Drake University v. Davis

769 N.W.2d 176, 2009 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 64, 2009 WL 2059758
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 17, 2009
Docket08-0639
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 769 N.W.2d 176 (Drake University v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake University v. Davis, 769 N.W.2d 176, 2009 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 64, 2009 WL 2059758 (iowa 2009).

Opinion

WIGGINS, Justice.

The workers’ compensation commissioner awarded an employee benefits for three separate injury dates. The employer and its insurance carrier sought judicial review of the agency action. The district court not only affirmed the decision of the agency, but also found the employer and its insurance carrier were not entitled to a credit for benefits paid by a group plan under Iowa Code section 85.38(2) (2005). 1 In this appeal, we find the employer and its insurance carrier were not deprived of procedural due process, substantial evidence supports the agency’s decision, the permanent total disability benefits are not subject to apportionment under the workers’ compensation statutes, the agency misapportioned the benefits due for the March 16, 2001, and July 31, 2002, injuries, and the district court should not have considered the credit for benefits issue. Therefore, we affirm in part the decision of the district court affirming the decision of the workers’ compensation commissioner. However, we reverse that part of the district court judgment dealing with the apportionment of benefits for the March 16, 2001, and the July 31, 2002, injuries. Additionally, we vacate that part of the district court judgment dealing with the credit for benefits issue because the commissioner did not consider the issue at the agency level.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

A. Employment History. Angela Davis began working at Drake University 2 *178 in the facility management area in May 1982. She worked at Drake moving up in pay scale and job title for twenty-two and one-half years until her termination on November 3, 2004. Davis started out as Facility Maintainer IV, the lowest position on the scale, doing custodial work in residence halls. Drake promoted her to Facility Maintainer III sometime in 1983. Drake promoted her again in 1985 to Facility Maintainer II in which position she trained new employees. Finally, Davis was promoted in 1990 to Facility Maintainer I, the top classification in the custodial field at Drake. Her responsibilities included answering the phone, arranging work schedules, training new employees, supervising student employees, and performing manual custodial work.

Although the university continued to promote her, it did have problems with her performance. Her employment records contained five disciplinary reports. Davis also had many run-ins with her boss, John Selin, the director of residential services throughout her time at Drake. Another supervisor claimed Davis did not respect her supervisors. Some of the complaints in Davis’s employee file dealt with her job performance, but many more dealt with her interpersonal skills. At one point, Drake demoted her from Facility Maintainer I to Facility Maintainer II for creating a hostile work environment. Drake later bumped her back up to Facility Maintainer I status.

In September 2004, Drake claimed Davis left work early without finishing her work. Drake informed Davis that any further incident would result in disciplinary action against her. Drake terminated Davis on November 3 citing inflammatory and racist comments to coworkers as well as an ongoing pattern of inappropriate behavior toward supervisors and coworkers as the justification for the termination.

B. March 16, 2001, Injury. Davis’s first injury occurred on March 16, 2001. She was shoveling snow outside a residential hall and felt a sharp pain down her back and leg. The doctors diagnosed a left L5-S1 herniated nucleus pulposus and performed a left L5-S1 diskectomy. After her recovery, the doctors gave Davis a ten percent permanent partial impairment rating and a permanent lift restriction of thirty-five pounds. Drake voluntarily paid her seventy-five weeks of permanent disability for this injury.

C. July 31, 2002, Injury. On July 31, 2002, while performing her duties vacuuming in the law school, Davis felt queasiness in her stomach and weakness in her leg. An MRI scan revealed left L5-S1 epidural fibrosis plus a small recurrent herniated nucleus pulposus. She received three epidural steroid injections for her injury. The doctor assented to Davis’s return to work with a twenty-pound lift restriction and allowed her to do only lightweight vacuuming on an occasional basis. He also gave her a two percent permanent partial impairment rating. Drake voluntarily paid her ten weeks of permanent disability for this injury.

D. September 14, 2004, Injury. Davis alleges her third injury occurred on September 14, 2004. Davis was working in the field house that day and was pulling trash across the floor when she felt queasy. She filled out an incident report of the injury. The incident report contained no statement as to the specifics of her injury, but she thought she told her supervisor how the injury occurred. The incident report stated Davis was going to *179 Concentra Medical Center, but also said her disability was ongoing and began on March 16, 2001. Davis’s supervisor filled out the incident report and Davis signed it.

At Concentra, Davis reported that her injury occurred around 8 a.m. and was from repetitive use of the vacuum and lifting more than twenty pounds of trash. Concentra referred her to her previous doctor. She reported to this doctor that the onset of pain had increased on September 14, 2004. She denied a specific injury. The doctor diagnosed her with having a herniated nucleus pulposus and spondylo-listhesis. The doctor opined the spondylo-listhesis was not work-related, but the herniated nucleus was related to her work activities. He recommended surgical intervention.

Davis decided on November 2 to proceed with surgery. Drake fired her the next day. Drake sought a second opinion before authorizing any surgery. Davis told the doctor retained by Drake about the specific incident of dragging trash in the field house and the pain she felt after that point. On November 17 the second doctor opined Davis’s current complaints related back to the original injury in March 2001. The second doctor acknowledged his opinion was based on his review of a July 2002 MRI and he did not have her recent MRI to study.

Based on this report, Drake would not authorize her surgery. Additionally, Drake informed Davis that Drake had no notice of increased back pain or the specific September 14 incident; therefore, it would be denying her claim for the surgery and any other subsequent treatment. Without Drake’s authorization, Davis had the surgery on November 22. Davis also had a permanent implantation of a dorsal column stimulator on August 15, 2005. A third physician rated Davis’s injury. He gave Davis an impairment rating of twenty-six percent for the September 14, 2004, injury, which includes a three percent impairment based on the pain from the dorsal stimulator.

Davis also saw a psychologist. The psychologist diagnosed Davis with major depression disorder and opined her depression was related to her work injury. He further opined Davis’s depression limited her ability to function in a normal society, and that she would likely require indefinite psychological care in the future.

Again, Drake referred Davis to a psychiatrist for a second opinion. He found Davis had a twenty-plus year history of interpersonal relationship problems.

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Bluebook (online)
769 N.W.2d 176, 2009 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 64, 2009 WL 2059758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-university-v-davis-iowa-2009.