Cox v. North River Homes

706 So. 2d 743, 1997 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 458, 1997 WL 283761
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 30, 1997
Docket2951215
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 706 So. 2d 743 (Cox v. North River Homes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. North River Homes, 706 So. 2d 743, 1997 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 458, 1997 WL 283761 (Ala. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

YATES, Judge.

Richard E. Cox sued his employer, North River Homes, seeking to recover workers’ compensation benefits for injuries he alleged he had sustained during the course of his employment. Following an ore tenus proceeding, the trial court denied benefits. Cox appeals.

Cox began working for North River Homes in January 1985. At that time he had had 17 years’ experience working in the mobile home industry, and he had worked for three other mobile home companies doing the same kind of work he was hired to do at North River Homes. During those 17 years, Cox had never been off work for an on-the-job injury and had never sought workers’ compensation for an on-the-job injury.

Cox was injured three times during the course of his employment with North River Homes. He was first injured in 1986 when he strained his back and was off work for two to three weeks. He returned to his same job after the 1986 strain. The X-ray of his lumbar spine taken in the course of treatment and diagnosis of that injury showed a “normal lumbar spine.”

In October 1991, Cox suffered his second injury, this time to his neck and shoulder. The injury occurred when a glue barrel that he was loading fell and pinned his legs. As he tried to lift the barrel off his legs, he tore muscles in his neck and right shoulder. Cox reported the injury to his foreman, and he was sent for approved medical treatment. He attended physical therapy for approximately three months. Cox was then released to return to work on light duty; however, he was assigned his regular job, which was heavy labor, not light work. After returning to work from the October 1991 injury and up until the time of the trial, Cox continued to experience pain and numbness in his shoulder and neck.

In October 1992, Cox suffered his third injury, while lifting a 700- to 800-pound beam. Cox stated that.while he was lifting it, something in his back “pulled loose” and his lower back started burning and aching. He reported the injury to his foreman, but his foreman would not give him a slip to go to a doctor. Cox went on his own to the company doctor the next morning. The company doctor took him off work, but told him that there was nothing he could do for him. North River Homes subsequently referred Cox to Dr. Benjamin Buchanan, an orthopedic surgeon.

Cox first saw Dr. Buchanan on October 13, 1992. He noted that Cox had an acute sinusitis and bronchitis problem and he diagnosed an acute lumbosacral strain in addition to a chronic spondylolisthesis with an apparent resolving L5 radiculopathy. In deposition, Dr. Buchanan stated that a spondylolis-thesis can result from a stress fracture.

In May 1993, Dr. Buchanan testified by deposition that heavy work such as Cox was performing on the day of his injury could contribute to cause the spondylolisthesis to become symptomatic, stating: “It can aggravate the back through a system of strain or pain.” He read from, his dictated reports, in which he had diagnosed Cox as having an acute lumbosacral strain, an L5 radiculopa-thy, evidence of degenerative spurring at the L3-4 disc level, and a bulging disc, none of which, he said, was attributable to spondylo-listhesis. Dr. Buchanan further testified that he could not say that the October 1992 injury trauma did not cause the disc bulge. However, on November 11,1992, Dr. Buchanan had formed the opinion that Cox’s injury was not job-related. On December 4, 1992, Cox was denied further workers’ compensation benefits because of Dr. Buchanan’s diagnosis of a chronic condition.

Dr. Buchanan performed back surgery on Cox on December, 16, 1992. The surgery included an L4-5 diskectomy bilaterally, partial L4 laminectomy, a Gill laminectomy for the spondylolisthesis, exploration of the L5 nerve root bilaterally, and bilateral/lateral fusion of the L4 sacral area. Cox suffered from various complications relating to the surgery. At one point, he was hospitalized for approximately two weeks because of a complication. North River Homes paid none of the medical expenses.

Two to three months after the surgery, Cox went to Dr. Chester Boston, an orthopedic surgeon, because he felt that he was not getting any better. He complained of persis[746]*746tent pain in his back and in both legs. Dr. Boston ordered an MRI, which confirmed the surgical treatment Cox had had and demonstrated a spondylolisthesis.

Dr. Boston explained that a spondylolisthe-sis is a condition that begins to develop during adolescence and that may or may not be symptomatic. If it is symptomatic, it is frequently symptomatic after an injury. Dr. Boston stated that Cox’s history was consistent with an injury causing his spondylolis-thesis to become symptomatic. He testified that, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, he thought Cox’s existing spondylolis-thesis was exacerbated by the trauma of his October 1992 injury.

Dr. Boston recommended a second surgery, but Cox did not feel that he could go through another surgery. Cox testified that he continues to experience a great deal of pain in his back and numbness in his legs and that he is often unable to sleep and cannot perform normal household duties. He cannot afford pain medication. Cox has not been employed since the October 1992 injury. He testified that he did not believe that there was any job that he could perform.

Michael Staff, Cox’s vocational expert, testified that, to a reasonable degree of vocational certainty, he considers Cox to suffer a 100% vocational disability. North River Homes never offered any retraining or rehabilitation to Cox and never offered him a job he could return to within his limitations.

Cox’s medical records, before his injuries at North River Homes, showed the following: In October and November 1977, Cox had gone to Dr. Carroll Sasser on three occasions, complaining of headaches, backaches, stomachaches, coughing episodes, and elevated temperature. Following each visit, Cox was diagnosed with bronchitis.

In 1978, at the request of a potential employer, Cox underwent a complete physical examination, in which an X-ray of his lumbar spine was taken. The X-ray showed a transitional vertebra, but, otherwise, nothing remarkable in the lumbar spine. There was no testimony as to what “transitional vertebra” is, but Dr. Boston’s testimony indicated that it is not spondylolisthesis. Dr. Sasser, who had performed the examination, found Cox to be fit for employment. Cox was not aware that he had transitional vertebra.

In 1985, Cox filled out an application for employment with North River Homes. Cox answered “no” to the question “Have you ever had any form of back injury?”.

The production manager for North River Homes testified that he would not have placed Cox on a heavy-duty job if he had known of his “preexisting” back problems. He testified that the only information he had concerning the preexisting back problems was Dr. Sasser’s 1977 report, wherein Cox had complained of headaches, backaches, and congestion, and had been diagnosed with bronchitis.

Cox filed this action alleging that he was owed benefits for the October 1991 injury to his shoulder and neck and for the October 1992 injury to his back. The court denied benefits for the 1991 injury. It further denied benefits for the 1992 injury, finding that Cox had a preexisting condition; that he had misrepresented that fact on his employment application; and that the preexisting condition had substantially increased the risk that he would become disabled from a foreseeable accident or job-related activity.

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Bluebook (online)
706 So. 2d 743, 1997 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 458, 1997 WL 283761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-north-river-homes-alacivapp-1997.