DARLENE TAYLOR as SURVIVING SPOUSE of DARRELL TAYLOR v. DALE’S RECYCLING

CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedMarch 19, 2026
Docket2023-07-5405
StatusPublished

This text of DARLENE TAYLOR as SURVIVING SPOUSE of DARRELL TAYLOR v. DALE’S RECYCLING (DARLENE TAYLOR as SURVIVING SPOUSE of DARRELL TAYLOR v. DALE’S RECYCLING) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DARLENE TAYLOR as SURVIVING SPOUSE of DARRELL TAYLOR v. DALE’S RECYCLING, (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

FILED Mar 19, 2025 03:48 PM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT JACKSON

DARLENE TAYLOR as SURVIVING ) Docket No. 2023-07-5405 SPOUSE of DARRELL TAYLOR, ) Employee, ) v. ) DALE’S RECYCLING, ) State File No. 860327-2023 Employer, ) And ) INS. CO. OF THE WEST, ) Carrier. ) Judge Allen Phillips

COMPENSATION ORDER

At a Compensation Hearing on March 11, 2025, Mrs. Taylor requested benefits for her husband’s death from a heart attack. Dale’s contended the heart attack did not arise out of the employment. For the following reasons, the Court holds Mrs. Taylor is entitled to the requested benefits. History of Claim

The incident

On June 22, 2023, Mr. Taylor was pulling a trailer of scrap metal for Dale’s to a destination in Kentucky. While passing through a construction zone, a local sheriff’s deputy, Dennis Poteet, was driving behind Mr. Taylor and saw metal falling out of the trailer and other pieces about to fall. He pulled Mr. Taylor over after he passed the construction zone.

The deputy said Mr. Taylor appeared anxious and nervous and did not know metal was falling out of the trailer. Deputy Poteet told him to secure it before proceeding. Mr. Taylor then stepped on one of the trailer’s rear wheels to access an attached ladder, climbed inside the trailer, and began to move metal away from the edges.

1 Deputy Poteet went to his cruiser to answer a phone call. He said that he could see Mr. Taylor at the back of the trailer, but when Mr. Taylor began “working his way around the edge,” he lost sight of him.

When Deputy Poteet finished his phone call about ten minutes later, he still did not see Mr. Taylor. He searched for him inside and outside the cab of the truck. He then climbed the ladder to look inside the trailer and found Mr. Taylor lying on the metal near the tailgate, “staring directly into the sunlight.” Deputy Poteet found no pulse, so he called emergency medical services, who upon arrival confirmed Mr. Taylor was dead. A few days later, the local coroner completed a report stating Mr. Taylor’s immediate cause of death was cardiorespiratory arrest related to chronic hypertension and diabetes.

The claim and discovery

In August 2023, Mrs. Taylor filed a Petition for Benefit Determination stating that she had not received a First Report of Injury regarding her husband’s death. She requested a report and death benefits for herself and Mr. Taylor’s stepson, who was enrolled as a full- time college student. Dale’s then completed a First Report, stating Mr. Taylor died from “Natural Causes (Massive Heart Attack).” Dale’s carrier denied the claim based on Mr. Taylor’s preexisting conditions.

The parties deposed Deputy Poteet, who said Mr. Taylor was driving appropriately. However, Mr. Taylor seemed nervous and anxious because of what the deputy perceived was the interaction with him. The deputy also testified the trailer was “extremely tall for a dump trailer” (about 14 feet) and that June 22 was a “very warm day.” He found Mr. Taylor very near the tailgate, lying back as if he had simply sat down.

The parties also deposed Dale’s Vice President of Operations, who knew no details of the incident except that Mr. Taylor died from a heart condition. He wrote in the First report that Mr. Taylor died from natural causes because that was “verbatim” what the coroner told him. He also said Dale’s drivers are always responsible for the loads on the trucks they are driving.

