Genesis Healthcare Services v. Cephas

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 12, 2021
DocketK20A-04-003 JJC
StatusPublished

This text of Genesis Healthcare Services v. Cephas (Genesis Healthcare Services v. Cephas) 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
Genesis Healthcare Services v. Cephas, (Del. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

GENESIS HEALTHCARE : SERVICES, : : Appellant, : K20A-04-003 JJC : v. : : OTASIA CEPHAS, : : Appellee. :

ORDER

Submitted: January 21, 2021 Decided: March 12, 2021

Upon Consideration of an Appeal from the Industrial Accident Board REMANDED

AND NOW TO WIT, this 12th day of March 2021, upon consideration of the record and the briefing by the parties, IT APPEARS THAT: 1. Appellant Genesis Healthcare Services (hereinafter “Genesis”) appeals a decision that the Industrial Accident Board (hereinafter “Board” or “IAB”) issued on March 11, 2020. In the IAB’s decision, it granted Appellee Otasia Cephas’ petition to determine additional compensation due. The Board then ordered Genesis to pay for lower back treatment that Dr. Scott Roberts provided to Ms. Cephas. 2. As background, Ms. Cephas worked for Genesis as a certified nursing assistant. On February 16, 2008, she suffered a compensable work injury to her lower back. When she assisted a patient to her room, the patient fell and caused Ms. Cephas to fall with her and injure her back. Thereafter, she received conservative treatment from the time of the injury until she underwent a lower back surgery in January 2016. There was no dispute that the work accident necessitated her low back treatment from 2008 through the 2016 surgery. 3. Ms. Cephas’s initial treatment with Dr. Roberts spanned from 2013 through her 2016 surgery. After that surgery, she resumed treatment with Dr. Roberts when either new back pain emerged or her previous pain reemerged (hereinafter, the disputed condition referenced as “post-2016 back pain”). The post- 2016 back pain came from a congenital condition that preexisted her work injury. Moreover, that congenital condition existed at a level in her spine below the lowest level addressed by her 2016 surgery. 4. Important to this appeal, Genesis nevertheless paid some of Dr. Roberts’ post-2016 bills. It also paid the facility and medication charges that accompanied some of Dr. Roberts’ post-2016 treatment. Genesis stopped paying the disputed bills, in large part, after August 3, 2018. Her unpaid bills generate the current dispute. 5. In the IAB’s decision, it focused on whether the post-2016 back treatment was related to the work accident. It correctly recognized that the work injury could have also been a cause of Ms. Cephas’ treatment notwithstanding an undisputedly concurrent congenital cause. The following record evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to Ms. Cephas, addressed whether the work injury constituted a “but for” cause of the disputed treatment: (1) Dr. Roberts testified that he treated Ms. Cephas for back pain before and after the 2016 surgery; (2) but, Dr. Roberts could not opine whether his post-2016 treatment was related to the work injury; (3) Ms. Cephas testified that she could perform certified nursing assistant duties prior to her 2008 injury, but could not perform them afterward because of her back pain; and (4) Genesis’ carrier paid a significant number of bills for her post-2016 treatment, but declined to pay others.

2 6. In its Order, the IAB referred to the correct standard: that is, but for the 2008 injury, would the disputed post-2016 treatment have been necessary?1 It then found the treatment to be related for one principal reason: the carrier paid many of Dr. Roberts’ post-2016 bills and other post-2016 bills.2 The Board found those payments to demonstrate Genesis’ acceptance of responsibility for her treatment.3 7. Genesis now appeals the IAB’s decision. It contends that because Dr. Roberts did not testify that the work injury necessitated Ms. Cephas’ treatment, she failed to meet her burden at the hearing. No other expert other than Dr. Roberts testified at the hearing. 8. In response, Ms. Cephas argues that there is substantial evidence in the record to support the Board’s finding that she met her burden. She identifies evidence that includes (1) the carrier’s payments, (2) and an earlier acknowledgement before the Board that Ms. Cephas suffered a low back injury that required the 2016 low back surgery. 9. This Court’s appellate review of the IAB’s factual findings is limited to determining whether the Board’s decision is supported by substantial evidence and is free from legal error.4 Substantial evidence means “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.”5 On appeal, the Court views the facts in the light most favorable to the prevailing party below.6 Moreover, the Court does not weigh the evidence, determine questions of credibility

