery with Ding-man in February 2005. Dr. Sanders’s notes indicate that he explained that a fusion surgery was the only intervention Dr. Sanders felt would benefit Dingman at that point. Dingman, however, according to Dr. Sanders’s notes, was reluctant to consider another surgery.

Dr. Sanders’s colleague, Dr. David Her-son, a pain-management specialist, treated Dingman for pain between March 2005 and January 2006. Dr. Herson prescribed several different narcotic pain relievers for Dingman over the course of his treatment. In January 2006, Dr. Herson also prescribed Prozac for Dingman to treat depression.

On January 17, 2006, Dingman returned to Dr. Sanders for further treatment. Dr. Sanders’s notes refer to Dingman’s persistent pain and to osteophytes within the ankle structure and posttraumatic arthritic changes in the medial aspect of the tibiota-lar joint. Dr. Sanders recommended another ankle arthroscopy to debride the ankle and the osteophytes. Dr. Sanders’s notes indicate that the arthroscopy would be a diagnostic tool as well, permitting him to “visualize the arthritic changes in the ankle joint.”

Dr. Sanders performed the second arthroscopic procedure on Dingman’s ankle on January 26, 2006. Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 So. 3d 909, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 392, 2010 WL 5130630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caseco-llc-v-dingman-alacivapp-2010.