The parties admitted two medical records from Mr. Taylor’s primary care provider, from his most recent DOT examination, and from his drug store. The medical records from December 2022 and January 2023 included that he was taking medications for high blood pressure, diabetes, and high cholesterol. His total cholesterol in December 2022 was 153, with an LDL level of 46 and an HDL level of 94. His hemoglobin A1C was 6.4, and his blood pressure was 150/84. In January, his blood pressure was 132/84. A Department of Transportation physical in April 2023 cleared him to drive a truck. His blood pressure was 118/70. The drug store records showed he filled his medications at regular intervals.

2 The expert proof

Mrs. Taylor retained cardiologist Dr. Arvindh Kanagasundram. He completed both medical school and his cardiology residency at Vanderbilt, where he has taught for 11 years. He is Board-certified in both cardiology and electrophysiology and spends 80% of his time evaluating and treating patients with heart arrythmias and coronary artery blockages.

Dr. Kanagasundram said Mr. Taylor’s positioning in the trailer was consistent with a sudden “catastrophic” cardiac event and he believed it resulted from physical and emotional stress in a patient with stable coronary disease. To a reasonable degree of medical certainty, Dr. Kanagasundram testified Mr. Taylor’s death was “significantly more than 50%” caused by physiological changes related to physical and emotional stressors, and exposure to heat.

The physical stressors were climbing a tall ladder and moving metal. He described how this exertion causes the heart to work harder, which in turn requires additional blood flow. That flow may be diminished by a blocked coronary artery. Likewise, increased exertion might cause a coronary artery plaque to rupture and cause a blockage.

As to emotional stressors, Mr. Taylor was troubled by being pulled over, and the resulting adrenaline rush could have caused spasms in a blocked artery, which would also diminish blood flow. That in turn could trigger a heart attack.

Dr. Kanagasundram explained how heat can affect the heart by disturbing the electrolyte balance, which can lead to “malignant arrhythmias.”

He cited articles from the Journal of the American Medical Association, the New England Journal of Medicine, and a scientific statement of the American Heart Association, which the doctor called “the definitive organization for cardiologists.” Those documented the connection between exertion in men with coronary artery disease and plaque ruptures or heart arrythmias causing sudden death.

As to preexisting conditions, Dr. Kanagasundram considered that Mr. Taylor’s cholesterol numbers were a “very, very good-looking lipid panel.” His HDL (good cholesterol) reading of 94 and LDL (bad cholesterol) of 46 indicated Mr. Taylor had both a “good genetic predisposition” and did not have a “terrible lifestyle.” The hemoglobin A1C of 6.4 and the blood pressure readings suggested well-controlled conditions. Overall, Mr. Taylor had stable coronary artery disease and was a low- to moderate-risk heart patient.

Dale’s retained cardiologist Dr. Kishore Arcot, who is Board-certified in internal medicine and cardiovascular medicine. He practices at the Memphis Vein Center but said “60-70%” of his practice is cardiology. He believed he was more qualified than Dr.

3 Kanagasundram because he was a “clinical” cardiologist who treats heart patients as opposed to an “electrocardiologist.” He did not believe electrocardiologists are fully qualified to “take care of heart attacks.”

Dr. Arcot testified the primary cause of Mr. Taylor’s heart attack was preexisting risk factors of being over age 45, a male, elevated blood pressure, type II diabetes, obesity, and high cholesterol. Given those risk factors, Dr. Arcot said “anyone” can “punch in the numbers” and see Mr. Taylor was at a 60-70% risk of a heart attack and “you don’t have to be a physician.” He said he did “not know what [Dr. Kanagasundram] went through,” because “this is black and white.”

Dr. Arcot said Mr. Taylor “most likely” died of a heart attack but talking to the deputy or moving metal is not what caused it.

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Related

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980 S.W.2d 365 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1998)

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DARLENE TAYLOR as SURVIVING SPOUSE of DARRELL TAYLOR v. DALE’S RECYCLING, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darlene-taylor-as-surviving-spouse-of-darrell-taylor-v-dales-recycling-tennworkcompcl-2026.