Du Quoin Home Lumber v. Illinois Workers Compensation Comm'n

2019 IL App (5th) 180541WC
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 5, 2019
Docket5-18-0541WC
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2019 IL App (5th) 180541WC (Du Quoin Home Lumber v. Illinois Workers Compensation Comm'n) 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
Du Quoin Home Lumber v. Illinois Workers Compensation Comm'n, 2019 IL App (5th) 180541WC (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

2019 IL App (5th) 180541WC-U

Order filed December 5, 2019

______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION DIVISION

______________________________________________________________________________

DU QUOIN HOME LUMBER, ) Appeal from the Appellant, ) Circuit Court of v. ) Perry County ILLINOIS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION ) No. 18MR74 COMMISSION et al. (Paul Fred, Appellee). ) ) Honorable ) Christopher T. Kolker, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Holdridge and Justices Hoffman, Hudson, and Barberis concurred in the judgment.

ORDER ¶1 Held: (1) By omitting the issue from both its petition for review and statement of exceptions that it filed with the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission (Commission), respondent has forfeited its statute of limitations defense.

(2) By finding that petitioner sustained a work-related injury on December 23, 2010, and that his current condition of ill-being was causally related to the accident, the Commission did not make findings that were against the manifest weight of the evidence. (3) By finding that petitioner reached maximum medical improvement on June 22, 2012, instead of April 6, 2015, the Commission made a finding that was against the manifest weight of the evidence.

¶2 The circuit court of Perry County confirmed a decision by the Illinois Workers’

Compensation Commission (Commission) to award workers’ compensation benefits to petitioner,

Paul Fred, for a back injury. Respondent, Du Quoin Home Lumber, appeals. Petitioner cross-

appeals the Commission’s award of 75 2/7 weeks of temporary total disability benefits, contending

he is entitled to 220 4/7 weeks of such benefits.

¶3 Except for the date of maximum medical improvement the Commission used to

determine the period of temporary total disability, we conclude that the Commission’s decision is

not against the manifest weight of the evidence. Therefore, we affirm in part and reverse in part

the circuit court’s judgment confirming the Commission’s decision, and we remand this case to

the Commission with directions to award 220 4/7 weeks, instead of 75 2/7 weeks, of temporary

total disability benefits.

¶4 I. BACKGROUND

¶5 A. The Arbitration Hearing

¶6 1. The Voluntary Dismissal of Four of the Eight Claims

¶7 The arbitration hearing was held on June 13, 2017, and at the beginning of the

hearing, petitioner voluntarily dismissed case Nos. 12-WC-33621, 12-WC-33656, 13-WC-

10222, and 13-WC-10928. That left four remaining claims to be arbitrated: case Nos. 12-WC-

26843, 13-WC-10931, 12-WC-26857, and 13-WC-10760.

¶8 2. The Amendment of Accident Dates

¶9 Also at the beginning of the arbitration hearing, the arbitrator allowed petitioner

to amend the accident dates in three of those four remaining claims. In case No. 12-WC-26843,

-2- the accident date was amended to December 3, 2010. In case No. 12-WC-26857, the accident

date was amended to February 23, 2007. In case No. 13-WC-10931 (the case under consideration

in this appeal), the accident date was amended to December 23, 2010. Respondent objected to

the amendments, arguing there was no relation back.

¶ 10 3. A Preliminary Discussion of the “Request for Hearing”

¶ 11 Respondent completed the “Request for Hearing” form (see 50 Ill. Adm. Code

§ 9030.40 (2016)) as follows: “Petitioner claims to be entitled to TTD [temporary total

disability)] period(s): 1-13-11 to 4.6-15, representing 220 4/7 weeks. Respondent agrees _____

disputes --- X and claims _____________.”

¶ 12 At the beginning of the arbitration hearing, the arbitrator interpreted the “Request

for Hearing” as putting into dispute only petitioner’s entitlement to temporary total disability

benefits, not the period of such benefits if he were entitled to them:

“ARBITRATOR LINDSAY: ***

***

Petitioner is claiming temporary total disability benefits from January 13,

2011, to April 6, 2015, a period of 220 4/7th weeks. Respondent does not dispute

the dates of temporary total disability but does dispute liability for the benefits.

There is no claim for temporary partial disability or maintenance. There

are no credits to be provided to Respondent in the event of an award of temporary

total disability. And it is my understanding that there are identical claims of TTD

being made in two of these cases, but Petitioner is not seeking a double recovery,

correct?

[PETITIONER’S ATTORNEY]: That is correct, [J]udge.

-3- ARBITRATOR LINDSAY: Thank you. The nature and extent of

Petitioner’s injury is in dispute.

So[,] in summary, the issues in dispute in [case No.] 13[-]WC[-]10931 are

accident, notice, causal connection, medical bills, temporary total disability, and

nature and extent. Is that correct?

[PETITIONER’S ATTORNEY]: Yes, Your Honor.

[RESPONDENT’S ATTORNEY]: Yes, Your Honor.” (Emphases added.)

¶ 13 4. The Medical Records Presented in the Arbitration Hearing

¶ 14 a. Du Quoin Chiropractic Center

¶ 15 Petitioner’s medical records dated from 2002, and the first eight or so years of

records came from Du Quoin Chiropractic Center, in Du Quoin, Illinois, where petitioner was

treated by a chiropractor, Robert Eaton. Some of his appointments with Eaton were for lower

back pain, which, judging from the records, waxed and waned from 2002 to 2010.

¶ 16 It also appears from Eaton’s records that, frequently, the pain originated from, or

was associated with, heavy lifting—something petitioner routinely did in his work for

respondent. On March 28, 2007, for instance, petitioner told Eaton that the soreness in his back

began the day before, after he moved some shingles. On July 16, 2007, petitioner reported that

his lower back had been hurting after he did some lifting and that the pain was radiating down

both legs. On September 23, 2008, he described left lower back pain that began about three

weeks earlier, after he moved some lumber at work. The pain dissipated in two or three days,

after the application of ice, but the pain returned soon afterward, this time on the right side and

radiating down the front of the leg, to the knee.

-4- ¶ 17 Eaton treated this right-sided pain with approximately six chiropractic

adjustments, bringing petitioner to 90% improvement.

¶ 18 On March 8, 2010, petitioner returned to Eaton with severe pain in his lower back

as well as left sacroiliac joint pain, this time without any radiation of the pain. Eaton wrote that

petitioner had been “steadily *** getting worse for about [three] weeks” but that there had been

“no specific injury to cause it.”

¶ 19 b. Wittenauer Chiropractic

¶ 20 Three or four times, from March 2010 to January 2011, petitioner went to

Wittenauer Chiropractic, in Pinckneyville, Illinois. The first time he went there, on March 30,

2010, he described pain in his neck and left sacroiliac and left lower back pain, all of which

began on February 28, 2010. When the chiropractor, James A. Wittenauer, asked him what made

the pain worse, he answered that “ ‘it [was] when he ben[t] and lift[ed] too much.’ ”

¶ 21 On January 13, 2011, petitioner returned to Wittenauer and reported that since

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2019 IL App (5th) 180541WC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/du-quoin-home-lumber-v-illinois-workers-compensation-commn-illappct-2019.