Eads v. Guideone Mutual Insurance Co.

197 S.W.3d 737, 2006 Tenn. LEXIS 599
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 S.W.3d 737 (Eads v. Guideone Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eads v. Guideone Mutual Insurance Co., 197 S.W.3d 737, 2006 Tenn. LEXIS 599 (Tenn. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

E. RILEY ANDERSON, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which WILLIAM M. BARKER, C.J., and ADOLPHO A. BIRCH, JR., JANICE M. HOLDER, and CORNELIA A. CLARK, JJ., joined.

We granted review in this workers’ compensation case to determine whether the trial court erred in awarding permanent total disability following an injury to the employee’s leg where the employee had a pre-existing diabetes-related disability to the same leg. Having considered the record and applicable authority, we affirm the decision of the trial court awarding permanent total disability.

Background

The facts as developed at trial are as follows. Plaintiff Peggy Eads (“Eads”) was fifty-one years old at the time of trial. She went to work for the Smoky Mountain Children’s Home in Sevierville, Tennessee in 1993. Defendant GuideOne Mutual Insurance Company (“GuideOne”) was the workers’ compensation carrier for the children’s home at the time of the injury at issue in this case.

In August of 2003, Eads was working as an assistant cook at the children’s home. Her duties included preparing food for the salad bar, making desserts, and assisting with the evening meal. On August 2, 2003, Eads was carrying a tray of food in the course and scope of her employment and tripped, falling to the floor. She sustained a comminuted fracture to her right femur and injured her right knee.

On August 5, 2003, Eads underwent surgery to repair her right femur. Because the fall had shattered her femur, the surgeon implanted a plate and screws to sta[739]*739bilize her leg. Eads was discharged on August 12, 2003, but was re-admitted on August 23 with pain and swelling. She was discharged a second time on August 29, 2003, and by October 2003 the fracture had healed.

During the 1990s, Eads had been diagnosed with diabetes. She stated that she attempted for many years to control the diabetes without medical assistance. However, in August 2001, she sought treatment for her diabetes. She began taking medicine and, among other things, was prescribed an ankle-foot orthosis (“AFO”) to stabilize a Charcot joint resulting from the diabetes in her right ankle. The AFO extended from below the right knee to the tip of Eads’ toes and was designed to immobilize her ankle while allowing her to walk about. Eads was wearing the AFO at the time of her fall and stated that, because it was rigid, it prevented her from catching herself when she fell.

Eads testified that since the fall she experiences back pain, as well as pain in her hip, buttocks, and thigh, whenever she sits for longer than an hour. She must use a walker and requires a wheelchair if she must walk longer than ten or fifteen minutes. She testified that she walks with a limp because her right leg is now shorter than her left leg. She also testified that she is unable to drive because of the loss of sensation in her right leg.

Eads had worked at the children’s home for approximately ten years at the time of her accident. Prior to that, she said that she had worked in housekeeping at a variety of motels, had worked as a dental assistant, and, over twenty years earlier, had worked in medical billing. Eads had completed the ninth grade and received a G.E.D. in the 1970s. She has not worked since the accident. She also testified that she is now legally blind as a result of her diabetes.

Dr. Steven Smith, an orthopedic surgeon, testified by deposition. Dr. Smith first saw Eads on January 30, 2003, for treatment of her Charcot joint. Dr. Smith explained that a Charcot joint is a “bone and joint destruction and a deformity that is usually because of a neuropathic condition, which is most commonly diabetes.” Dr. Smith said that he diagnosed Eads with a Charcot joint in her right ankle in January 2003. He prescribed a walking cast to immobilize Eads’ ankle. The cast extended from just below Eads’ knee to the tip of her toes. Eads wore the cast until May 2003, when Dr. Smith switched her to the AFO. Like the walking cast, the AFO was designed to keep her ankle immobile and was a molded brace fitted to Eads’ leg from just below her knee to the tip of her toes.

Following Eads’ fall, Dr. Smith performed surgery to repair the comminuted fracture to Eads’ right femur. Dr. Smith explained that the femur was “broken in pieces” above Eads’ right knee joint and required a plate and screws to stabilize the leg. Dr. Smith stated that Eads’ right leg is now approximately one-quarter inch shorter than her left leg as a result of the surgery. She also has limited knee motion. Based on the fracture alone, Dr. Smith assigned a 10% impairment to the lower extremity. However Dr. Smith said that based on the nature of the fracture and the effects of it, including the loss of flexion in Eads’ knee, he assigned a 33% impairment to the lower extremity as a result of the fall, or 13% to the body as a whole, using the AMA Guides.

Dr. Vincent Tolley, Eads’ family physician, also testified by deposition. Dr. Tol-ley testified that he began treating Eads in August 2001. At the time Dr. Tolley began treating Eads, she had uncontrolled diabetes and told him that she had had diabetes for ten years. Dr. Tolley stated [740]*740that in August 2001 Eads, who is five-foot-one, weighed 138 pounds. By October 2001, Eads weighed 158 pounds. In December of 2002 she weighed 190 pounds. Dr. Tolley referred Eads to Dr. Law, an endocrinologist, for help controlling her diabetes.

Dr. William M. Law, Jr. testified by deposition that he specializes in endocrinology and metabolism. He first saw Eads on September 16, 2003, for treatment of her diabetes. He said that she was referred to him because poor control of her diabetes was impeding her recovery from the surgery on her femur. He testified that her diabetes affected the healing of her fracture. He also testified that the fracture affected her diabetes, because trauma tends to increase the body’s resistance to insulin. He said that the effect would only be temporary, however.

Finally, Dr. William E. Kennedy, an orthopedic surgeon, testified by deposition that he performed an Independent Medical Examination on Eads on May 3, 2004. Dr. Kennedy stated that Eads had mechanical low back syndrome, or painful recurrent strain to her lower back, as a result of the fracture she sustained in the fall. He also noted that she had diabetic arthropathy of the right midfoot due to her diabetes “which, of course, was clearly present and was clearly advanced and under treatment” at the time of Eads’ fall. Dr. Kennedy opined that Eads had sustained a 40% permanent partial disability to the body as a whole as a result of her fall. He apportioned the disability to the body as a whole rather than just to the leg based on gait derangement and back pain. Dr. Kennedy also assigned a 15% permanent partial impairment to the right lower extremity as a result of the pre-existing Charcot joint. However, he testified that the 40% impairment rating was solely as a result of the fall, stating that Eads “would not be classified for permanent physical impairment at a lesser level than the forty percent, even if she did not have the diabetes or if she did not have the obesity.” At the time Dr. Kennedy examined her, Eads weighed 225 pounds.

The trial court found that Eads was permanently and totally disabled considering her age, education, vocational history, and local job opportunities as a result of the fall and the fractured femur.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.W.3d 737, 2006 Tenn. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eads-v-guideone-mutual-insurance-co-tenn-2006.