1 Cephas v. Genesis Healthcare Services, No. 1316891, at *9 (Del. IAB March 11, 2020) [hereinafter “IAB Order”]. 2 Id. at * 12. 3 Id. 4 Bullock v. K-Mart Corp., 1995 WL 339025, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. May 5, 1995) (citing General Motors v. Freeman, 164 A.2d 686, 688 (Del. 1960)). 5 Olney v. Cooch, 425 A.2d 610, 614 (Del. 1981) (quoting Consolo v. Fed. Mar. Comm’n, 383 U.S. 607, 620 (1966)). 6 Chudnofsky v. Edwards, 208 A.2d 516, 518 (Del. 1965) (citing Turner v. Vineyard, 80 A.2d 177, 179 (Del. 1951)).

3 or make its own factual findings.7 Absent an error of law, which would be reviewed de novo, a decision of the IAB supported by substantial evidence will be upheld unless the Board abused its discretion.8 The Board abuses its discretion when its decision exceeds the bounds of reason in view of the circumstances.9 10. At the outset, the Board recognized the correct causation standard. Namely, it applied the “but for” standard articulated in Reese v. Home Budget Center.10 The central issue in this appeal, however, turns on whether the Board erred by applying an incorrect standard when finding Genesis to have entered an implied agreement to compensate Ms. Cephas. This potential error of law impacts whether Genesis’ payment of some of the post-2016 bills constitutes credible evidence of compensability. Because Dr. Roberts testified that he could not relate the post-2016 treatment to the work accident, how to treat those payments will impact the Court’s substantial evidence review. 11. The IAB explained its finding that Genesis’ payment of the bills demonstrated that they were compensable as follows: [t]here is not evidence that Employer/carrier’s partial payments of Dr. Roberts’ treatment was simple inadvertence or was made under a feeling of compulsion. . . . Furthermore, there is no evidence that the payment of Claimant’s low back treatment was . . .[a] gift flowing merely from a generosity of spirits by a carrier . . .. Thus, the board finds that Employer/carrier’s payment of Claimant’s low back treatment . . . is indicative of its acceptance of that treatment as compensable. . . . [T]he Board concludes that the evidence supports a finding that Claimant’s low back treatment with Dr. Roberts, including any unpaid charges, is compensable.11

7 Bullock, 1995 WL 339025, at *2 (citing Johnson v. Chrysler Corp., 213 A.2d 64, 66 (Del. 1965)). 8 Hoffecker v. Lexus of Wilmington, 2012 WL 341714, at *1 (Del. Feb. 1, 2012) (citation omitted). 9 Id. 10 Reese v. Home Budget Center, 619 A.2d 907, 910 (Del. 1992) (describing the standard for causation in a workers’ compensation claim involving a claimant’s preexisting injury as asking whether the injury would not have occurred but for the accident).

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Related

Consolo v. Federal Maritime Commission
383 U.S. 607 (Supreme Court, 1966)
General Motors Corporation v. Freeman
164 A.2d 686 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1960)
Johnson v. Chrysler Corporation
213 A.2d 64 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1965)
Olney v. Cooch
425 A.2d 610 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1981)
Reese v. Home Budget Center
619 A.2d 907 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1992)
Chudnofsky v. Edwards
208 A.2d 516 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1965)
Turner v. Vineyard
80 A.2d 177 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1951)
Hoffecker v. LEXUS OF WILMINGTON
36 A.3d 349 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2012)
Starun v. All American Engineering Co.
350 A.2d 765 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1975)
New Castle County v. Goodman
461 A.2d 1012 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1983)
McCarnan v. New Castle County
521 A.2d 611 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
Genesis Healthcare Services v. Cephas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genesis-healthcare-services-v-cephas-delsuperct-2021.