Darden Restaurant v. Labor Commission

2024 UT App 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 24, 2024
Docket20230743-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 UT App 153 (Darden Restaurant v. Labor Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darden Restaurant v. Labor Commission, 2024 UT App 153 (Utah Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 UT App 153

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

DARDEN RESTAURANT AND XL INSURANCE AMERICA INC., Petitioners and Cross-respondents, v. CHINYU JAMES SUN, Respondent and Cross-petitioner, v. LABOR COMMISSION, Respondent.

Opinion No. 20230743-CA Filed October 24, 2024

Original Proceeding in this Court

Eric J. Pollart and Jeffrey A. Callister, Attorneys for Petitioners and Cross-respondents Aaron J. Prisbrey, Attorney for Respondent and Cross-petitioner

JUDGE AMY J. OLIVER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.

OLIVER, Judge:

¶1 Chinyu James Sun suffered injuries to his neck and shoulder when he slipped and fell at work. He never reported the incident to his employer, Darden Restaurant (Darden), who was notified only when he filed a workers’ compensation claim 300 days later. An administrative law judge (the ALJ) found Sun had failed to comply with the reporting requirements of the Workers’ Compensation Act, see Utah Code § 34A-2-407 (the Reporting Statute), and dismissed his claims with prejudice.

¶2 Sun sought review with the Appeals Board (the Board) of the Utah Labor Commission (the Commission). The Board Darden Restaurant v. Labor Commission

affirmed the ALJ’s determination that Sun’s shoulder injury was barred for lack of timely notice, but it remanded the matter to the ALJ for further proceedings regarding Sun’s neck injury. In light of a material dispute in medical opinions from various physicians, the ALJ appointed a medical panel. After reviewing the medical panel’s report, the ALJ ordered Sun’s employer to pay temporary total disability compensation as well as necessary and ongoing medical care for his neck injury. Sun sought review of the ALJ’s determination because it did not address his shoulder injury. The Board affirmed the ALJ’s award of benefits to Sun for his neck and affirmed the ALJ’s prior decision that Sun’s shoulder claim was barred. Both Darden and Sun brought petitions for judicial review. We decline to disturb the Board’s decision as to the shoulder claim, but we set aside the Board’s order as to the neck claim because both were barred as untimely.

BACKGROUND

¶3 Sun was employed as a manager at a restaurant owned by Darden. In July 2020, Sun was carrying a large plastic tub at work that he had filled with ice when he slipped and fell, hitting his head on the wall and his right shoulder on the ice machine. Sun landed on his back with the ice bucket on top of him. Sun’s “whole upper body hurt but his right shoulder hurt the worst.” Two of Sun’s coworkers helped him up, and Sun was able to finish his shift. He did not file an accident report with Darden, but he claimed to have left a voicemail message with Darden’s director of operations (the Director) about the accident (the Accident).

¶4 Before the Accident, Sun had been treated for complaints related to pain in both of his shoulders and was scheduled to have surgery on his right shoulder in August 2020. A week before that surgery, Sun’s orthopedic surgeon ordered an MRI after Sun complained of being in “a lot more pain” and mentioned something about a fall. The MRI showed “a moderate sized near full-thickness bursal sided tear” on Sun’s right shoulder. Sun

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underwent surgery on his right shoulder in August, as scheduled, and was placed off work afterwards.

¶5 In December 2020, Sun returned to his surgeon, complaining of pain in both shoulders and cramping in his neck. When an MRI of his right shoulder showed no tear, Sun underwent an MRI of his cervical spine, 1 which showed “joint disease and degenerative disc disease.” The following month, Sun reported to the Director a years-earlier fall at work that had injured his left shoulder when he was employed at one of Darden’s restaurants in Colorado. In February 2021, the Director then filed a workers’ compensation claim for the accident in Colorado. That claim was ultimately denied.

¶6 That same month, Sun was evaluated by a physiatrist for pain management. In his treatment notes, the physiatrist described Sun as a “51-year-old gentleman, who 3 years ago fell while at work injuring his left shoulder and his neck.” Sun’s surgeon declared him fit to go back to work “full duty with no restrictions regarding his shoulders.” Sun also went to an orthopedic spine surgeon for surgical recommendations to alleviate his neck pain.

¶7 In April 2021, Sun filed a claim with the Commission based on the Accident, seeking an award of temporary total disability benefits, medical expenses, and ongoing medical care. The ALJ held an evidentiary hearing in June 2022. Sun testified about the Accident as described above. Sun’s testimony confirmed that, as a manager who had to file reports when employees were injured, he was aware of how to report workplace accidents.

¶8 On cross-examination, Sun initially asserted that on the day of the Accident, he left a voicemail with the Director in which

1. The cervical spine is “the neck area” of the spine and “consists of the first seven vertebrae”—C1 to C7—of the spine. Cervical Spine, Cleveland Clinic, https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/arti cles/22278-cervical-spine [https://perma.cc/6CLS-L2KQ].

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he described the Accident. When Darden’s counsel pointed out that Sun had claimed in his deposition that the voicemail did not describe the Accident or his injury, he admitted, “Yeah. I did not discuss the detail of the [Accident].” Sun also claimed that the Director called him a couple of days later at work to discuss the Accident. Sun then admitted that if an employee came to him with an injury, he would “report [it] right away” but explained he did not report the Accident to Darden because he already had surgery scheduled for his shoulder the following month, “so [he] wasn’t too worried about it.” Darden’s counsel asked Sun, “So [you’ve] got a surgery coming right around the corner and you make the decision, ‘Ah, I’m not going to report it as work-related’; is that correct?” Sun replied, “Correct.” Sun also admitted he filed the claim with the Commission for the Accident after becoming aware that his claim in Colorado for the previous injury was denied.

¶9 Sun then called the Director to testify. She testified she was not aware Sun had injured himself at work in July 2020 until she received a notice that he had filed his claim with the Commission. The Director testified that Sun “did not” leave her a voicemail about the Accident and that Sun’s claim that she called him a couple of days after the Accident to ask about the Accident was “not accurate.” The Director stated that the only claim Sun reported to her was in relation to the alleged injury to his left shoulder that occurred when he was working for Darden in Colorado. The Director confirmed, “I was never made aware of any slip and fall in Utah. Had I been made aware, I can promise you, in all of my years and experience, I would have instantly reported it into the system.” She testified there was no investigation into the Accident because Sun never reported it. The Director testified she was aware of Sun’s August 2020 surgery for his shoulder and that she made arrangements “to provide coverage to the restaurant . . . for the time that he had requested off” to have surgery. But she reiterated that those arrangements were “not related to any claim or any injury related to work.” The Director stated that as a manager, Sun could have filed his own claim and had access to a portal with the phone number for reporting.

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2024 UT App 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darden-restaurant-v-labor-commission-utahctapp-2024.