Felipe M. Espindola v. Peter Pan Seafoods, Inc. and Seabright Insurance Company

486 P.3d 1116
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 2021
DocketS17683
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 486 P.3d 1116 (Felipe M. Espindola v. Peter Pan Seafoods, Inc. and Seabright Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Felipe M. Espindola v. Peter Pan Seafoods, Inc. and Seabright Insurance Company, 486 P.3d 1116 (Ala. 2021).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.us.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

FELIPE M. ESPINDOLA, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-17683 Appellant, ) ) Alaska Workers’ Compensation v. ) Appeals Commission No. 17-019 ) PETER PAN SEAFOODS, INC. and ) OPINION SEABRIGHT INSURANCE ) COMPANY, ) No. 7529 – May 14, 2021 ) Appellees. ) )

Appeal from the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Appeals Commission.

Appearances: Felipe M. Espindola, pro se, Grandview, Washington, Appellant. Michelle M. Meshke, Meshke Paddock & Budzinski, Anchorage, for Appellees.

Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Carney, and Borghesan, Justices.

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION A cannery worker reported two injuries, one to his back and one to his shoulder, suffered at different times but while working for the same employer. The employer paid some medical benefits for both injuries but eventually controverted its obligation to provide further care. The Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board denied the worker’s claim for more medical benefits, and the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Appeals Commission affirmed the Board’s decision. The worker appeals, representing himself. We conclude that the Commission properly affirmed the Board’s decision as to the back injury but that the Board’s findings as to the shoulder injury lack adequate support in the record. We therefore reverse the Commission’s decision in part and remand for further proceedings. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS Felipe Espindola lives in Washington and has worked seasonally in Alaska in the seafood industry for a number of years, including work for Peter Pan Seafoods from 2002 until 2013. He usually worked from January to April in King Cove, then from June to September in Dillingham; other times of year he worked picking fruit in Washington. Espindola is not a fluent English speaker and had a translator at the Board hearing, his deposition, and some medical appointments. Espindola first reported an injury to his back in April 2009 when he was working for Peter Pan in King Cove spreading cod bellies, but he did not miss any work at that time. He saw a doctor after he returned to Washington, about three weeks after the injury, and the doctor diagnosed a lumbar strain and told him to take two weeks off. Espindola returned to the doctor in May and August 2009. In August of that year he had an MRI, which showed degenerative changes in the lumbar spine. In October he began a course of physical therapy which evidently improved his function, and in early 2010 he came back to Alaska for work. Espindola again sought medical attention for his back in Washington in April 2010, and he was diagnosed with degenerative disc disease. He completed another course of physical therapy that spring and summer and had a series of three epidural steroid injections in June and July. The injections provided minimal pain relief, but his

-2- 7529 healthcare provider decided in November 2010 that he was medically stable and could return to work. Espindola’s second reported injury related to shoulder pain, which began in August 2012 while he was working for Peter Pan in Dillingham trimming salmon fillets. He usually worked on one side of the conveyor belt but one day was assigned to the other; he explained at his deposition that this meant he had to cut fish to the left instead of to the right as he usually did. Further information about the injury is not entirely consistent. According to contemporaneous medical records, Espindola began to feel pain in his arm and shoulder as he worked; it “started in his little finger . . . like pins and needles, and gradually it [went] all the way up to his neck.” The report of injury describes pain occurring “after 8 hours of repetitive movement . . . as the movement to remove bones was different.” But at his deposition Espindola testified that at some point he “felt a click” in his right shoulder “[a]nd then with the movement, it got numb.” Espindola went to the walk-in clinic in Dillingham and saw a doctor, who diagnosed nerve impingement in his neck from overuse and instructed him to wear a sling for three days. Back in Washington in September, Espindola consulted with a physician assistant who wrote a note for a few weeks of modified duty and referred him to physical therapy. The physical therapy helped, though he still had “mild residual symptoms.” He reported “occasional weakness” in his right hand, and the doctor observed decreased grip strength, so the doctor referred him for a shoulder MRI. In November Espindola reported that his shoulder pain kept him from his usual work picking apples. He nonetheless returned to Alaska for seasonal cannery work in early 2013.

-3- 7529 An MRI of Espindola’s shoulder in August 2013 showed arthritic changes, tears in tendons that are part of the rotator cuff,1 and a labral2 cyst, which a doctor later said could mean a labral tear. Espindola was given a steroid injection in the shoulder but had only short-lived pain relief. He received care for his lower back pain at this time as well. Peter Pan sent Espindola to an employer’s medical evaluation (EME) with Dr. Paul Reiss, an orthopedic surgeon, in September 2013. Dr. Reiss diagnosed degenerative disc disease in the lumbar spine and degenerative arthritis in the right shoulder. Dr. Reiss did not think the work injuries had permanently aggravated either condition, and in his opinion both arthritic processes predated the work injuries. Dr. Reiss acknowledged that Espindola suffered a work-related back injury in 2009, but he believed that injury was no longer the substantial cause of the back condition. In Dr. Reiss’s opinion, Espindola was medically stable with respect to the work-related injuries, and they required no further medical care. Peter Pan controverted all benefits after receiving this report. Espindola’s shoulder pain increased for no reason he could identify, leading him to again seek medical care in April 2014. He informed a physician assistant that the

1 The MRI showed problems with the subscapularis, the supraspinatus tendon, and the infraspinatus tendon. The rotator cuff of the shoulder is defined as “anterior, superior, and posterior aspects of the capsule of the shoulder joint reinforced by the tendons of insertion of the supraspinatus, infraspinatus, teres minor, and subscapularis (SITS) muscles.” Rotator cuff of shoulder, STEDMAN’S MEDICAL DICTIONARY, Westlaw (database updated Nov. 2014). 2 A labrum is “[a] fibrocartilaginous lip around the margin of the concave portion of some joints.” Labrum, id. The shoulder joint is also known as the glenohumeral joint. Glenohumeral joint, id. The “glenoid labrum of scapula” is “a ring of fibrocartilage attached to the margin of the glenoid cavity of the scapula to increase its depth.” Glenoid labrum of scapula, id.

-4- 7529 pain interfered with his sleep and got worse when he tried to work picking apples and grapes. The physician assistant did not impose any formal work restrictions because “the claim is not open and accepted at this time,” but he nonetheless recommended that Espindola look for work that did not require him to raise his arm above shoulder level. Imaging in July 2014 was similar to the 2013 MRI, with the exception of a change related to the infraspinatus. Espindola filed a written workers’ compensation claim in the spring of 2014, seeking medical and transportation costs as well as a finding that Peter Pan’s controversion of his claim was unfair and frivolous. Peter Pan again controverted the claim. Espindola continued to get medical care throughout 2014 for both his shoulder and his back.

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