Connaway v. Welded Construction Co.

592 N.W.2d 414, 233 Mich. App. 150
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 12, 1999
DocketDocket 201559
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 592 N.W.2d 414 (Connaway v. Welded Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connaway v. Welded Construction Co., 592 N.W.2d 414, 233 Mich. App. 150 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Whitbeck, J.

Plaintiff Deborah L. Connaway appeals by leave granted from a decision of the Worker’s Compensation Appellate Commission (wcac) that denied Michigan benefits to her on the basis that a successive injury in New York aggravated her prior, Michigan-based condition. We affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. THE NOVEMBER 2, 1989, INJURY

Plaintiff is a resident of Illinois. Defendant Welded Construction Company is engaged in pipeline construction in several states. Plaintiff’s job as a “welder’s helper” involved fairly heavy labor that took *153 place at outdoor construction sites. Welded Construction assigned plaintiff to a job in northern Michigan in November 1989. On the first day working on that job, plaintiff injured her right knee (the November 2, 1989, injury). She received Michigan worker’s compensation benefits, and she was treated by an orthopedic surgeon in Illinois.

Dr. Raymond Coss, plaintiff’s treating physician, performed arthroscopic surgery on plaintiff in February of 1990. Dr. Coss found that plaintiff had tom her anterior cmciate ligament and also had a problem with her patella or, in other words, her kneecap. After the surgery, plaintiff improved, although she was at risk of her knee buckling. Plaintiff went through rehabilitation and a “work hardening” program for six months after her surgery. Plaintiff was also prescribed a knee brace. In August of 1990, Dr. Coss thought that plaintiff “had achieved a maximum benefit from the work hardening” program and suggested “a trial of work.” When asked what he meant by a “trial of work,” the doctor explained that plaintiff could return to work and see if her knee held up:

We had some tentative feelings about her return to work as a construction worker but felt that she had proceeded with her work hardening and therapy program to a point where she could be permitted to return understanding that she, in my opinion, would have some increased percentage chance of reinjury or intolerance to the work demands.

B. THE SEPTEMBER 4, 1990, INJURY

Welded Construction then assigned plaintiff to work on a pipeline project in New York State. Plaintiff started working at that job site in mid-August of 1990. Plaintiff performed the same job as a welder’s *154 helper that she did before she was injured. Plaintiff returned to work without restrictions. Plaintiff worked long days and long weeks, about ten hours a day and about six days a week. Plaintiff apparently wore her knee brace while she was working. She testified that she also carried an ice pack in her lunch box to be used on her knee. After working regularly for ten days to two weeks, on September 4, 1990, plaintiffs knee gave out when she turned suddenly (the September 4, 1990 injury). The injury occurred at the end of the work day. Plaintiff could not work the next day. Plaintiff returned home and has not worked since.

Plaintiff returned to see Dr. Coss in September of 1990. Dr. Coss testified that he felt plaintiff had “resprained” her knee. Plaintiffs knee brace was “continued,” and her activities were “modified.” Plaintiff was also “continued” on home exercises. Dr. Coss saw plaintiff at least through May of 1993. By October of 1990, Dr. Coss thought plaintiffs knee was “more stable . . . than at any previous time.” It seems, however, that plaintiffs condition either plateaued or gradually deteriorated after that point. Dr. Coss thought that plaintiff was disabled from her job as a welder’s helper. He thought plaintiff should be restricted from climbing, working on uneven terrain, and heavy lifting. When asked for the basis for his opinion that plaintiff was disabled, Dr. Coss testified:

We know that the patient has had a significant cruciate ligament injury and we know that she has had at the time of her arthroscopy a grade three chondromalacia patella, and this coupled with the subjective performance of the knee would, in my opinion, disqualify her from heavy industry participation.

*155 Dr. Coss related plaintiffs continuing disability to the November 2, 1989, injury. He was asked whether the knee condition for which he was then treating plaintiff was caused or aggravated by the November 2, 1989, injury. He answered:

I think that the ligamentous injury was caused by the fall, I think that the chondromalacia was most likely exacerbated.

Regarding the September 4, 1990, injury, Dr. Coss did not seem to think that injury meaningfully affected plaintiffs pathology. He was asked what effect the September 4, 1990, injury had on plaintiffs underlying knee condition. He answered:

One would have a difficult time perceiving any injury to have a beneficial effect on the knee. On the other hand, I was unable to determine any objective finding which delineated further harm to the knee.

On cross-examination it was brought out that plaintiffs condition when the doctor saw her in September of 1990, after the September 4, 1990, injury, was considerably different than when he saw her in August of 1990. The doctor said that plaintiff’s condition “was certainly subjectively different.” He explained that in September plaintiff was complaining of pain that she did not complain about in August and that plaintiff was complaining in September that she could not perform all the same activities she could in August.

Plaintiff was examined by Dr. Eugene Cisek in November of 1992. Dr. Cisek thought that plaintiff was disabled from heavy labor because of her knee condition. Dr. Cisek further testified that he thought that plaintiff’s knee disability was a result of the *156 November 2, 1989, injury and that the September 4, 1990, injury had no permanent effect on plaintiff. Dr. Cisek testified:

Yes, I did not feel that there was any permanent — permanency associated with the accident of 9/4/90,1 felt that that particular accident represented an aggravation of her preexisting condition, which occurred as a result of the November, 1989 accident, namely the rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament and aggravation of patella chondromalacia.

The doctor testified that the September 4, 1990, injury “would result in a temporary aggravation of her preexisting condition.” When asked on cross-examination about the fact that plaintiff had returned to work without restrictions and had worked her regular job for about two weeks before she was again injured, Dr. Cisek replied:

Well, she had been working only a short time before this 9/4/90 injury, and there is no way in telling whether that knee would have continued to hold up for her with the type of pathology she had in her knee joint, given a longer period of stress on her knee.

The doctor then agreed, however, that the September 4, 1990, injury “did have some effect” on plaintiff. Dr. Cisek’s view of the two injuries is summarized in a paragraph at the conclusion of his medical report, which was an exhibit to his deposition:

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Bluebook (online)
592 N.W.2d 414, 233 Mich. App. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connaway-v-welded-construction-co-michctapp-1999.