Duke v. Carolina Crane Corporation

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedJuly 15, 1998
DocketI.C. NO. 607206
StatusPublished

This text of Duke v. Carolina Crane Corporation (Duke v. Carolina Crane Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duke v. Carolina Crane Corporation, (N.C. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinions

Upon review of all the competent evidence of record with reference to the errors assigned, and finding no good ground to reconsider the evidence, receive further evidence, or to rehear the parties or their representatives, the Full Commission AFFIRMS and ADOPTS the Opinion and Award of the Deputy Commissioner with minor modifications as follows:

The Full Commission finds as facts and concludes as matter of law the following which were entered into by the parties in a Pre-Trial Agreement prior to hearing before the deputy commissioner as

STIPULATIONS
1. Employee is Norman Dale Duke.

2. Employer is Carolina Crane Corp.

3. The employer is self-insured and the servicing agent is Key Risk Management Services.

4. Defendant-Employer regularly employs three or more employees and is bound by the North Carolina Workers' Compensation Act. The employer-employee relationship existed between the employer and the employee on the 27th day of September 1995, the alleged day of the injury.

5. The parties agree that the average weekly wage was $797.14 on the alleged date of injury and this sum yields a compensation rate of $478.00 on September 27, 1995.

6. The parties agree that employee sustained an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment with the employer on September 27, 1995.

7. The issues to be heard are:

Employee contends:

(a) Chiropractic Care

(b) Second opinion with Dr. Dimmig

(c) Change of medical care to Dr. Dimmig

(d) The issue of Temporary Total Disability has been reserved for later hearing.

Employer contends the only issue to be heard is whether employee is entitled to medical compensation for chiropractic care subsequent to February 18, 1996.

8. The parties stipulate that the following documents a-c are admitted into evidence, as to (d) and (e) plaintiff admits he was provided copies of these on November 19, 1996, but objects because he cannot cross examine the maker of the records and those who provided input.

(a) Medical Records from Dr. Nelson (10 pages)

(b) Medical Records from Dr. Williams (18 pages)

(c) Medical Records from Dr. Dimmig (13 pages)

(d) Utilization review procedures of Berkeley Care Network (Plaintiff objects)

(e) Documents from Berkeley Care Network concerning utilization review and peer review, obtained from Dr. Eugene Lewis, D.C. (Plaintiff objects).

***********
Based upon the competent evidence of record herein, the Full Commission adopts the Findings of Fact of the deputy commissioner with minor modifications and finds as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. At the time of the hearing before the deputy commissioner, plaintiff was 40 years old and certified as a welder. He did not have an antecedent history of significant low back problems prior to the September 27, 1995 date in question.

2. In approximately January of 1995 plaintiff became employed by defendant-employer as a working foreman, whose duties included both welding and rigging work and involved him working at different work sites.

3. Because defendant-employer was then engaged in a large amount of demolition work, plaintiff's job not only involved lifting sixty-five to seventy percent of the time, but heavy lifting of unlimited weight, which he can no longer do because of the work-related low back injury on September 27, 1995. The welding work that plaintiff also did as part of his working foreman's job, however, did not involve the same type of heavy lifting.

4. In the process of lifting an oxygen cylinder at a job that defendant-employer was doing in Raleigh on September 27, 1995 plaintiff sustained the admittedly compensable low back injury that was subject of defendant-employer's Form 60 Employer's Admission of Employee's Right to Compensation benefits.

5. Upon notifying his supervisor of the involved back injury plaintiff was directed to see a physician and returned home to Roxboro where he came under the care of Dr. Dale Williams, a chiropractor, on September 28, 1995.

6. Because defendant-employer did not direct him to a particular physician, plaintiff was free to select his own and defendant-employer was obligated to bear the costs of the same treatment so long as it was reasonably designed to tend to effect a cure of, provide needed relief from and/or lessen any period of disability associated with plaintiff's low back injury. The chiropractic treatment plaintiff received did provide temporary relief of plaintiff's symptoms.

7. Defendant-employer initially authorized Chiropractor Williams' treatment, but subsequently referred plaintiff to a medical doctor, Dr. Michael Wilkerson, and he provided a conservative course of treatment, including physical therapy, which did not significantly improve plaintiff's condition.

8. Ultimately defendant-employer referred plaintiff to an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. J. Leonard Nelson of Raleigh Orthopedic Clinic, who initially saw him on December 12, 1995 and continued a conservative course of treatment, including additional medication and an exercise program. Because plaintiff was continuing to experience incapacitating pain when he returned to Dr. Nelson for re-evaluation on January 3, 1996, Dr. Nelson not only scheduled a diagnostic MRI, but took him out of work altogether to see if that would improve his symptoms, which it did not.

9. Despite his incapacitating low back pain, which was aggravated by the heavy lifting required by his regular working foreman's job, plaintiff was able to continue regularly working for defendant-employer until Dr. Nelson took him out of work on January 3, 1995. He thereafter began receiving benefits under defendant-employer's Form 60 Employer's Admission of Employee's Right to Compensation.

10. Upon returning to Dr. Nelson on January 17, 1995 after undergoing the diagnostic MRI, Dr. Nelson released plaintiff to return to his regular job without restriction and did not anticipate he would retain any permanent partial disability from the involved back injury. At the time he attempted to return to his regular working foreman's job on January 18, 1996, however, plaintiff was continuing to experience incapacitating low back pain from his September 27, 1995 back injury and had not reached maximum medical improvement and/or the end of the healing period from the same injury.

11. He was initially assigned to a welding job at Raleigh-Durham Airport, which did not involve the type of heavy lifting that he had been doing sixty-five to seventy percent of the time prior to his injury and did not aggravate his back pain as much. After a week there, however, plaintiff was reassigned to a job at Duke Hospital remodeling a room that involved lifting and carrying a lot of heavy items out of a small door. The heavy lifting significantly aggravated plaintiff's existing low back pain.

12. On the last date, plaintiff worked for defendant-employer, March 8, 1996, he was assigned to a job at a printing business in Raleigh moving printing presses weighing seven to eight thousand pounds a piece. Jacks had to be used to raise the printing presses and then timber was placed under the presses to move them. Plaintiff was required to lift jacks and timbers weighing fifty to sixty pounds over a ten-to-twelve hour period aggravating his existing back pain. Although he was scheduled to return to work there on Saturday, plaintiff's back pain was so severe that he could not get out of bed the next day and return to work.

13. Because he had been released from Dr.

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Hilliard v. Apex Cabinet Co.
290 S.E.2d 682 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1982)
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Ashley v. Rent-A-Car Company
155 S.E.2d 755 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
Duke v. Carolina Crane Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duke-v-carolina-crane-corporation-ncworkcompcom-1998.