Chem Lawn Services v. Stephens

469 S.E.2d 375, 220 Ga. App. 239, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 791, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 19, 1996
DocketA95A2657
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 469 S.E.2d 375 (Chem Lawn Services v. Stephens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chem Lawn Services v. Stephens, 469 S.E.2d 375, 220 Ga. App. 239, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 791, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 168 (Ga. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Andrews, Judge.

We granted the application of Chem Lawn Services and its insurer for a discretionary appeal in this workers’ compensation case.

After Stephens suffered a blow to his left knee while working for Chem Lawn on June 26, 1992, Chem Lawn voluntarily paid medical expenses and disability benefits without an award. Temporary total disability benefits were paid until February 3, 1993, when Stephens obtained a physician’s release to return to normal work duties, and he returned to his regular work for Chem Lawn. Stephens continued to work for Chem Lawn until May 31, 1993, when he was unable to continue work because of gradually increasing pain in both knees, at which time he was terminated by Chem Lawn. After that date, Stephens sought additional medical treatment for his knee problems, and he eventually filed a claim on April 4, 1994, seeking temporary total disability from June 1, 1993, and also payment of contested medical expenses incurred after that date.

There was expert medical testimony at the hearing held on August 12, 1994, that, during treatment for the June 26, 1992 knee injury, Stephens was diagnosed as having a pre-existing disease in both knees known as osteochondritis dissecans (OD), the development of which was unrelated to a condition of his employment and which had developed over a long period prior to the June 26 accident. There was also a diagnosis of a possible fracture of the left knee from the June 26 accident. A surgical procedure was performed on Stephens’ left knee in July 1992 during which the surgeon looked for any signs of *240 trauma or fracture to the knee caused by the June 26, 1992 injury and examined and treated the OD condition in that knee. No knee fracture was found. Based on his observations, the surgeon testified that the June 26, 1992 blow to the knee temporarily aggravated the preexisting OB condition and that the aggravation caused by the June 26 accident would have likely resolved in three to six weeks. However, during rehabilitation from the surgery to the left knee, the resulting shift of weight to Stephens’ right knee aggravated the pre-existing OD condition in his right knee. As a result, additional surgery was performed on Stephens’ right knee in November 1992. After additional rehabilitation therapy, Stephens was released to return to his normal work duties on February 3, 1993. Accordingly, there was medical evidence that the aggravation of the pre-existing OD caused by the June 26, 1992 knee injury was resolved prior to Stephens’ return to normal work duties in February 1993 and that Stephens’ subsequent knee problems were caused by a progressive worsening of the pre-existing OD as a result of resuming normal work duties, rather than the June 26, 1992 injury to the knee.

The WC-14 form on which Stephens filed his claim stated that he was first disabled on June 26, 1992, and that he was seeking “temporary total disability from 6/1/93 until released to return to duty.” Chem Lawn took the position that the June 26 accident caused a temporary aggravation of the pre-existing condition and that any temporary disability caused by the June 26 compensable accident had completely resolved by the time Stephens returned to normal work duties on February 3, 1993. At the hearing, the administrative law judge characterized the issue as whether there was a change in condition for the worse from the June 26, 1992 compensable injury. Based on evidence presented, the ALJ found that the compensable injury of June 26, 1992 was not the cause of the disability or medical expenses for which Stephens sought compensation in the present claim and that Stephens had failed to carry his burden of proving that he had experienced a change in condition for the worse from the prior compensable injury.

The appellate division of the Board accepted the findings of fact of the ALJ as supported by a preponderance of the competent and credible evidence. OCGA § 34-9-103 (a). The appellate division made additional findings of fact that, after Stephens returned to his regular work duties in February 1993, his normal work duties aggravated the OD condition to the extent that he became unable to work. The appellate division further found that, even though the June 26, 1992 knee injury only temporarily aggravated the pre-existing OD, “[w]hen employer/insurer accepted employee’s claim [from the June 26, 1992 knee injury] as compensable and paid both income and medical benefits for treatment of the OD, employer/insurer accepted the OD as the *241 compensable injury. Therefore, the employer/insurer cannot now claim that it is not responsible for the treatment or disability caused by the OD condition which it has already accepted as compensable.” The appellate division also found that Chem Lawn and its insurer “cannot now controvert the claim for the OD condition” because, “[w]here an employer/insurer has accepted a claim which is later discovered to be non-compensable, the employer/insurer’s remedy is to controvert the claim on the grounds of newly discovered evidence [pursuant to] OCGA § 34-9-221 (h).” The appellate division concluded that Chem Lawn and its insurer were prohibited from controverting the claim for the OD condition because they failed to exercise due diligence, prior to voluntary payment of compensation for the OD condition, to discover that the employee’s OD condition was not caused by the injury or that any aggravation of the OD condition caused by the prior knee injury was only temporary.

Based on these findings, the appellate division concluded that Stephens met his burden of proving a change in condition for the worse. The appellate division then noted that “even if the employee had only suffered a temporary aggravation of a pre-existing condition which resolved in February 1993 . . . the facts presented at [the] hearing could lead to a conclusion that [the] employee suffered a fictional new accident as of June 1, 1993, the date he was forced to cease work due to an aggravation of his pre-existing, unrelated OD condition.” On appeal, the superior court affirmed the award of the appellate division.

Chem Lawn and its insurer claim it was error for the appellate division, as affirmed by the superior court, to conclude they were es-topped from denying the compensability of the pre-existing OD on the basis that they paid for medical treatment and disability benefits related to the pre-existing condition. They claim benefits and treatment were provided as a result of the temporary aggravation of the pre-existing condition caused by the June 26 knee injury, and that there was no acceptance of a causal relationship between the June 26 accident and the pre-existing condition. We agree.

Based on evidence presented at the hearing, the ALJ found that the pre-existing condition was not caused by the June 26 accident, which had developed prior to Stephens’ employment. The ALJ concluded that the June 26 accident temporarily aggravated the pre-existing condition resulting in a compensable injury for which Chem Lawn paid benefits until the temporary disability ceased, and Stephens returned to normal work duties on February 3, 1993. These findings were accepted by the appellate division as supported by a preponderance of the competent and credible evidence in the record.

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Bluebook (online)
469 S.E.2d 375, 220 Ga. App. 239, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 791, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chem-lawn-services-v-stephens-gactapp-1996.