Devaney v. Board of Trustees of the Calumet City Police Pension Fund

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 25, 2010
Docket1-09-0458 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Devaney v. Board of Trustees of the Calumet City Police Pension Fund (Devaney v. Board of Trustees of the Calumet City Police Pension Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devaney v. Board of Trustees of the Calumet City Police Pension Fund, (Ill. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION January 25, 2010

No. 1-09-0458

GARY A. DEVANEY, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County ) v. ) No. 07 CH 33943 ) THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE CALUMET CITY ) POLICE PENSION FUND, and Individual Board Members ) PATRICK J. O’MEARA, President; THOMAS ) STIPANICH, Secretary; and JERRY JANIGA, GEORGE ) BARICH, and LOUISE MUSYNSKI, Trustees, ) Honorable ) Richard J. Billik, Defendants-Appellants. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE LAMPKIN delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff Gary Devaney filed a complaint for administrative review against the defendant

Board of Trustees of the Calumet City Police Pension Fund (Board) and its individual members,

who had determined that plaintiff was entitled to a nonduty, rather than a line-of-duty, disability

pension based on findings that his disability did not result from or was not aggravated by a duty-

related incident.

The circuit court reversed defendants’ decision and granted plaintiff his requested relief.

Defendants appealed, arguing that their decision was not against the manifest weight of the

evidence and the circuit court improperly reweighed the evidence. For the reasons that follow,

we affirm the judgment of the circuit court. 1-09-0458

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff had been employed as a police officer for the Calumet City police department

since January 1989. Prior to his employment, he had back surgery in January 1985 for an injury

that had caused left-sided back and leg pain. He was, however, medically cleared for police duty

without any restrictions.

On March 11, 2001, plaintiff was off duty when he responded to an emergency call.

Plaintiff engaged in a physical struggle with the suspect while trying to arrest him. During the

struggle, plaintiff fell to the pavement on his back, and the suspect landed on top of plaintiff. That

same day, plaintiff filed an employer’s first report of injury or illness, stating that he was injured

on the right side of his head, right leg and left hand. Plaintiff did not mention any injury to his

lower back in that report and did not seek treatment immediately after the incident.

On March 26, 2001, when plaintiff was treated for allergies and sinusitis by his family

doctor, Matt Chelich, D.O., plaintiff did not mention any back or leg pain. Plaintiff, however,

returned to Dr. Chelich on May 1, 2001, complaining of lower back pain that radiated into his

right leg. Plaintiff was prescribed pain killers and muscle relaxants and instructed to attend

physical therapy. In August 2001, plaintiff was referred to Martin G. Luken, M.D., a

neurosurgeon.

According to Dr. Luken’s August 17, 2001 chart note, plaintiff reported that his surgery

in 1985 for left-sided sciatica completely relieved his pain and he remained well until the March

2001 arrest incident. Ever since that incident, he experienced left buttock and hip pain with

intermittent burning paresthesia extending distally over the anterior aspect of his right foreleg.

2 1-09-0458

Dr. Luken reviewed hard copies and the report of plaintiff’s July 30, 2001 MRI scan and

concurred with the interpretation of a right lateral disk protrusion at L4-L5 and right paracentral

protrusion disk at L5-S1 with mass effect upon the associated nerve root. Dr. Luken concluded

that plaintiff’s current symptoms, neurologic deficit, and demonstrated disk herniation were the

result of the March 2001 work injury. Dr. Luken scheduled a lumbar epidural steroid injection as

a final attempt to manage plaintiff’s problem nonoperatively.

At plaintiff’s next visit on July 12, 2002, Dr. Luken noted that administrative problems

had prevented plaintiff from undergoing the recommended steroid injection. Nevertheless,

plaintiff had enjoyed gradual resolution of his pain and was able to continue working. He was,

however, always aware of his right foot slapping, particularly when he was fatigued. Plaintiff

continued to do reasonably well until he experienced a marked flare-up of symptoms two or three

months prior to the visit. He could not recall a “specific injury that precipitated the worsening,

though he suspects activities attendant to his care of a new puppy at home may have played a role

in his increased symptoms.” The pain and foot slapping markedly worsened and only slowly

resolved during the intervening months, particularly for the two weeks when he was on vacation.

Plaintiff described himself as very nearly pain free and the foot slapping was at its usual baseline.

Dr. Luken reviewed plaintiff’s June 14, 2002 MRI scan, and noted Dr. Grace Lee’s comment

suggesting that the demonstrated abnormality “ ‘does not look significantly worse than 7/31/01.’ ”

Dr. Luken and plaintiff discussed the worrisome implications of plaintiff’s foot weakness and the

possibility of surgery. Dr. Luken scheduled the steroid injection.

3 1-09-0458

Dr. Howard Robinson, who performed the steroid injection on July 30, 2002, noted that

plaintiff, despite not getting the recommended injection in 2001, had reported improvement and

was doing well until June 2002, when he sneezed and experienced a significant increase in his

right lower-back pain into the right buttock. At an August 19, 2002 follow-up visit, Dr. Luken

noted that plaintiff did not enjoy any significant symptomatic gains from the injection. Moreover,

plaintiff stated that his level of activity had been significantly limited in recent months due to his

lumbar symptoms. Dr. Luken recommended surgery, which was performed in January 2003.

Dr. Luken’s remaining chart notes from February 11 through October 17, 2003,

concerned plaintiff’s follow-up visits and progress in treatment after surgery. Dr. Luken noted

that plaintiff’s pattern over the several months was to be typically comfortable at rest except for

some vague right lower-back soreness, but walking or other substantial exertions precipitated

right-sided lower-back spasms and pain, with painful radiation extending into his right leg or the

toes of his right foot. They discussed spinal stabilization surgery, but plaintiff was not inclined to

undergo further surgery and thought he could live with the pain for the time being. Dr. Luken

stated that plaintiff had reached his maximum medical improvement from the surgery and any

employment he pursued must be strictly sedentary.

Although plaintiff had worked since the March 2001 incident and up to the date of his

January 2003 surgery, he was restricted to office work. After the surgery, plaintiff was not able

to return to full duty or serve in any other capacity as a police officer. Plaintiff applied for a line-

of-duty disability pension based on injuries he claimed to have sustained to his lower back as a

result of the March 2001 incident.

4 1-09-0458

In a March 2004 report, Dr. Julie Wehner stated that she examined plaintiff, who no

longer complained of severe aching in his leg, but still had constant right, lower-back pain, and the

dorsum of his ankle still hurt on an intermittent basis. The first two toes on his right foot were

still asleep, and any prolonged walking made his right leg weak and start to slap. All of plaintiff’s

MRIs from 2001, 2002 and 2003 showed multilevel degeneration at L2-L3, L3-L4, L4-L5, and

L5-S1. In addition, the preoperative MRIs were of somewhat poor quality, but did show disk

protrusions at L4-L5 and L5-S1. Dr.

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Devaney v. Board of Trustees of the Calumet City Police Pension Fund, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devaney-v-board-of-trustees-of-the-calumet-city-po-illappct-2010.