City of Conway and Arkansas Municipal League Workers' Compensation Trust v. Jessie Ellis

2025 Ark. App. 339
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 28, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 339 (City of Conway and Arkansas Municipal League Workers' Compensation Trust v. Jessie Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Conway and Arkansas Municipal League Workers' Compensation Trust v. Jessie Ellis, 2025 Ark. App. 339 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 339 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-24-636

Opinion Delivered May 28, 2025 CITY OF CONWAY AND ARKANSAS MUNICIPAL LEAGUE WORKERS’ APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS COMPENSATION TRUST WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPELLANTS COMMISSION [NO. H107908] V.

JESSIE ELLIS APPELLEE REVERSED

KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge

Appellants City of Conway and Arkansas Municipal League Workers’ Compensation

Trust (collectively, City of Conway) appeal from an order of the Arkansas Workers’

Compensation Commission (Commission) that reversed the opinion of the administrative

law judge (ALJ) and found that appellee Jessie Ellis established a compensable closed head

injury and awarded associated benefits. City of Conway argues on appeal that the

Commission’s finding of compensability for a closed head injury was not supported by

substantial evidence because such injury was not established by medical evidence supported

by objective findings. We agree, and we reverse.

I. Relevant Facts

Ellis was employed as a police officer with the Conway Police Depaetment on June

17, 2020, when he was involved in a job-related accident. Ellis was engaged in a training exercise that required him to pursue, on foot, another officer posing as a fleeing suspect.

During the course of the chase, Ellis fell and hit his head on the curb of a sidewalk. Ellis

testified that he did not believe he was rendered unconscious but that when he was able to

open his eyes, “it seemed like stars or TV static.” Ellis stated that it took him ten or fifteen

seconds to stand up after he hit his head.

Another officer drove Ellis to the emergency room. The emergency-room report

stated that as he was running, Ellis had fallen forward, striking his left hand, right leg, and

left forehead on the ground. The report stated that Ellis denied loss of consciousness, neck

pain, or any significant headache but that Ellis was nauseated and vomited during the visit,

after which the nausea subsided. Ellis was diagnosed with abrasions to his left eyebrow, left

hand, and right lower extremity as well as “mild closed head injury, initial encounter.” 1

The next day, Ellis resumed his regular duties as a police officer. However, according

to Ellis, he felt lethargic, groggy, and confused, and he “knew something was off.” As a result,

Ellis returned to the emergency room on June 20, 2020, where he reported that a few hours

after he left the initial emergency-room visit, he had developed a dull headache, and he was

having difficulty concentrating during his work shifts. That same day, a CT scan of Ellis’s

head revealed “no acute intracranial findings.”

1 City of Conway admitted compensability for work-related abrasions above Ellis’s left eye, to his knuckles, and to his knee. However, after Ellis had undergone numerous diagnostic tests, City of Conway subsequently controverted compensability for a brain injury based on its contention that there was no objective medical evidence of a brain injury.

2 On June 22, 2020, Ellis was examined by Dr. Gil Johnson. In a progress note, Dr.

Johnson stated, “There’s a small abrasion and soft tissue swelling just above the laptop [that]

is quite tender to touch.” Dr. Johnson gave the impression: “closed head trauma with

contusion to frontal/parietal skull; posttraumatic headache; nausea and vomiting related to

head trauma; [and] slightly altered mental status related to head trauma, currently stable.”

Dr. Johnson treated Ellis conservatively and returned him to work in a light-duty capacity.2

Dr. Johnson continued to provide follow-up treatment to Ellis, and on July 27, 2020,

he noted that Ellis’s headaches and memory issues had persisted, and he ordered an MRI.

On July 30, 2020, an MRI of Ellis’s brain was taken with the impression, “normal brain.”

Ellis was referred to Dr. Barry Baskin, who became Ellis’s primary treating physician.

In Dr. Baskin’s initial evaluation on September 3, 2020, he reported that Ellis had a left

eyebrow laceration that did not require any staples or stitches and that he had been

diagnosed with a questionable post concussive syndrome. On October 6, 2020, Dr. Baskin

reported that Ellis had residual headaches, memory loss, and some blurring of his vision.

Dr. Baskin recommended that Ellis see a neuropsychologist for neuropsychological testing.

Dr. Renee Magiera-Planey performed a neuropsychological evaluation of Ellis on

November 13, 2020, and reported that Ellis displayed mild impairments in his progressive

language skills and mild impairments in his comprehension. Dr. Magiera-Planey reported

2 The Conway Police Department assigned Ellis to a light-duty job in the records department, and Ellis was released from the Department a little over a year later when it was determined that Ellis would be unable to resume his regular duties as a police officer. Ellis testified that he currently works for Shamrock Foods delivering boxes of food to businesses.

3 further that Ellis had described changes in his mood and level of patience after the accident

and that Ellis was a candidate for a mood stabilizer to help with reported anxiety and mood

swings.

Ellis continued to follow up with Dr. Baskin. On December 17, 2020, Dr. Baskin

reported that “Ellis does not have any objective findings with regard to imaging studies or

neurologic pathology.”

Ellis also underwent an eye exam. On January 27, 2021, Dr. Jennifer Doyle of the

Little Rock Eye Clinic reported that “his exam is completely normal today.”

Ellis then underwent an EEG, which was performed on February 24, 2021. The EEG

report stated that it was “a normal EEG.”

A second neuropsychological evaluation of Ellis was performed by Dr. A.J. Zolten on

April 2, 2021. Dr. Zolten reported that the test results were not entirely reliable due to Ellis’s

inconsistent effort and overreporting of psychological symptoms. Dr. Zolten stated, “In

general, there are no overt deficits noted in [Ellis’s] neurocognitive profile with the exception

of poor visual construction skills and the related incidental visual memory after the visual

construction task.”

In May 2021, Ellis began treatment with Tobi Taylor, a licensed professional

counselor. Ms. Taylor thought that Ellis may be suffering from an ongoing adjustment

disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood. Ms. Taylor acknowledged in her

deposition that her diagnosis was based entirely on Ellis’s own reporting of symptoms, which

she agreed could be manipulated. Ms. Taylor stated further that she is not qualified to test

4 for cognitive defects and is not qualified to provide an opinion on whether Ellis had suffered

a traumatic brain injury.

In a September 14, 2022 report, Dr. Baskin stated that Ellis had memory loss, blurred

vision, irritability, anger, fatigue, and generalized weakness. Dr. Baskin’s overall impression

was that “Ellis did in fact sustain a closed head injury and to some extent a traumatic brain

injury without any significant bleeding or skull fracture or objective findings on his CT of

the head or MRI of the head.” Dr. Baskin assigned Ellis a 14 percent impairment rating

“which is mild limitation of some but not all social interpersonal daily living functions.”

On February 5, 2022, Dr. Baskin wrote a letter discussing his treatment and diagnosis

of Ellis. Dr. Baskin stated, “He had a closed head injury without any significant

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2025 Ark. App. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-conway-and-arkansas-municipal-league-workers-compensation-trust-v-arkctapp-2025.