Crew v. First Source Furniture Group

259 S.W.3d 656, 2008 Tenn. LEXIS 418, 2008 WL 2502113
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 2008
DocketW2006-00713-SC-WCM-WC
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 259 S.W.3d 656 (Crew v. First Source Furniture Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crew v. First Source Furniture Group, 259 S.W.3d 656, 2008 Tenn. LEXIS 418, 2008 WL 2502113 (Tenn. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

GARY R. WADE, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which WILLIAM M. BARKER, C.J., and CORNELIA A. CLARK, and WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JJ., joined. JANICE M. HOLDER, J., not participating.

In 2004, the plaintiff, Lacay Crew, filed a workers’ compensation claim alleging injuries to her left and right hands, wrists, and arms, while in the course and scope of her employment. In response, the defendant, First Source Furniture Group, d/b/a Anderson Hickey Company, denied the claim on issues of causation. The trial court found that Crew sustained a compen-sable, gradual injury to both upper extremities and awarded a permanent partial vocational disability of 25% to each upper extremity equating to a judgment award of $25,479.00. Discretionary costs in the amount of $150.00 were awarded for reimbursement to Crew for a doctor’s completion of a Tennessee Department of Labor Form C-32 on Crew’s behalf. The Special Workers’ Compensation Appeals Panel found that there was insufficient evidence of causation and dismissed the case. We affirm the decision of the Appeals Panel.

I. Facts

Lacay Crew (“Crew”), who was 39 years of age at the time of trial, is a high school graduate. She attended college for a time, studying voice range and music. Her work career began with packing automobile parts at Tennessee Electroplating for approximately six months and putting parts on the line for motors for fans at Magnetek Universal Electric. She began working for First Source Furniture Group, d/b/a Anderson Hickey Company (“Anderson Hickey”) in 1991, where she operated a break press. Her job required that she bend parts that would later be used to assemble desks. In 1995, she left Anderson Hickey and became a substitute teacher. In 1999, when she returned to Anderson Hickey, she was initially assigned to the welding department, where she assembled filing cabinets and later began to assemble desks on the line. 1 She worked there continuously until January 28, 2002, when she was permanently laid off. Anderson Hickey’s plant closed two months later.

In October 2001, during the time in which she was working in desk assembly, Crew used a rubber hammer weighing approximately five pounds to bend drawers in order to assure a proper fit. When a desk on the moving assembly line lacked all of the necessary parts, Crew, with the help of others, would lift as much as 200-300 pounds of weight. Her work was varied and included welding and working on the hang line lifting files. On her own, she could lift approximately 30 to 40 pounds.

*660 On October 13, 2001, Crew noticed that her wrist was swollen. Ten days later, the swelling was worse. She reported her condition to her supervisor because she could not remove her ring from her finger. Anderson Hickey referred her to a Dr. Robbins.

Before being treated by Dr. Robbins, Crew completed a workers’ compensation questionnaire. She reported that she lifted items from the floor to the “peds,” helped to fit drawers on a desk line “in an upward [and] downward motion all day,” and “notice[d] tingling in [her] fingers and also swelling of the fingers [and] wrist.” During the course of treatment on her left wrist, Crew began to experience pain in her right wrist as well. Dr. Robbins, who last saw Crew in December of 2001, authorized her return to work with a ten pound lifting restriction. Ultimately, he referred her to a Dr. Carl Huff, an orthopedic surgeon.

On December 21, 2001, Crew had her first appointment with Dr. Huff. She complained at that time of numbness in her left hand and a gradual onset of symptoms occurring in the previous two months associated with repetitious use of her hand at work. She also reported that she had been wearing a brace and using medications. Dr. Huff found that Crew had nearly a full range of motion but tested positive on both a Phalen’s test 2 and Tinel’s sign. 3 He also noted that she displayed a slight weakness of pinch and had decreased sensation in her thumb and fingers. Dr. Huff acknowledged that the validity of these results depends upon subjective responses from a patient to questions relative to sensation. Radio-graphs of Crew’s left wrist were negative. Dr. Huff ordered an electromyogram (“EMG”), which measures the speed of the transmission of an electrical impulse along the path of the nerve, to determine whether Crew was suffering from carpal tunnel syndrome. He deemed the EMG as particularly reliable because it “doesn’t require patient response.” Dr. Huff returned Crew to work with a five-pound lifting limit, a repetitive work restriction, and a wrist immobilizer.

Three weeks later, Dr. Huff conducted a second examination. In the meantime, the EMG report indicated no carpal tunnel syndrome to the left upper extremity. On physical examination, however, Dr. Huff found “marked tenderness over the first dorsal extensor compartment at the wrist,” “increased pain” in the same area, a diminished strength of pinch, and a negative Phalen’s test and Tinel’s sign over the median nerve. Crew’s range of motion remained full. Dr. Huff diagnosed de Quervain’s tendonitis 4 of the left wrist and ordered a cortisone shot, medications for pain, an immobilizer, and further testing. Because Crew was still complaining of some numbness in her left hand, Dr. Huff ordered lab testing for arthritic and rheu-matological issues. He again returned her to work with the five-pound lifting restriction and repetitive work restriction.

*661 When Crew returned to Dr. Huff on January 24, 2002, for a third visit, she reported that her grip and pinch had “definitely improved.” Her examination showed minimal tenderness, her pinch and grip strength were near normal, and she had no loss of sensation. Dr. Huff prescribed an anti-inflammatory medication and returned her to work without restrictions.

One week later, Crew returned to see Dr. Huff complaining of pain in her left shoulder and right wrist and generalized pain in her joints. By then, Dr. Huff had the lab results for rheumatology, which indicated that Crew had lupus, an inflammatory arthritic condition. He noted pain and swelling in multiple parts of her body and stated that it was “possible” that her return to work at full duty had aggravated her condition. It was also his opinion that Crew would be permanently unable to resume repetitious work. Dr. Huff advised her to seek follow up care for her lupus from her primary care physician.

In December of 2002, Crew again saw Dr. Huff on a follow-up basis, complaining of numbness in the left hand and, for the first time, in the right hand. She also displayed triggering of her left middle finger, tenderness over the de Quervain’s tendons of the left wrist, decreased sensation in her fingers, and a slight weakness of pinch in both hands. She reported a tingling paresthesia with the Phalen’s test in both wrists. Dr. Huff ordered EMGs to both the left and right upper extremities, but released Crew to full duty with no restrictions.

On January 24, 2003, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W.3d 656, 2008 Tenn. LEXIS 418, 2008 WL 2502113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crew-v-first-source-furniture-group-tenn-2008.