David J. Mach, Jr. v. Wells Concrete Products Co., and CCMSI, Relators, and Blue Cross Blue Shield, Operating Engineers Local 49 Health & Welfare Fund, Intervenors.

CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 22, 2015
DocketA14-2065
StatusPublished

This text of David J. Mach, Jr. v. Wells Concrete Products Co., and CCMSI, Relators, and Blue Cross Blue Shield, Operating Engineers Local 49 Health & Welfare Fund, Intervenors. (David J. Mach, Jr. v. Wells Concrete Products Co., and CCMSI, Relators, and Blue Cross Blue Shield, Operating Engineers Local 49 Health & Welfare Fund, Intervenors.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David J. Mach, Jr. v. Wells Concrete Products Co., and CCMSI, Relators, and Blue Cross Blue Shield, Operating Engineers Local 49 Health & Welfare Fund, Intervenors., (Mich. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MINNESOTA

IN SUPREME COURT

A14-2065

Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals Gildea, C.J.

David J. Mach, Jr.,

Respondent,

vs.

Wells Concrete Products Co., and CCMSI,

Relators,

and Filed: July 22, 2015 Office of Appellate Courts Blue Cross Blue Shield, Operating Engineers Local 49 Health & Welfare Fund,

Intervenors. ________________________

Eric W. Beyer, Falsani, Balmer, Peterson, Quinn & Beyer, Duluth, Minnesota, for respondent.

Janet Monson, Amy M. Mahowald, Aafedt, Forde, Gray, Monson & Hager, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota, for relators.

________________________

SYLLABUS

1. A claim for payment of medical expenses incurred to treat a work-related

injury is not barred by res judicata if the right to seek reimbursement for those expenses

had not arisen at the time of the previously denied claim.

1 2. A claim for payment of medical expenses incurred to treat a work-related

injury is not barred by collateral estoppel if the facts establish that the employee’s

condition has changed since the time of the previously denied claim.

Vacated and remanded.

OPINION

GILDEA, Chief Justice.

We are asked to determine whether res judicata or collateral estoppel bars

respondent’s workers’ compensation claim. The compensation judge concluded that the

claim was barred, but the Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals (“WCCA”) reversed.

We agree that res judicata does not apply, but because we conclude that whether

collateral estoppel bars respondent’s claim depends on whether his condition has

changed, we vacate the decision of the WCCA and remand to the compensation judge.

This action arises from an injury that respondent David J. Mach sustained to his

left leg while employed by Wells Concrete Products Co. (“Wells”). Mach was working

as a crane operator when an auger on the back of a skid steer detached and struck Mach

in the left leg. There is no dispute that the injury was work-related, resulted in lasting

pain, and required medical treatment. Mach experienced chronic pain and discomfort

after the injury, and underwent significant medical treatment, including MRIs, physical

therapy, knee surgery, and dozens of evaluations.

In August 2010 Mach sought compensation under the workers’ compensation

laws. He filed a claim petition seeking disability benefits and compensation for medical

expenses (“2010 claim”). Most relevant here, Mach claimed that as a result of his work

2 injury, he developed reflex sympathetic dystrophy (“RSD”), now known as complex

regional pain syndrome (“CRPS”), and that he was entitled to compensation for medical

expenses, including expenses incurred for the implantation of a spinal cord

neurostimulator. Mach also claimed temporary partial disability benefits from June 7,

2010 through September 20, 2010, temporary total disability benefits from September 21,

2010 through the date of the hearing, and permanent partial disability benefits due to his

CRPS. Wells admitted that Mach suffered an injury in the course of his employment but

denied that Mach had CRPS, that the neurostimulator was compensable medical

treatment, and that Mach had any restrictions on his work activities.

The compensation judge determined that some of the disputed medical bills,

including those for an x-ray, an MRI, and several clinic visits, were reasonable and

necessary treatment for Mach’s injury, and awarded compensation for those expenses.

