Graves, Chad v. Southall Adventures, LLC

CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedApril 23, 2026
Docket2024-50-5540
StatusPublished

This text of Graves, Chad v. Southall Adventures, LLC (Graves, Chad v. Southall Adventures, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graves, Chad v. Southall Adventures, LLC, (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

FILED Apr 23, 2026 09:02 AM(CT) TENNESSEE WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Chad Graves Docket No. 2024-50-5540

v. State File No. 25190-2024

Southall Adventures, LLC, et al.

Appeal from the Court of Workers’ Compensation Claims Thomas L. Wyatt, Judge

Reversed and Remanded

In this second interlocutory appeal, the employer questions the trial court’s denial of its request for a continuance of an expedited hearing, as well as its award of medical benefits to the employee. The employee suffered multiple injuries when he fell at work. The employer provided medical treatment initially but later denied some of the recommended medical care. Following the first expedited hearing, the trial court awarded medical benefits for several conditions, including an injury to the employee’s left knee, and the employer appealed. On appeal, we reversed the trial court’s award of medical benefits for the left knee as the record did not contain sufficient evidence that the knee condition was primarily caused by the work injury. On remand, the employee filed a new request for expedited hearing, again seeking medical treatment of his left knee, which he supported with new medical evidence. The employer sought to schedule a medical examination with its own expert prior to the expedited hearing. Due to ongoing discussions between the parties’ attorneys regarding scheduling the exam, the employer filed a request for a continuance. The trial court denied the continuance on the day of the expedited hearing and issued an order awarding medical benefits. The employer has appealed. Having carefully reviewed the record, we reverse the trial court’s denial of the requested continuance and remand the case.

Judge Meredith B. Weaver delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board in which Presiding Judge Timothy W. Conner and Judge Pele I. Godkin joined.

Brady W. Allen and Nicholas J. Peterson, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the employer- appellant, Southall Adventures, LLC

Adam C. Brock-Dagnan, Nashville, Tennessee, for the employee-appellee, Chad Graves

1 Factual and Procedural Background

This is the second interlocutory appeal in this matter. Chad Graves (“Employee”) was cleaning a whirlpool in the course and scope of his employment with Southall Adventures, LLC (“Employer”), when he slipped and fell, causing numerous alleged injuries. Employee sought medical treatment with a variety of providers, and Employer denied several aspects of treatment, which was the focus of the initial appeal in this case. This current appeal concerns only Employee’s purported injury to the left knee, for which Employee had received a panel and selected Dr. Jeffrey Lawrence. Previously, we provided the following history relative to the left knee:

Employee brought Dr. Lawrence a note from the walk-in clinic that described posttraumatic stress, left knee injury, pain, and hypertension. The note referred Employee to an orthopedic specialist for evaluation of his knee complaints, and Dr. Lawrence then “recommend[ed] that he be allowed to be seen for his knee from Workers’ Comp.” . . . He also recommended an authorized evaluation of Employee’s left knee complaints, continued physical therapy, and authorization for Employee to see Dr. Robert Lowe, III, another physician in his practice, for Employee’s neck complaints.

In the interim, Employer obtained Employee’s past medical records, which documented a 2010 surgical repair to the quadriceps tendon in Employee’s left knee. These records also revealed prior treatment for depression and anxiety stemming from a 2020 workers’ compensation case. Employer then retained Dr. Junaid Makda to perform a records review in May 2024. Dr. Makda’s review included records pertaining to Employee’s previous left knee injury along with negative x-rays from the date of injury and May 2024. Ultimately, Dr. Makda opined that the April 10, 2024 incident was not the primary cause of Employee’s left knee condition or need for medical treatment of that knee.

....

Thereafter, Employer scheduled an employer’s examination with Dr. Jeffrey Hazlewood in July 2024. Following that examination, Dr. Hazlewood opined . . . that the April 2024 work accident was not the primary cause of the left knee complaints because, upon examination, he found no objective evidence of an acute injury to the left knee, stating he saw “nothing to suggest any acute injury on examination, nor apparently did the previous physicians that saw [Employee].”

2 In the interim, Employee attempted to return to work but was unsuccessful. Employer offered him a buyout to resign from his job in October, and Employee accepted. Employee testified that he was able to use some of this money to purchase health insurance, which enabled him to obtain treatment for his alleged work injuries.

On January 14, 2025, Dr. Bowman surgically repaired medical meniscus and anterior collateral ligament tears in Employee’s left knee. . . . That treatment and surgery were not authorized by Employer.

Employee’s counsel sent questionnaires to . . . Dr. Bowman seeking causation opinions. With respect to the left knee, Dr. Bowman was asked:

Is it your opinion to a reasonable degree of medical certainty – considering [Employee’s] self-reported history, as well as the video documentation – that [Employee’s] current left knee problems [are] causally-related to the April 10, 2024 work injury?

(Emphasis added.) In response, Dr. Bowman checked “yes.” In light of the prior MRI finding of a “non-acute” ACL tear in the left knee, Dr. Bowman was also asked whether Employee’s “on-the-job accident primarily caused” that injury, to which Dr. Bowman responded “no” and wrote, “unclear, but unlikely.”

Graves v. Southall Adventures, LLC, No. 2024-50-5540, 2025 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 38, at *5-11 (Tenn. Workers’ Comp. App. Bd. Aug. 25, 2025) (footnotes omitted). After holding an expedited hearing, the trial court issued an order awarding some of the relief requested by Employee, which we summarized as follows:

Regarding the left knee, the court weighed the competing opinions of Dr. Bowman and Dr. Hazlewood and concluded that Dr. Bowman’s opinion offered the most probable explanation of the causal relationship between Employee’s fall and his torn meniscus and ligament injury in the left knee. The court noted that although Dr. Bowman’s opinion “was not stated in response to a rigid recitation of statutory language [it] does not limit the Court’s confidence in it.” The court also noted that Employee reported left knee pain to the emergency physician he saw on the date of the injury and that an x-ray of the left knee was obtained. As a result, the court found that Employee had established he would likely prevail at trial in showing his left

3 knee condition and the need for treatment arose primarily from the work accident.

Id., at *14-15.

On appeal, we reversed that portion of the trial court’s order, stating:

As applicable to the present case, although we agree with the trial court that a doctor need not necessarily adhere to a rigid recitation of the statutory language addressing expert medical causation, we have also stated, “[w]hat is necessary, however, is sufficient proof from which the trial court can conclude that the statutory requirements of an injury as defined in section 50-6-102[(12)] are satisfied.” Panzarella, 2017 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 30, at *14.

Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-102(12)(B) provides that

An injury “arises primarily out of and in the course and scope of employment” only if it has been shown by a preponderance of the evidence that the employment contributed more than fifty percent (50%) in causing the injury, considering all causes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Graves, Chad v. Southall Adventures, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-chad-v-southall-adventures-llc-tennworkcompapp-2026.