Clay v. Lakeview Farms, Inc.

2010 Ohio 603
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 22, 2010
Docket1-09-55
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2010 Ohio 603 (Clay v. Lakeview Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clay v. Lakeview Farms, Inc., 2010 Ohio 603 (Ohio Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

[Cite as Clay v. Lakeview Farms, Inc., 2010-Ohio-603.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT ALLEN COUNTY

DEREK CLAY,

PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,

v. CASE NO. 1-09-55

LAKEVIEW FARMS, INC.,

DEFENDANT-APPELLEE, -and- OPINION

MARSHA P. RYAN, ADMINISTRATOR,

DEFENDANT-APPELLEE.

Appeal from Allen County Common Pleas Court Trial Court No. CV2008 1753

Judgment Affirmed

Date of Decision: February 22, 2010

APPEARANCES:

James C. Ayers for Appellant, Derek Clay

Andrew J. Alatis for Appellee, Adm., OBWC

Peter N. Lavalette for Appellee, Lakeview Farms, Inc. Case No. 1-09-55

ROGERS, J.

{¶1} Plaintiff-Appellant, Derek Clay, appeals from the judgment of the

Court of Common Pleas of Allen County denying his motion for a continuance of

the trial and dismissing his claim, with prejudice, to receive workers’

compensation benefits. On appeal, Clay argues that the trial court erred in

denying his motion for a continuance and subsequently dismissing his case with

prejudice for failure to prosecute pursuant to Civ.R. 41(B)(1) where the dismissal

resulted in extreme prejudice to him, producing a reversal of his workers’

compensation benefits. Based on the following, we affirm the judgment of the

trial court.

{¶2} In November 2007, Clay filed an application for workers’

compensation benefits with the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation

(“BWC”), claiming eligibility to benefits due to a back injury suffered while

lifting boxes at his place of employment with Lakeview Farms (“Lakeview”).

Subsequently, the BWC granted his claim as to a sprain in his lumbar region, but

denied his claims for spondylolisthesis, sacrum disorder, and sacroilitis, and Clay

appealed the decision to the Industrial Commission of Ohio (“Industrial

Commission”).

{¶3} In April 2008, the Industrial Commission vacated the BWC’s order

and granted benefits for a “fracture to the pars interarticular at L5 level resulting in

-2- Case No. 1-09-55

an anterolisthesis at L5-S1,” with temporary total compensation awarded from

January 11, 2007, through January 4, 2008, and April 18, 2008, through April 22,

2008. (April 2008 Record of Proceedings, pp. 1-2). Subsequently, Lakeview

appealed the Industrial Commission’s decision.

{¶4} In June 2008, the Industrial Commission modified its April 2008

award, granting temporary total disability compensation benefits from November

1, 2007, through the present, and continuing upon the submission of medical

evidence. In its decision, the Industrial Commission stated the following:

This finding is based upon the medical records of Dr. Fumich, specifically those dated 6/3/2008, which indicates [sic] that the condition would not show on an MRI, but rather be shown on a CT-scan or x-ray; his report of 4/08/2008, 2/12/2008, 1/18/2008 and 11/1/2007. Dr. Fumich is aware of Injured Worker’s specific work activity and opines that Injured Worker sustained an acute incident from his lifting activities.

Therefore, the weight of the evidence supports that the condition arose in the course and scope of Injured Worker’s employment and the claim is allowed as indicated.

(June 2008 Record of Proceedings, p. 1).

{¶5} In September 2008, Lakeview appealed the Industrial Commission’s

June 2008 decision to the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County pursuant

to R.C. 4123.512.

{¶6} In December 2008, pursuant to the agreement of the parties, the case

was transferred to the Court of Common Pleas of Allen County.

-3- Case No. 1-09-55

{¶7} On September 10, 2009, Clay filed a motion for relief from Loc.R.

3.08, requesting that he be permitted to file the deposition of his medical expert,

Dr. Frank Fumich, only three days prior to trial. In the motion, Clay explained

that the normal procedure for workers’ compensation cases is to delay spending

money on the case before there is an attempt to resolve the matter; that a

conference was held on August 12, 2009, but no resolution was reached; and, that

he then attempted to schedule Dr. Fumich for a deposition, but Dr. Fumich

notified him he would only be available on September 24, 2009. Subsequently,

the trial court granted the motion.

{¶8} On September 24, 2009, Dr. Fumich testified via deposition that he

is licensed to practice medicine in the state of Ohio; that he practices with the

Orthopedic Institute of Ohio and is board certified as a specialist in orthopedic

surgery; that he first treated Clay in November 2007; that Clay complained of

lower back pain and bilateral leg pain; that Clay stated that he began experiencing

the pain after an incident at work in October 2007 where he was lifting forty-

pound boxes; that Clay related that the pain made it difficult for him to walk and

stand; that Clay informed him that he received chiropractic treatment from

October 16, 2007, up until October 23, 2007; and, that, based upon an x-ray of

Clay’s back, he diagnosed him with “a grade one spondylolisthesis and a pars

-4- Case No. 1-09-55

defect of the L5-S1 level.” (Fumich Dep., p. 10). The following discussion then

took place between Clay’s trial counsel and Dr. Fumich:

Clay’s Trial Counsel: * * * I want you to assume as it was told, as you were told in your history, that he lifted a box that weighed approximately forty pounds and felt the pain in his low back, he continued to work about four hours or so that day continuing to lift boxes, and when he got home he had trouble getting out of his truck and he felt the back pain, which he then went to see the chiropractor for, eventually ending up in your care. I want you to assume your findings, diagnoses, testing that you’ve all discussed here today, and I want you to assume that on April 9, 2005, he had a motor vehicle accident in which he did see a chiropractor, and he did have some low back pain. I want you to assume that in February 7, 2007, or thereabout, he also had low back pain and he was treated by a chiropractor, even going back as far as back as [sic] the year 2000 he had chiropractic treatment for his low back. But I also want you to assume that when he reported to work that day he was able to perform his services, he was not on any restriction, and he was able to lift boxes until he lifted this particular box. I want you to also assume that he had had treatment as late as 2007, as I said in February 7, 2007, for his low back by a chiropractor. Now, Doctor, accepting those factors as true and accepting your findings and your diagnoses, I ask you if you have an opinion to a reasonable degree of medical probability and certainty as to whether that lifting incident on October 16, 2007, as was described by you, proximately caused the conditions that you diagnosed and discussed with us in your deposition here today. Do you have an opinion?

Dr. Fumich: Well, you’ve offered a lot of new information to me that I wasn’t aware of beforehand.

Clay’s Trial Counsel: Yes, sir.

Dr. Fumich: Different treatments for different incidences which I’ve had no ability to review records of until you’ve said this just now very succinctly in the matter of two minutes. So, that offers

-5- Case No. 1-09-55

a whole lot of more information I can consider, that I have to take a look at to be able to say with absolute certainty what my judgment is. I can’t say without looking at that, now that I know that that existed, that this is direct causation of that lifting injury.

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125 Ohio St. 3d 1425 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2010)

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