Gaskill v. State of Delaware

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 29, 2018
DocketK17A-10-002 NEP
StatusPublished

This text of Gaskill v. State of Delaware (Gaskill v. State of Delaware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaskill v. State of Delaware, (Del. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

RICHARD GASKILL, Appellant/Claimant Below, : C.A. No. Kl7A-lO-002 NEP In and for Kent County v. STATE OF DELAWARE,

Appellee/Employer Below. ORDER

Submitted: April 3, 2018 Decided: June 29, 2018

On Appeal from the Industrial Accident Board AFFIRMED

Appellant/Claimant Richard Gaskill (hereinafter “Mr. Gaskill”) has appealed a decision of the Industrial Accident Board (hereinafter the “Board”), which denied Mr. Gaskill’s petition to determine additional compensation due for permanent impairment to his left lower extremity (hereinafter the “Petition”). The Court’s review is confined to the facts contained in the record, and it is those facts that are referenced herein.

Mr. Gaskill was employed by the State of Delaware (hereinafter the “State”) as Assistant Principal for Laurel High School. On January 15, 2013, Mr. Gaskill sustained injuries to his lumbar spine, neck, and right shoulder while attempting to break up a group of fighting students (hereinafter the “Accident”), and later received compensation for these injuries. On March 9, 2017, Mr. Gaskill filed the Petition, seeking compensation for permanent loss of function to his left lower extremity,

which he claims to flow from the Accident as well.

Richard Gaski// v. State of Delaware K17A-10-002 NEP June 29, 2018

A hearing was held before the Board on August 30, 2017, at which both sides presented expert testimony. Mr. Gaskill’s expert, Dr. Stephen Rodgers, opined that Mr. Gaskill’s previous disability rating for his lumbar spine did not cover impairment for his left lower extremity symptoms, and that a separate permanency rating was warranted.

The State’s expert, Dr. Jonathan Kates, testified that while he agrees that Mr. Gaskill has symptoms in his left lower extremity, those symptoms stem from his back injury, and that the prior disability rating for Mr. Gaskill’s back specifically incorporated his left lower extremity symptoms. Dr. Kates used the Diagnosis Related Estimate (hereinafter “DRE”) found in the Fifth Edition AMA Guia'esl to make this argument Under the AMA Guides, Mr. Gaskill was previously rated as having a DRE Category V lumbar spine injury, and that rating requires findings of various symptoms relating to the lower extremities: radicular symptoms, atrophy, loss of reflexes, sensory changes, loss of sensation_the same symptoms of which Mr. Gaskill complains in his left lower extremity, and for which he sought a separate disability rating from the Board. Page 524 of the AMA Guides also provides that “[i]f lower extremity impairment is due to an underlying spine disorder, lower extremity impairment in most cases would be accounted for in the spine impairment rating.”

The Board denied Mr. Gaskill’s Petition on September l3, 2017, reasoning that the State’s expert witness testimony was more convincing, and that the AMA Guides’ instructions indicated that a separate permanency rating is generally

unavailable The Board found that Mr. Gaskill’s left lower extremity injury had

l American Medical Association Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment. 2

R/'chard Gaskill v. $tate of Delaware K17A-10-002 NEP June 29, 2018

already been taken into consideration and compensated in his prior benefits payments.

An appeal from an administrative board’s final order to this Court is confined to a determination of whether the board’s decision is supported by substantial evidence and free from legal error.2 Evidence is substantial when it is such that a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.3 The Court views the record “in the light most favorable to the prevailing party,” and takes into account the Board’s experience and special competency in workers’ compensation matters.4 When parties present expert testimony to the Board, “the Board is free to choose between conflicting medical opinions, and either opinion will constitute substantial evidence for purposes of an appeal.”5 The party that attacks the board’s decision as unreasonable and capricious bears the burden of proof.6

In Cross v. State, this Court reversed a decision of the Board to deny a petition for a permanent impairment rating to the lower extremities separate from an impairment rating for the lower back where loss of function in the lower extremities was attributable to the lower back injury.7 The Cross decision is distinct from the

current case for at least four reasons.

2 E.g., Unemployment Ins. Appeal Ba'. Dept. of Labor v. Duncan, 337 A.2d 308, 308 (Del. 1975); Thompson v. Christiana Care Health System, 25 A.3d 778, 781~82 (Del. 2011). 3 Histea’ v. E.I. Dupom‘ deNemours & Co., 621 A.2d 340, 342 (Del. 1993). 4 Lopez v. Parkvz'ew Nursing Home, 2011 WL 900674, at *3 (Del. Super. Mar. 15, 2011). 5 Stratton v. Bayhealth Med. Ctr., 2005 WL 2841608, at *3 (Del. Super. Oct. 25, 2005). 6 Dep't of Justice v. Unemployment Ins. Appeal Baf.,v 2016 WL 3742158, at *4 (Del. Super. July 6, 2016) (citations omitted). 7 2000 WL 33115722 (Del. Super. Oct. 17, 2000). 3

Richard Gaskill v. State of Delaware Kl7A-10-002 NEP June 29, 2018

First, in Cross, the employer had previously agreed to a permanency rating for the claimant’s left lower extremities, and this Court therefore remanded to the Board for clarification of the Board’s statement that a separate rating for the lower extremities was not appropriate8 In this case, by contrast, the State had never agreed to a separate permanency rating for the lower extremities prior to the hearing.

Second, the Cross court found that symptoms of the lower extremities “help[ed] to assess the impairment to the spine, but [did] not preclude the separate rating of the legs for permanent impairrnent,” and further found that the issue of separate ratings for the back and legs had previously been settled when the Board granted separate permanency ratings for both.9 Here, there was no previous approval by the Board of a separate permanency rating for the left lower extremity.

Third, in this case, the Board, in reaching its conclusions, specifically relied upon the statement in the AMA Guides that “[i]f lower extremity impairment is due to an underlying spine disorder, lower extremity impairment in most cases would be accounted for in the spine impairment rating.” In Cross, no such statement was ever before the Board or the Court, nor did such a concept factor into the Court’s decision.

Fourth, in Cross, the Court faulted the Board not only for revisiting the issue of separate permanency ratings for the spine and legs, but for doing so “without any supporting evidence whatsoever.”10 Here, however, there was ample support for the

Board’s decision, including Dr. Kates’ conclusion that the 34% permanency rating

8 Id. at *3. 9 Id. at *5. 10 Id.

Richard Gaskill v. State of Delaware K17A-10-002 NEP June 29, 2018

for the lumbar spine accurately reflected the entire functional loss related to the lumbar spine injury, including the symptomatology in the left lower extremity.

The Court finds that in the instant case, the Board’s decision was based upon substantial evidence and free from legal error. Moreover, the Board was entitled to credit Dr. Kates’s testimony over Dr. Rodgers’s, and to determine that in this case_ as “in most cases,” according to the AMA Guides-the lower extremity impairment was accounted for in the impairment rating for the spine.

Finally, the Court addresses Mr.

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Related

Histed v. E.I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co.
621 A.2d 340 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1993)
Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board v. Duncan
337 A.2d 308 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1975)
Thompson v. Christiana Care Health System
25 A.3d 778 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2011)

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