Cooper Tire & Rubber Company v. Rondie Loveless

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 23, 2021
Docket2020-WC-00266-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Cooper Tire & Rubber Company v. Rondie Loveless (Cooper Tire & Rubber Company v. Rondie Loveless) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper Tire & Rubber Company v. Rondie Loveless, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2020-WC-00266-COA

COOPER TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY APPELLANT

v.

RONDIE LOVELESS APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/27/2020 TRIBUNAL FROM WHICH MISSISSIPPI WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALED: COMMISSION ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: M. REED MARTZ ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: GREG E. BEARD NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WORKERS’ COMPENSATION DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/23/2021 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., WESTBROOKS AND McCARTY, JJ.

WILSON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Rondie Loveless was diagnosed with a stress fracture in her right foot while she was

employed by Cooper Tire & Rubber Company. Cooper Tire denied that the injury was work-

related and therefore denied workers’ compensation benefits. An administrative judge (AJ)

found that the injury was work-related, that Loveless had sustained a 100% industrial loss

of use of her right leg, and that she was entitled to temporary total and permanent partial

disability benefits. The Workers’ Compensation Commission affirmed the AJ’s decision.

On appeal, Cooper Tire challenges the Commission’s finding that Loveless’s injury was

work-related. However, because there is substantial evidence to support the Commission’s

finding, we affirm. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. In 2003, Rondie Loveless began working as a tire builder at Cooper Tire’s plant in

Tupelo. In 2004, Loveless injured her neck, requiring fusion surgery and resulting in a

permanent restriction on pushing, pulling, or lifting more than 20 pounds.1 As a result of

Loveless’s neck injury, Cooper Tire reassigned her to the dye-mixing laboratory. Her job in

the lab involved working twelve-hour shifts, and Loveless estimated that she spent up to

ninety percent of those shifts on her feet. Loveless testified that she did not engage in any

strenuous activity outside of work. Instead, she liked to lie by the pool at her house.

Loveless performed her job in the lab well. She never received negative reports from her

supervisors and received pay raises throughout her employment at Cooper Tire.

¶3. In 2014, Loveless began experiencing severe pain in her right foot. Loveless believed

that the pain was caused by “excessive walking, standing, and all that [she] had done”

working in the lab. In contrast, Cooper Tire offered evidence that Loveless had mentioned

that she had dropped a can of hairspray on her foot.2 Cooper Tire suggests that the hairspray

1 Loveless filed a petition to controvert regarding her neck injury. Cooper Tire admitted that the injury was compensable but denied that Loveless had suffered any loss of wage-earning capacity or permanent disability. The Commission agreed with Cooper Tire and denied Loveless’s claim for permanent partial disability benefits. In prior proceedings before the Commission, Loveless’s neck injury claim was consolidated with the claim that is the subject of this appeal. However, the Commission’s decision regarding the neck injury claim is now final and is not at issue in this appeal. 2 A Cooper Tire employee testified that in 2014 Loveless stated that “[t]he only thing she could think of” to explain her foot pain was that “she had previously dropped a can of hairspray on [her foot].” Cooper Tire offered a signed statement from a second employee and a transcript of a recorded interview of the employee by Cooper Tire’s attorney. That employee, who had since relocated to a Cooper Tire plant in Mexico, also stated that Loveless attributed her foot pain to the can of hairspray.

2 can could be responsible for Loveless’s injury. However, Loveless denied that she ever

made such a statement, and two of her coworkers testified that she had never mentioned

anything about dropping a can of hairspray.

¶4. In July 2014, Loveless sought treatment from Med Serve, but x-rays of her foot did

not reveal any problems. In August 2014, Loveless saw Dr. Nels Thorderson. He gave

Loveless a medical boot to wear and ordered an MRI of her foot. The MRI revealed swelling

in her foot, which Thorderson believed indicated either a stress fracture or arthritis. The MRI

did not reveal any evidence of bruising, which would indicate an acute trauma, such as being

hit by a can of hairspray. Based on the swelling in Loveless’s foot, Thorderson suspected

that the pain was due to a stress fracture rather than arthritis. Loveless returned to

Thorderson in September 2014, and Thorderson began a treatment plan that consisted of

keeping Loveless’s foot in the boot at all times, including while Loveless was sleeping.

¶5. Cooper Tire refused to allow Loveless to wear her medical boot at work. Although

Loveless believed that she could perform her duties while wearing her medical boot, Cooper

Tire informed her that company policy required her to wear steel-toed boots at the plant.

Loveless testified that some of her coworkers had been allowed to work while wearing

medical boots but that Cooper Tire insisted she wear steel-toed boots.

¶6. In October 2014, Thorderson concluded that the boot alone would not allow the

fracture to heal. Thorderson put Loveless’s foot into a cast and instructed her to stay off her

feet. In November 2014, Thorderson removed the cast and returned Loveless to the boot.

Although Loveless’s condition had improved, Thorderson began to suspect that Loveless was

3 also experiencing arthritis. By December 2014, Loveless’s pain had returned, and

Thorderson’s nurse practitioner put her back in a cast. Loveless continued in the cast until

February 2015, when Thorderson switched her back to the boot with a plan to transition over

time to a custom-made insert for her shoe. Loveless returned to Thorderson in March 2015,

complaining that the pain in her foot had returned and that she was experiencing new pain

in her right ankle. Thorderson did not return Loveless to the cast but did give her a steroid

injection for her ankle.

¶7. With more conservative treatment options exhausted, Thorderson recommended a

surgical procedure to try to repair the stress fracture. Loveless agreed, and Thorderson

performed the surgery in April 2015. Although Loveless’s condition initially improved after

the surgery, by August 2015 her pain had returned. She was experiencing less swelling in

her foot, but she was still in pain, which Thorderson believed suggested arthritis. Steroid

injections again provided some relief, but the relief was only temporary. When Thorderson

informed Loveless that there was nothing additional he could do for her, she decided to seek

a second opinion.

¶8. Loveless went to Vanderbilt Medical Center in November 2015. Dr. Bethany

Gallagher examined her and ordered a CT scan. Gallagher subsequently recommended

surgery to repair Loveless’s foot. In January 2016, Gallagher performed the operation. The

surgery and post-operative treatment resulted in significant improvement of Loveless’s foot

pain. However, Gallagher instructed Loveless to permanently avoid walking or standing for

more than four hours in a day.

4 ¶9. Cooper Tire denied that Loveless’s injury was work-related and refused to pay

workers’ compensation benefits. Loveless received short-term disability payments from

Cooper Tire from August 2014 to February 2015. In August 2015, Cooper Tire terminated

Loveless’s employment on the basis of absenteeism. Loveless did not seek to return to

Cooper Tire after she completed treatment for her foot. In September 2016, Loveless began

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Cooper Tire & Rubber Company v. Rondie Loveless, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-tire-rubber-company-v-rondie-loveless-missctapp-2021.