DiGrazia v. Park Place Entertainment

914 So. 2d 1232, 2005 WL 3046847
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedNovember 15, 2005
Docket2004-WC-01035-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 914 So. 2d 1232 (DiGrazia v. Park Place Entertainment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DiGrazia v. Park Place Entertainment, 914 So. 2d 1232, 2005 WL 3046847 (Mich. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

¶ 1. Lina DiGrazia was injured on the job at the Grand Casino Biloxi when she was hit on the head by the top door of a freight elevator. She initially received temporary total disability benefits for her injury but later filed a petition to controvert claiming that she was permanently *Page 1234 and totally disabled as a result of her head injury. After a hearing held on August 15, 2001, the administrative law judge issued an opinion dismissing her petition, and the Commission affirmed. DiGrazia appealed to the Circuit Court of Harrison County, which affirmed the order of the Commission. Aggrieved, DiGrazia appeals to this Court. Finding that the order of the Commission was supported by substantial evidence, we affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS
¶ 2. Lina DiGrazia began working at the Grand Casino Biloxi as a cashier on or about September 27, 1994. On September 6, 1995, as DiGrazia was returning to her post from having taken a break, she stepped onto the service elevator; the top door of the elevator closed and hit her head. Although the impact did not render her unconscious, DiGrazia claimed that she suffered head, neck, and back pain, and that she was unable to move her right leg. She was rushed to the hospital in Ocean Springs, where she was treated by Dr. Fred Dale. Dr. Dale performed a CT scan, which was found to be normal, and prescribed Tylenol for her headache. He told DiGrazia not to return to work for twenty-four hours, but indicated that she could return to work on September 8 with no limitations.

¶ 3. DiGrazia testified that Dr. Dale referred her to Dr. Terry Millette, a neurologist.1 Dr. Millette examined DiGrazia on September 19 and found that she had mild cervical muscle spasm, and that she "had a post traumatic headache-like syndrome, or a near post concussion-like syndrome." Dr. Millette was of the opinion that DiGrazia could not immediately return to work because of her injury. Based on Dr. Millette's diagnosis and refusal to release DiGrazia to work, Grand Casino paid temporary total disability benefits from September 1995 through March 1996. By January 5, 1996, Dr. Millette noted that DiGrazia's headaches had resolved but that she continued to be plagued by anxiety and stress. Dr. Millette was of the opinion that DiGrazia reached maximum medical improvement, from a neurological standpoint, on April 18, 1996. He believed, however, that she continued to suffer from psychiatric problems, which had either been caused or exacerbated by her 1995 injury. In his opinion, this was a life-threatening event in the eyes of DiGrazia. Dr. Millette was deposed on three separate occasions during the course of this litigation, and he continually maintained his belief that DiGrazia suffered from psychiatric problems even following the resolution of her neurological problems. But, in an office note dated April 18, 1996, he stated that he would "defer to the psychiatrist"2 in regards to DiGrazia's psychiatric problems. Also, he was of the opinion that DiGrazia should at least try to return to work, although he thought it unlikely that she would be successful in returning to employment.

¶ 4. Testimony at hearing indicated that, following her release from work due to her injury, DiGrazia moved to Jackson, Mississippi, where she lived with one of her daughters. She testified that she had no desire to return to Biloxi. It is undisputed that Grand Casino made offers for DiGrazia to return to work on more than one occasion. Grand Casino made its first offer on March 12, 1996, and then offered *Page 1235 again on June 17. DiGrazia claimed not to have received the June 17 letter until after the expiration of the job offer. Then, on July 17, DiGrazia requested, through counsel, to be allowed to return to work with Grand Casino.3 Grand Casino did not respond. Approximately two years later, after DiGrazia had filed her petition to controvert, Grand Casino made several employment offers of "modified" positions that would accommodate DiGrazia's alleged psychiatric disabilities. DiGrazia denied these later offers through her counsel, claiming that she was disabled and unable to work.

¶ 5. Grand Casino conducted independent medical examinations of DiGrazia through Dr. Diane Ross, a neurologist, and Dr. Henry Maggio, a psychiatrist. Dr. Ross examined DiGrazia on November 8, 1995. She found that DiGrazia had suffered a head injury with concussion, and that this injury led to DiGrazia's problems with speech, anxiety, and headaches. Dr. Ross found that DiGrazia's stuttering was caused by anxiety, and not by an organic source, such as her head injury. When deposed, Dr. Ross reviewed the job description for a cage cashier, and stated her belief that DiGrazia could return to work, from a neurological standpoint. Dr. Ross deferred to Dr. Maggio on DiGrazia's condition from a psychiatric standpoint.

¶ 6. Dr. Maggio examined DiGrazia on March 6, 1996. He reviewed her past history, primarily through medical records, and then interviewed her for a period of approximately two hours.4 Dr. Maggio found DiGrazia's past history to be relevant to her current condition. From his review of DiGrazia's medical records, he noted that her mother had died at an early age, and that she had dropped out of high school and moved to Europe with her father following her mother's death. DiGrazia then suffered three unsuccessful marriages, one of which involved infidelity on the part of her husband, and two which involved abuse. Dr. Maggio noted that in 1994 DiGrazia was examined by her family physician, Dr. Striegel, to whom she complained of weight loss, which she attributed to stress. DiGrazia claimed that the stress was tied to the fact that her son was an alcoholic, and because she could not work in the closed office space at the casino. In response, Dr. Striegel prescribed medication for DiGrazia's anxiety and depression. During her interview with Dr. Maggio in 1996, however, DiGrazia stated that she was not depressed, although she admitted that she was anxious because of her alcoholic son. Based on these observations, Dr. Maggio found that DiGrazia suffered from (1) adjustment disorder, with mixed emotions of anxiety and depression, but that this disorder had resolved, (2) personality disorder, which preexisted her employment at Grand Casino, and (3) post traumatic headache syndrome, which resulted from her injury, but had resolved. Dr. Maggio did not believe that DiGrazia suffered from post-traumatic *Page 1236 stress syndrome, because, in Dr. Maggio's opinion, DiGrazia did not experience a life-threatening event. Dr. Maggio was of the opinion that DiGrazia had the ability from a psychiatric standpoint to return to her original job with no modifications. However, he also noted that DiGrazia had a strong personal desire not to return to work.

¶ 7. DiGrazia filed her petition to controvert on October 17, 1997, claiming that she was permanently and totally disabled. After a hearing on the matter, the administrative law judge issued an opinion on August 15, 2001, and found that DiGrazia: (1) did not sustain permanent disability related to her head injury; (2) failed to show that her psychiatric condition was causally related to her head injury; and (3) failed to show a reasonable effort to find employment pursuant to section 71-3-3(I) of the Mississippi Code. On appeal, the Commission issued an order affirming the opinion of the administrative judge. DiGrazia then appealed to the Circuit Court of Harrison County, which issued an opinion affirming the Commission.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
914 So. 2d 1232, 2005 WL 3046847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/digrazia-v-park-place-entertainment-missctapp-2005.