FORREST, THADDEAU V. CONCRETE STRUCTURES, INC.

2025 TN WC 71
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedOctober 22, 2025
Docket2025-60-3186
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 TN WC 71 (FORREST, THADDEAU V. CONCRETE STRUCTURES, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FORREST, THADDEAU V. CONCRETE STRUCTURES, INC., 2025 TN WC 71 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

FILED Oct 22, 2025 11:35 AM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS IN THE COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT NASHVILLE

THADDEUS FORREST, ) Docket No. 2025-60-3186 Employee, ) v. ) CONCRETE STRUCTURES, INC., ) State File No. 21779-2025 Employer, ) And ) BUSINESS FIRST INS. CO., ) Carrier. ) Judge Joshua Davis Baker

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER

The Court held an expedited hearing on September 30, 2025, to consider Mr. Forrest’s requests for temporary-total disability and medical benefits stemming from a workplace accident when a plywood and metal form for erecting a concrete wall fell on his leg, fracturing his femur. He also seeks attorney’s fees from Concrete Structures for the wrongful denial of this claim. Concrete Structures denied that Mr. Forrest is entitled to any benefits due to a cancer diagnosis that reduced the strength of his femur.

For the reasons below, the Court rejects Concrete Structures defense and awards Mr. Forrest all the requested benefits except attorney’s fees.

Claim History

On April 2, 2025, several connected plywood and metal forms fell on Mr. Forrest’s head and left leg. The accident resulted in a spiral, femoral fracture. Mr. Forrest was taken to the hospital.

Medical staff there noticed a suspicious lesion on imaging and called for an orthopedic surgeon specializing in orthopedic oncology, Dr. Ginger Holt. Dr. Holt diagnosed “pathological fracture of femur due to neoplastic disease.” Two other physicians also noted that the femur fracture was likely due to cancer. The day after the accident, Dr. Holt surgically repaired Mr. Forrest’s leg.

Page 1 of 6 In her deposition, Dr. Holt testified she observed during surgery “a 4.5cm lytic lesion in the bone.” She biopsied the area and then a removed the tumor, followed by a fracture reduction and intramedullary nail fixation. The pathology report showed “a tumor called myeloma, or plasma cell neoplasm.” The tumor was within the fracture site, she said, explaining that “[o]ver time, [lytic lesions] can allow or create fractures” and can weaken the bone. She continued, “A thin bone could be at risk of fracture.”

Although the lesion contributed to the fracture, Dr. Holt maintained “getting hit by this wall . . . caused his fracture,” insisting “it was a greater than 50 percent chance that wall contributed to his fracture.” She also answered “yes” to “whether or not [the wall] caused this fracture, more than 50 percent in causing his injuries, considering all causes[.]” And when asked directly if “between the force from whatever happened at the work site and the weakened bone at that area, what was the primary cause of the fracture?,” she responded, “The force that happened at the work site.”

Dr. Holt explained that the falling wall hit him and/or caused him to brace himself “with more than regular body force” that is required for ordinary daily activities. In other words,

[A] patient who, although they have a lytic bone lesion, has no pain, [that means] the bone is handling the stress it needs to handle . . . what it does every day.” She pointed out, “[H]e wasn’t having any pain with all of his heavy labor and activity. So[,] his bone was structurally sound and strong enough to do all the things it needed to do. But [then] a force hits it[,] and it can’t.

Dr. Holt said Mr. Forrest needs chemotherapy and specialized care in medical oncology to ensure the bone heals properly. Concrete Structures did not provide a panel of oncologists or any other doctors for post-surgical care. It also did not send these recommendations to utilization review.

Instead, Concrete Structures denied Mr. Forrest’s claim the same day he was injured, but it did not complete the denial form until April 29. The Notice listed the reason for denial as “the condition is not greater than 50% related to work.” Previously, Concrete Structures paid temporary disability at a weekly compensation rate of $575.01.

To support the denial, Concrete Structures relied on a medical records review report from Dr. Robert Holladay, an orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Holladay determined that Mr. Holt’s underlying “neoplastic disease,” here myeloma, primarily caused the injury. Importantly, he wrote the following:

Page 2 of 6 The clinical records consistently documented that the fracture occurred through an area of abnormal, weakened bone due to an underlying neoplastic process. In such cases, pathologic fractures occur in bones structurally compromised by malignancy, where minimal or even no trauma can result in fracture. Were it not for the neoplastic disease, it is unlikely that the reported mechanical trauma alone would have resulted in such a complex femoral shaft fracture.

Dr. Holt disagreed with Dr. Holladay’s opinion.

At trial, Mr. Forrest said he had no problem working on the date he was hurt. Afterward, he could not. He also explained that he has not recovered from the accident and needs post-operative care to ensure proper healing.

As for an attorney’s fee, Mr. Forrest’s counsel offered an affidavit detailing his work on the case and requesting a fee of $17,430. Concrete Structures opposed the fee amount.

Factual Findings and Legal Conclusions

To receive benefits at an expedited hearing, Mr. Forrest must prove he is likely to prevail at a final hearing. McCord v. Advantage Human Resourcing, 2015 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 6, at *7-8, 9 (Mar. 27, 2015).

This expedited hearing concerns three distinct requests for relief: medical treatment, temporary disability benefits, and an attorney’s fee. Specifically, Mr. Forrest seeks post- operative care for his femur fracture. He also seeks temporary disability benefits from April 17 to the present and continuing, and fees.

Additional treatment

Considering medical benefits, it is well-settled that “an employer takes an employee ‘as is’ and assumes the responsibility of the employee having a preexisting condition aggravated by a work-related injury that might not affect an otherwise healthy person.” Bradshaw v Jewell Mechanical, LLC, 2015 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 16, at *15 (June 4, 2015) (internal citations omitted). “An employer is liable for disability resulting from injuries sustained by an employee arising out of and in the course of his employment even though it aggravates a previous condition with resulting disability far greater than otherwise would have been the case.” Id. at *16

Here, the parties presented competing expert medical opinions on the cause of Mr. Forrest’s femur break. When faced with competing expert opinions, the Court may consider, among other things, “the qualifications of the experts, the circumstances of their examination, the information available to them, and the evaluation of the importance of

Page 3 of 6 that information by other experts.” Bass v. The Home Depot U.S.A. Inc., 2017 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 36, at *9 (May 26, 2017).

Weighing the Bass factors and Mr. Forrest’s statements, the Court finds Dr. Holt’s opinion more persuasive and adopts it. On qualifications, the Court finds that Dr. Holt’s qualifications exceed Dr. Holladay’s in this case. While both are orthopedic surgeons, Dr. Holt specializes in orthopedic oncology; Dr. Holladay does not. As for their examinations’ circumstances, Dr. Holt saw and treated Mr. Forrest when the injury occurred. Dr. Holladay never saw him. Mr. Forrest’s own statements about his ability to work without limitation before the accident supports Dr. Holt’s conclusion that the falling barrier, not the underlying myeloma, caused the femur fracture.

Further, Dr. Holladay’s opinion does not precisely discredit Dr. Holt’s. In his opinion, Dr.

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Related

§ 50-6-239
Tennessee § 50-6-239(d)(3)

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