George Easley Co. v. Estate of Lindekugel

117 P.3d 734, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 111, 2005 WL 1706388
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 2005
DocketS-10851
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 117 P.3d 734 (George Easley Co. v. Estate of Lindekugel) 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
George Easley Co. v. Estate of Lindekugel, 117 P.3d 734, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 111, 2005 WL 1706388 (Ala. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The George Easley Company appeals the decision of the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board holding that it is liable for John Lindekugel’s injuries and that it is not entitled to the three offsets it sought from Lin-dekugel’s workers’ compensation award. We affirm the board’s finding that Easley is liable for Lindekugel’s disability under the last injurious exposure rule and its denial of Eas-ley’s petitions to modify the award.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

John Lindekugel suffered two separate accidents while working for two different employers. While working on the trans-Alaska oil pipeline in August 1976 as an employee of Fluor Alaska, Lindekugel fell off a ladder, landed on his lower back, and struck his head against the ground. He was treated on an out-patient basis for several months, and was later hospitalized for two weeks for pelvic traction. In January 1977 Lindekugel underwent a fusion of the cervical spine. In December 1977 and March 1978 Dr. Edward Voke, who had previously treated Lindekugel while he was hospitalized, performed additional surgeries on Lindekugel.

In May 1979 Lindekugel and Fluor entered into a settlement in which Lindekugel received $225,000 in exchange for waiving all claims against Fluor except for future medical benefits. For the purposes of the second injury fund only, 1 $60,000 of the award was deemed to be payment for “permanent partial disability.” Lindekugel began receiving social security disability benefits in July 1977.

Lindekugel moved to Montana in August 1979. While in Montana Lindekugel was not *737 employed, but he planted a garden, chopped wood, mowed the lawn, and remodeled his house, which required light carpentry work. While in Montana Lindekugel sought no medical attention for his neck or back. Lin-dekugel testified that by September 1981 he was able to walk without limping and had only minimal pain in his neck and back.

At the request of the Social Security Administration (SSA), Dr. John Davidson examined Lindekugel on January 15, 1981 and took x-rays of his spine. Dr. Davidson concluded that, although Lindekugel continued to experience some pain as a result of his 1976 injury, he was physically capable of returning to work. Shortly after the examination, Lindekugel received a letter from the Disability Determination Bureau of Montana’s Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services. The letter stated the bureau’s preliminary opinion, based upon the examination, that Lindekugel had the “capacity to engage in medium work activity.” 2 Accordingly, the bureau forwarded the records to the SSA for a redetermination of Lindeku-gel’s eligibility for benefits. The SSA’s surgical consultant reviewed Dr. Davidson’s report and concluded that the injury sustained by Lindekugel in August 1976 “should not interfere with [work] of a light nature where bending, lifting, and twisting can be controlled.” On March 10, 1981 the SSA informed Lindekugel that he was able to do “substantial gainful work” as of January 1981 and that his entitlement to disability payments ended in March 1981.

Lindekugel returned to Alaska in August 1981 and began work as a carpenter for the George Easley Company (Easley) in October. The union hall had not asked whether he had any medical restrictions, nor did he volunteer such information. While working at Easley, Lindekugel was able to climb a ladder, set scaffolding, and use typical carpentry tools without difficulty.

On October 8,1981, having worked at Eas-ley for seven eight-hour days at the standard union rate of twenty dollars per hour, Linde-kugel tripped and fell onto a cement floor while carrying a sheet of plywood. The plywood, which weighed approximately seventy-five pounds, landed on Lindekugel, injuring his back and right elbow.

Easley initially paid Lindekugel $21,655.85 in medical benefits, but controverted the claim on October 29,1981. In February 1984 the SSA reinstated Lindekugel’s disability benefits at a rate of $764 per month effective retroactively to April 1981. The SSA took an offset from Lindekugel’s $225,000 settlement with Fluor, prorating the settlement at $357.59 per week. In the years following his accident at Easley, Lindekugel was seen by numerous physicians to treat his back injury and its consequences. Lindekugel was seen by Dr. Richard Nollmeyer for pain in his legs and feet in July 1984. He was also treated with a variety of pain medications by Dr. Curt Kurtz from 1985 to 1987. In 1986 Drs. Voke and Paul Dittrich performed back surgery on Lindekugel.

B. Medical Testimony

Dr. Voke, the only doctor who had examined Lindekugel before and after the Easley injury, testified that Lindekugel’s physical condition as of October 8, 1981 (after the Easley accident) was “identical with ... the years past” and that “nothing substantially happened as a result of [the Easley] injury.” In a letter to Gil Johnson, Lindekugel’s former attorney, Dr. Voke wrote “I feel simply that all operative procedures and his general condition are a direct result of his 1976 injury.” The last time Dr. Voke had seen Linde-kugel before the 1981 injury was in 1978, before Lindekugel moved to Montana. When Dr. Voke issued this opinion, he believed that a classification of permanent total disability (PTD) was immutable.

In Lindekugel v. George Easley Co. 3 (Lin-dekugel II ), 4 we held that a PTD classifica *738 tion is not immutable, and we remanded for the board to determine whether Lindekugel’s medical condition had improved prior to his 1981 injury at Easley. 5 Subsequent to this decision, Dr. Yoke stated in a December 1999 affidavit that he believed that Lindekugel showed “significant improvement in [his] symptoms and range of motion since he was seen ... in 1978.” He concluded that the 1981 injury was a “substantial factor” in worsening Lindekugel’s condition. He also stated that Lindekugel would not have needed the two back surgeries performed after 1981 had it not been for the Easley injury. In a deposition taken in March 2000 Dr. Voke maintained his earlier position that the 1981 injury was an aggravation of the 1976 injury and not a new injury, but did not renounce his opinion that the Easley injury was a substantial factor in Lindekugel’s postAL981 disability.

Several other physicians provided information concerning Lindekugel’s condition over the years. In 1983 Dr. Davidson testified that he believed that Lindekugel was not in need of back surgery when he began work at Easley in 1981. Dr. Davidson stated that the facts surrounding Lindekugel’s second injury were consistent with, and confirmed his opinion that, the Easley injury was a “substantial factor” in Lindekugel’s medical condition and his need for additional surgical treatment.

In 1994 Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
117 P.3d 734, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 111, 2005 WL 1706388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-easley-co-v-estate-of-lindekugel-alaska-2005.