Durbin v. Brown

178 So. 3d 789, 2013 WL 1406233, 2013 Miss. App. LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedApril 9, 2013
DocketNo. 2012-WC-00232-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 178 So. 3d 789 (Durbin v. Brown) 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
Durbin v. Brown, 178 So. 3d 789, 2013 WL 1406233, 2013 Miss. App. LEXIS 166 (Mich. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

CARLTON, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. In September 2001, Byron L. Brown suffered injuries during his employment at Marshal Durbin.1 Brown‘ returriéd to work and coiitinued to work for Marshal Durbin until his retirement in 2008. Significantly, Brown retired without seeking alternative positions from Marshal Durbin. Brown' thereafter filed a claim to receive disability compensation, alleging that the worsening of his injuries from 2001 left him unable to continue working. The administrative judge (AJ) determined Brown to be permanently and totally disabled and ordered Marshal Durbin to pay Brown disability benefits for 460 weeks based on his average weekly wage of $629.51. Marshal Durbin appealed to the Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Commission (Commission), which reversed the findings of the AJ.. The Commission found that Brown sustained a fifty percent loss of wage-earning capacity and ordered that Marshal Durbin should pay Brown temporary total disability benefits of $806.67 per week for the period of September 27,2001, until October 10, 2002, and permanent, disability benefits at the rate of $209.85 per week for 450 weeks. Marshal Durbin appealed to the Wayne County Circuit Court, which affirmed the judgment of the Commission. This appeal followed.

¶ 2. Employing our limited standard of review, we áre unable to say that the Commission erred as a matter of law or acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner. Therefore, we affirm.'

[792]*792FACTS

¶ 3. On September 27, 2001, Brown received-injuries while working as a diesel mechanic for Marshal Durbin in Waynes-boro, Mississippi. Brown testified that he was lying on his side under a suspended eighteen-wheeler truck when the hook broke, causing the truck to fall and crush his pelvis. Brown suffered fractures to his hip, separation of his sacroilliac joint, and a urethral tear. Brown also claimed that as ,a result of his urethral tear, he suffered' stress incontinence and leakage, as well as pain in his hips and back. He also claimed that he has suffered from erectile dysfunction since the accident.

¶ 41 ’ After reaching maximum medical improvement, Brown returned to work' on October 10, 2002. Brown testified that he worked the night shift, from 4:00 p.m. until 11:00 p.m. Brown stated that his job responsibilities entailed performing brake jobs, occasionally working on transmissions, working On feed trucks, paperwork, cleaning the shop, and other mechanic duties. ’ Brown further stated that his employment duties required him to stand eight percént of the time and to walk about ten percent of the time. Brown’s responsibilities also required him to lift, carry, or push up to fifty pounds. Brown testified that he took the medication Lor-tab three times each day, as well as muscle relaxers. Brown also testified that he took two sleeping pills before going to sleep.

¶ 5. In January 2008, nearly six years after.his injury, Brown notified his supervisor that he intended to retire at the age of sixty-five. Brown turned sixty-five on September 26, 2008. Brown’s last day of work was October 11, 2008. On May 20, 2009, Brown filed a petition to controvert, alleging that he was permanently disabled due to his 2001 workplace injury. Brown alleged that he retired because the effects of his workplace injury no longer made it possible for him to perform his job duties.

¶ 6. In its answer to Brown’s petition, Marshal Durbin claimed that Brown’s decision to retire was voluntary, and at no point did Brown inform Marshal Durbin that his decision to retire was based upon the effects of his workplace injury. Marshal Durbin further contended that at no point during the six years that Brown worked after his injury did Brown ever, complain -of difficulty in performing his duties.

¶7. Prior to a June 2, 2010 hearing before the AJ, Brown submitted a'list of employers that he had contacted seeking available employment. At the hearing, the AJ heard testimony from Brown, David' Singley, Jimmy Singleton, Dr. Thomas Sturdavant, and Dr. David Collipp. The AJ also ■ examined Brown’s hospital records.

¶ 8. Brown testified that after his injuries and once he returned to work, he recéived a handicap sticker for his vehicle and began parking in a handicap parking space in the Marshal Durbin’s parking lot. Brown alleged that after “a while,” Marshal Durbin informed Brown that he would be terminated if he continued to park in the handicap parking space. Brown admitted that Marshal Durbin designated him a different handicap space to park his vehicle, which Brown estimated to be approximately 35 yards away from his work area. Brown testified that he failed to complain to Marshal Durbin about his pain because he feared termination. He testified that despite his medical restrictions due to his injury, his responsibilities at work remained unchanged following the accident. However, Brown admitted that as a result of his injury, Marshal Durbin no longer required him to climb on food trucks or push the transmissions of the trucks with his feet. Brown stated that [793]*793Marshal Durbin provided him with a wheel dolly to assist him with various physical aspects of his job, which Brown testified “made the work a whole lot easier.”

¶ 9. Singley, the Marshal Durbin’s shop supervisor, testified that Brown never complained to him of any pain. Singley also refuted Brown’s statement that Brown was threatened with termination if he was unable to complete a task. Singleton, Brown’s supervisor, also testified that Brown never complained of suffering from any pain.

¶ 10. Dr. Sturdavant, a physical-medicine, rehabilitation, and pain-management physician, testified by deposition. Dr. Sturdavant began treating Brown in October 2001, and he testified that if Brown’s wife had not been diligent in caring for Brown, then Brown would have required home health care. Dr. Sturdavant testified that Brown continued to show signs of osteoarthritis and chronic pain through the course of treatment. Dr. Sturdavant testified with a reasonable degree of medical probability that the arthritis was related to Brown’s injury. Dr. Sturdavant admitted on cross-examination that Brown’s physical medical impairment rating of 27% had npt been updated since Dr. Sturdavant assigned the rating on October 10, 2002,

¶ 11. Dr. Collipp, board certified in physical medicine and rehabilitation, also testified by deposition. Dr. Collipp performed an “Employer Medical Evaluation” on Brown on March 8, 2010. Dr. Collipp testified that his findings were consistent with Dr. Sturdavant’s findings. Dr. Col-lipp assigned Brown a 12% partial impairment medical rating and a 3% rating for his urethral injury, totaling. 15% whole body impairment. Dr. Collipp expressed that he found no medical reason for Brown to discontinue his employment.

¶ 12. After the hearing, the AJ found that “[although [Brown] left [Marshal Dur-bin] because of his increased pain, [he] did not tell anyone about the pain or why he was retiring. Additionally, he never felt an explanation was nécessary.” The AJ ultimately found that Brown’s condition gradually worsened until it manifested in permanent and total disability status. The AJ ordered that Brown should be paid for 450 weeks based on his average weekly wage of $629.51.

¶ 13. Marshal Durbin appealed to the Commission. On May 18, 2011, the Commission reversed the order of the AJ.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 3d 789, 2013 WL 1406233, 2013 Miss. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durbin-v-brown-missctapp-2013.