Emco and Old Republic Insurance Company v. Avdulah Sehic

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 15, 2014
Docket14-0336
StatusPublished

This text of Emco and Old Republic Insurance Company v. Avdulah Sehic (Emco and Old Republic Insurance Company v. Avdulah Sehic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Emco and Old Republic Insurance Company v. Avdulah Sehic, (iowactapp 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-0336 Filed October 15, 2014

EMCO and OLD REPUBLIC INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

AVDULAH SEHIC, Defendant-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Michael D. Huppert,

Judge.

EMCO appeals from the district court’s order affirming the Iowa Workers’

Compensation Commissioner’s award of thirty-five percent industrial disability to

Avdulah Sehic. AFFIRMED.

Timothy W. Wegman and Joseph M. Barron of Peddicord, Wharton,

Spencer, Hook, Barron & Wegman, L.L.P., West Des Moines, for appellants.

Adnan Mahmutagic of Beecher, Field, Walker, Morris, Hoffman

& Johnson, P.C., Waterloo, for appellee.

Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vogel and Bower, JJ. 2

VOGEL, J.

EMCO appeals from the district court’s order affirming the Iowa Workers’

Compensation Commissioner’s award of thirty-five percent industrial disability to

Avdulah Sehic, claiming the award is not supported by substantial evidence.

Because we conclude there is some evidence in the record showing Sehic

sustained a work injury that caused a disability, we affirm the decision of the

district court.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Sehic was born in Bosnia and came to the United States in 1999. He was

sixty-three at the time of the hearing, and had worked at EMCO making door and

window frames since June 7, 1999. He did not complete any education in the

United States and speaks only limited English. On August 17, 2010, Sehic

sustained an injury to his neck and lower back after falling while carrying a door

frame from one machine to another. He stated he did not remember how he fell

or what happened but that he did lose consciousness.

The record contains several reports from a number of different examining

and treating doctors regarding Sehic’s injury and subsequent disability. On

August 18, 2010, Sehic was examined by Anandeep Kumar, M.D., whose report

stated Sehic had lower back pain. The second report, dated August 24, noted

Sehic also reported pain in his mid-back and cervical spine, and he had shooting

pain radiating upwards that made him dizzy, as well as numbness and tingling in

both upper and lower extremities. Dr. Kumar’s report also stated: “In addition to

physical impairments, [Sehic] does demonstrate psychological barriers to

recovery including anxiety and depression, and these are provocative of 3

subjective pain perceptions. He may benefit from ongoing counseling sessions.”

On several occasions Sehic informed Dr. Kumar he wanted to be taken off work

completely, to take advantage of earned sick days. In his subsequent

examinations, Dr. Kumar noted Sehic was not always compliant with taking his

medications or consistently attending physical therapy.

On October 27, 2010, Sehic was examined by M.S. Iqbal, M.D., with the

aid of an interpreter. Dr. Iqbal diagnosed Sehic with myofascial pain syndrome

lumbar, thoracic and cervical spine; lumbar radicular pain; and dizziness, etiology

unknown. He performed various trigger point injections at that time as well as on

December 16. On February 28, 2011, Dr. Iqbal reported: “I could not find any

objective evidence to support any need for permanent work restrictions or

permanent functional impairment pursuant to AMA Guidelines, 5th Edition. I do

not see any objective reason for further medical treatment for the alleged work

related injury of August 17, 2010.”

Steven Adelman, D.O., a neurologist, examined Sehic on November 1,

2010. Dr. Adelman’s report stated:

Mr. Sehic presents as a 61-year-old gentleman who suffered a work-related injury in mid August when he fell and subsequently has had low back pain, neck pain, headache, and dizziness. His neurologic examination is normal as are the MRIs of his cervical and lumbar spine. Clinically, I suspect we are dealing with musculoskeletal lumbar and cervical pain along with tension-type headaches. His vertigo is fairly nonspecific in nature. Certainly, I do not believe that he has suffered an intracranial lesion. I suspect he may have some degree of vestibular dysfunction . . . . Obviously, his symptoms are subjective in nature. I see nothing that would suggest that he will have any permanent impairment from his work-related accident. 4

David Boarini, D.O., performed an independent medical examination (IME)

on February 2, 2011, and in his report dated February 15, asserted Sehic’s:

[M]ain difficulty at the present time is back pain, although he has some neck pain. He has an extremely positive review of symptoms, which would be consistent with no possible physical finding and is strongly suggestive of psychological difficulties or symptom exaggeration. .... I reviewed the patient’s MRI scans of the entire spine. They show some minimal degenerative changes in the neck and back consistent with his age but no sign of anything unusual, significant, or traumatically related. This patient has simple myofascial pain from a rather nonspecific injury. He has signs of symptom exaggeration, as noted above. I don’t find any physical basis for the patient’s ongoing difficulties. I don’t see anything that should keep him from returning to normal activities and do not find anything upon which to base an impairment rating.

Arnold Delbridge, D.O., performed another IME on April 28, 2011, and

found no evidence of impairment regarding Sehic’s neck. His report opined:

In summary, Mr. Sehic had a fall at work. He was examined shortly thereafter by the nurse and by Dr. Kumar and was found to have specific findings related to the fall which are reasonably consistent with the history. Mr. Sehic was noted by different examiners to have limited range of motion and has continued to have limitation of motion in the cervical and lumbar spine in particular. He did not respond well to medications, trigger point injections, or physical therapy.

Dr. Delbridge further noted:

There does appear to be some effort on [Sehic’s] part to convince me that he was injured; however, he has had physical findings with a fall as he describes immediately after the injury which persist to the present time; most particularly of limited motion of the cervical and lumbar spine.

Consequently, Dr. Delbridge assigned a five percent whole-body impairment

rating and placed restrictions on lifting heavy objects from the floor, repeated

twisting of the head or body, and a lift-restriction of no more than forty pounds. 5

On August 24, 2012, Sunil Bansal, M.D., performed another IME and

found Sehic’s lumbar back and cervical neck symptoms were caused by his work

injury. In the examination Sehic reported a six out of ten on a pain scale, with the

pain increasing to seven or eight after activity or when the medication wore off.

Dr. Bansal’s report stated:

It is implausible that [Sehic] would have been able to perform the above duties on a sustained basis with his current lumbar back and cervical neck pathological state. Thus, from both a chronological and mechanistic standpoint it is clear that his back pathology is related to his work injury on 8/17/2010.

Dr. Bansal assigned Sehic a twelve-percent whole body impairment rating,

advising that Sehic not lift more than twenty pounds frequently and forty pounds

occasionally. Dr. Bansal placed Sehic at MMI as of August 24, 2012.

Scott Neff, D.O., performed another IME on October 22, 2012. He noted

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