Cedeno v. Moran Hauling

769 So. 2d 203, 2000 Miss. App. LEXIS 191, 2000 WL 471532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedApril 25, 2000
DocketNo. 1999-WC-00057-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 769 So. 2d 203 (Cedeno v. Moran Hauling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cedeno v. Moran Hauling, 769 So. 2d 203, 2000 Miss. App. LEXIS 191, 2000 WL 471532 (Mich. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

SOUTHWICK, P.J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. The claimant alleged that he suffered an injury to his back in the course of his employment. It was uncontroverted that the claimant had a back problem. Its source was the issue. The Commission found that substantial evidence supported that his injuries were not job related. On appeal the claimant, who is a Cuban native, alleges that his difficulty with speaking English explains why coworkers and supervisors were unaware of his injury. Accordingly, he alleges that the evidence was sufficient. We conclude that the Commission was aware of the language problems, gave them consideration, yet still found a failure of proof. We find no reversible error.

FACTS

¶2. The claimant Adelso Cedeno was born in Cuba and came to the United States in 1980 at age 23. According to one of Cedeno’s witnesses, the claimant had been part of the 1980 “boat lift.” This apparently refers to the mass exodus of Cubans from Mariel Harbor to Key West, Florida, an exodus of voluntary and involuntary emigrants that numbered 125,000. United States v. Zayas-Morales, 685 F.2d 1272, 1273 (11th Cir.1982); see also Garcia-Mir v. Smith, 469 U.S. 1311, 1311-12, [204]*204105 S.Ct. 948, 83 L.Ed.2d 901 (1985). For roughly seven years prior to the incidents involved in this litigation he had lived on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. On July 1, 1996, he began work for the defendant Moran Hauling as a maintenance man. Cedeno testified that four weeks later he and a coworker were moving a book case at Moran’s offices as part of their duties. He felt back pain and had to stop for ten minutes. He continued to work that day, which was Monday, July 29, and also the rest of the week.

¶ 3. On the next Monday, August 5, Ce-deno and his wife went to a nurse practitioner where he complained of back. pain. Cedeno did not return to work until Wednesday, August 7 and was laid off on August 18. After leaving employment with Moran, Cedeno went to see a general practitioner who diagnosed him with a herniated disc. He then went to a neurosurgeon.. After a lumbar myelogram was taken, the doctor recommended surgery on the disc. In the medical records, the neurosurgeon indicated that Cedeno was totally temporarily disabled because of the disc problem.

¶4. Not recounted here but described later as we analyze Cedeno’s arguments is the evidence of other explanations for the injury. In summary, there was testimony that he never complained of a back injury that occurred at work, that he had mentioned back pain even before the alleged event, and that he told at least one person that he had a back injury before he went to work at Moran.

¶ 5. After hearing all the testimony, the administrative judge, Virginia Wilson Mounger, prepared a detailed summary of the evidence upon which she relied. She denied benefits because she found that the “vast abundance of credible evidence” disputed that the back problems were a result of a work injury. The Commission and later the circuit court affirmed that order.

DISCUSSION

¶ 6. We start with an explanation of the role of the Workers’ Compensation Commission. The Commission is entrusted with making the initial determinations of the applicability of the relevant statutes to the facts that it finds to exist. An appellate court will uphold the decision if the fact-findings are based upon substantial evidence and if there is no error of law. Metal Trims Industries, Inc. v. Stovall, 562 So.2d 1293, 1296-97 (Miss.1990).

¶ 7. On appeal the claimant splits its argument into three issues, but they all suggest that the Commission gave insufficient weight to his language problems, that this is what made the evidence of contemporaneous claims of a job injury so meager, and that therefore he carried his burden of showing a compensable injury. All this together disputes how the testimony was evaluated.

¶ 8. In effect, the claimant is asking either that we reweigh the evidence, being more sensitive to the claimant’s language difficulties than was the Commission, or that we send this back to the Commission after ordering it to recalibrate its eviden-tiary scales. We proceed down the analytical trail somewhat differently than is set out in the claimant’s brief, but we consider each issue.

1. The evidence

¶ 9. The administrative judge in her evi-dentiary summary revealed that she appreciated the language limitations. The factual question was whether Cedeno’s injury occurred on the job or whether it had a different and non-work origin. We find nothing in the administrative judge’s opinion indicating that she ruled the way that she did because Cedeno failed to do something at the hearing or at his place of employment that someone with a better command of English would have done.

¶ 10. When Cedeno accompanied by his wife saw a nurse on Monday, August 5, he told her that he had been injured at work [205]*205on the previous Thursday as opposed to an entire week earlier as claimed before the Commission. Though not fatal to his claim, the administrative judge thought it suggestive that so soon after the injury he did not state the correct date. The nurse’s notes stated that he was cooperative but spoke little English. “His wife interprets most of the information.” The nurse compiled a page-long, single-spaced report that primarily contains statements that either Cedeno or his wife made though all are written as if they came from Mr. Cede-no.

¶ 11. He told a general practitioner on August 21 that he had been injured on the job, and referred to moving a book case. He repeated this to the neurosurgeon on September 24.

¶ 12. Balanced against what he told the medical professionals, no one at work— supervisors or coworkers — thought that he had mentioned a job injury. Cedeno himself testified that he told two supervisors. It could be argued that the language difficulties meant that the supervisors did not hear what Cedeno was trying to say. One of these two supervisors stated that he did not recall ever having a conversation with Cedeno. The other mentioned conversations with Cedeno and indicated no problems in understanding him at least as to level of conversation needed for simple orders that the supervisor gave. He stated positively that Cedeno never came to him with a complaint of injury.

¶ 13. The administrative judge had the benefit of hearing Cedeno herself. According to Moran’s brief, when necessary Mrs. Cedeno was “permitted to help him communicate or his attorney was allowed to lead him.” In the judge’s decision she noted the language difficulty but explicitly found that “the claimant’s testimony was understood.” Clearly there was strain required for understanding. Yet it was insufficient to convince the judge that there was a reasonable possibility that a disconnect existed between what Cedeno said to supervisors and what they heard. Since Cedeno testified that he told both supervisors and each of them stated that Cedeno had not, the administrative judge’s fact-finding appears based on Cedeno’s credibility and not on his clarity.

¶ 14. In addition, the judge did not just rely on the absence of communication at the workplace but also on the presence of statements that Cedeno had a pre-existing injury.

¶ 15.

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Bluebook (online)
769 So. 2d 203, 2000 Miss. App. LEXIS 191, 2000 WL 471532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedeno-v-moran-hauling-missctapp-2000.