City of Portsmouth v. Robert Ayers

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 11, 2024
Docket0735231
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Portsmouth v. Robert Ayers (City of Portsmouth v. Robert Ayers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Portsmouth v. Robert Ayers, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Fulton, Lorish and White UNPUBLISHED

CITY OF PORTSMOUTH, ET AL. MEMORANDUM OPINION* v. Record No. 0735-23-1 PER CURIAM JUNE 11, 2024 ROBERT AYERS

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

(Audrey Marcello; Ethan W. Smith; Ford Richardson, PC, on brief), for appellants.

No brief or argument for appellee.

The City of Portsmouth and PMA Management Corp., TPA (collectively, “appellants”)

appeal the judgment of the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission (“the Commission”)

that claimant Robert Ayers is entitled to continuing temporary total disability benefits beginning

January 6, 2022. Appellants claim that the evidence was insufficient to support the

Commission’s finding that Ayers was totally disabled beginning January 6, 2022. After

examining the brief and record in this case, the panel unanimously holds that oral argument is

unnecessary because “the appeal is wholly without merit.” Code § 17.1-403(ii)(a); Rule

5A:27(a). For the following reasons, we find no error and affirm the Commission’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

“On appeal from a decision of the Commission, ‘the evidence and all reasonable

inferences that may be drawn from that evidence are viewed in the light most favorable to the

prevailing party below.’” Jalloh v. Rodgers, 77 Va. App. 195, 200 n.2 (2023) (quoting City of

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). Charlottesville v. Sclafani, 70 Va. App. 613, 616 (2019)). On July 9, 2021, Ayers, a heavy

equipment operator employed by the City of Portsmouth, “got hung up on” debris at work while

retrieving a tool and fell on his head and arm. That same day, he received medical attention at

I & O Medical Center (“I & O”). A physician’s assistant examined Ayers and noted that he had

reduced range of motion in his neck, as well as cervical and muscular tenderness. He also had a

nose laceration, superficial abrasions to his forehead and left arm, and a bruised head. Ayers

complained of pain in his head, neck, and left forearm, as well as neck stiffness. After cleaning and

bandaging Ayers’s injuries, the physician’s assistant recommended that he return the next day for

further evaluation.

When Ayers returned to I & O a day later, he complained of muscle pain and soreness in his

neck and upper back and continued to exhibit reduced range of motion in his neck. The medical

records indicate that Ayers was diagnosed with “neck strain,” was prescribed muscle relaxers, and

was instructed to avoid “safety sensitive work.” At a follow-up appointment a few days later, Ayers

was further instructed to avoid lifting or pulling anything over ten pounds. Ayers’s neck pain and

reduced range of motion persisted.

On July 20, 2021, Ayers saw Dr. Baddar and reported that, in addition to continued pain in

his neck and shoulder, he experienced a “compression type of feeling going down his spine” and a

“pulling sensation” when turning his neck. Dr. Baddar increased Ayers’s work restrictions further

and referred him to physical therapy. Over the next two weeks, Ayers participated in physical

therapy but continued to complain of neck pain and stiffness. At a follow-up appointment in early

August 2021, Ayers reported he had begun experiencing numbness in his right fingers. Dr. Baddar

ordered an MRI of Ayers’s cervical spine. The results of the MRI showed “[m]ultilevel

degenerative changes of the spine” and “[m]ultilevel moderate to high-grade neural foraminal

-2- stenosis.” The MRI further revealed “[m]ild-to-moderate canal stenosis” at C4-C5 and “moderate

canal stenosis” at C5-C6 and C6-C7.

Dr. Baddar opined that the MRI showed “chronic changes” and “no acute changes or

surgical lesions,” and recommended that Ayers continue physical therapy. On September 10, 2021,

Dr. Baddar cleared Ayers to return to full duty at work on September 20. Ayers returned to see

Dr. Baddar in October, reporting that he had tried to perform his regular work, but that his neck

continued to “hurt bad” and that he experienced pain and numbness running from his shoulder and

down his arm to his fingers. Ayers also reported that “his fingers lock[ed] up at times.” Dr. Baddar

ordered an EMG, but did not place any restrictions on Ayers’s work duties.

The EMG showed “chronic ulnar neuropathy at the right elbow” and “chronic right C7

radiculopathy,” leading Dr. Baddar to conclude that Ayers’s conditions predated his work accident.

On November 9, 2021, Dr. Baddar referred Ayers to his primary care provider for further care. In

November, Ayers saw his primary care provider, nurse practitioner Lisa Hills. Hills recommended

that Ayers see a specialist.

On December 7, 2021, Ayers consulted Dr. Mark Kerner, an orthopedic surgeon. Ayers

complained of pain in his neck and right arm, decreased range of motion in his neck, and numbness

extending down his arm into his hand. After examining Ayers and reviewing the results of the

previously ordered MRI and EMG, Dr. Kerner opined that Ayers suffered from “cervical spinal

stenosis” and recommended surgery. In Dr. Kerner’s opinion, Ayers’s symptoms were “disabling.”

Dr. Kerner noted that although Ayers had been “treated and released by his compensation provider”

for “a worker’s compensation injury,” he continued to exhibit “ongoing neck pain with decreased

range of motion” and “pain . . . in his right arm with numbness and radiating pain into his hand.”

Further, Dr. Kerner noted that Ayers suffered from “chronic neck pain and radiating arm pain since

his injury” and had a “disability with dropping things and ongoing mechanical induced

-3- radiculopathy.” Dr. Kerner diagnosed Ayers with “significant cervical foraminal stenosis at C5-7”

and “[m]oderate bilateral stenosis at C5-6” and recommended cervical decompression fusion.

On January 6, 2022, Ayers returned to Dr. Kerner reporting that he “continu[ed] to have

significant pain” and felt that “he cannot function at work.” Ayers wanted to proceed with the

recommended surgery. Dr. Kerner wrote a “work/school note” stating that Ayers would be having

surgery and should be excused from work until February 16, 2022. Dr. Kerner scheduled Ayers for

surgery on February 21, 2022. In early February, Dr. Kerner estimated that Ayers would remain

incapacitated until May and stated on Ayers’s Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)

questionnaire that Ayers “will need to remain out of work for full recovery time.”

Although Ayers’s arm pain and numbness improved after the surgery, he continued to

experience neck pain and “[d]ecreased range of motion in his cervical spine.” After a follow-up

appointment at Dr. Kerner’s practice on May 17, 2022, Ayers was referred to physical therapy for

“4-6 weeks” and provided with a note excusing him from work until June 28, 2022. On July 8,

Dr. Kerner wrote another note stating that Ayers “was seen in our office July 6th” and that he

should “remain[] out of work until his follow-up [appointment] which is August 30.”

On May 17, 2022, neurologist Dr. Grant Skidmore reviewed Ayers’s medical records at

appellants’ request. Dr. Skidmore opined that, although Ayers “[c]ertainly . . . had the pre-existing

degenerative foraminal compromise specifically at 5-6 and 6-7,” the fall at work “did cause the

onset of [Ayers’s] symptoms.” Dr. Skidmore reasoned that “[t]he mechanism of injury is consistent

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