But the judge concluded that Mach failed to show that he suffered from CRPS and that

the neurostimulator was a reasonable medical treatment for Mach’s work injury. The

judge rejected the medical opinion of Mach’s doctor, who had recommended placement

of the neurostimulator, and instead adopted the opinions of two independent medical

examiners, who had concluded that Mach did not have CRPS and that a neurostimulator

was not a reasonable or necessary treatment. The judge therefore denied Mach’s claims

3 for treatment related to the neurostimulator. 1 The WCCA affirmed this denial. Mach v.

Wells Concrete Prods. Co., 72 Minn. Workers’ Comp. Dec. 91, 107 (WCCA 2012).

Mach subsequently underwent surgery to remove his neurostimulator and replace

it with a new one. Mach filed a second request for medical benefits on October 7, 2013,

seeking compensation for the expenses related to the replacement (“2013 claim”). To

support his 2013 claim, Mach submitted a letter from Dr. Paul J. Vollmar, who began

treating Mach on January 16, 2012. Dr. Vollmar concluded that Mach “has and

continues to have complex regional pain syndrome of the left leg” and that this condition

“is directly related to the [work] injury.” Dr. Vollmar said that Mach “has [a] spinal cord

stimulator in place which will need to be periodically interrogated by a manufacturer’s

representative and reprogrammed. Since this is a battery operated electronic unit at some

point in the future it will probably need to be revised or replaced.”

Wells moved to dismiss the 2013 claim, arguing that Mach’s claim for benefits

was barred by res judicata and collateral estoppel. Specifically, Wells argued that the

2013 claim was barred because the necessity of a spinal cord neurostimulator had already

1 As to the disability ratings, the compensation judge denied Mach’s claim for total temporary disability benefits, finding that any inability to work after September 21, 2010 was due to either a low-back condition unrelated to Mach’s work injury, or to Mach’s personal wishes. The judge also denied Mach’s claim for permanent partial disability, finding that Mach had failed to establish the CRPS criteria necessary for a permanency rating. The judge granted Mach’s claim for temporary partial disability benefits from June 7, 2010 to September 20, 2010. The WCCA affirmed the denial of temporary total and permanent partial disability benefits and vacated the award of temporary partial disability benefits after Mach conceded on appeal that he could not prove that his physical condition was the cause of his wage loss during that period. Mach v. Wells Concrete Prods. Co., 72 Minn. Workers’ Comp. Dec. 91, 105, 108 (WCCA 2012).

4 been considered and rejected by the compensation judge and the WCCA. The

compensation judge granted the motion to dismiss. The judge determined that the

removal and replacement of the neurostimulator “represent[ed] maintenance and/or a

continuation of treatment found non-compensable” by the litigation of Mach’s 2010

claim. The judge concluded that Mach “failed to show in the previous proceedings that

the implant of the Medtronic pain stimulator” was related to his work injury, and

therefore held that an attempt to relitigate that issue with a new claim for benefits was

barred by res judicata and collateral estoppel.

The WCCA reversed. Mach v. Wells Concrete Prods. Co., 2014 WL 6472040, at

*3 (Minn. WCCA Nov. 4, 2014). The court held that “Dr. Vollmar’s bills were not

before the judge in [the 2010 claim] and are therefore not precluded by the previous

decision.” Id. The court noted that none of the compensation judge’s findings on the

2010 claim established that Mach’s work injury was temporary, had healed, or had

resolved. Id. Because those “findings and order covered only claims for medical

expenses prior to January 5, 2011, and the current claim is for medical expenses from and

after January of 2012,” the court held that Mach’s 2013 claim was not barred by res

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David J. Mach, Jr. v. Wells Concrete Products Co., and CCMSI, Relators, and Blue Cross Blue Shield, Operating Engineers Local 49 Health & Welfare Fund, Intervenors., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-j-mach-jr-v-wells-concrete-products-co-and-ccmsi-relators-and-minn-2015.