Green, C. v. Palfrey, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 23, 2023
Docket2424 EDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Green, C. v. Palfrey, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-A05005-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COREY GREEN : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : JOHN PALFREY, MONROE ENERGY, : No. 2424 EDA 2022 LLC AND MIPC, LLC :

Appeal from the Judgment Entered November 4, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at No(s): 200900435

BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and MURRAY, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED MAY 23, 2023

Corey Green appeals from the judgment, entered in the Philadelphia

Court of Common Pleas, in favor of John Palfrey, Monroe Energy, LLC, and

MIPC, LLC (collectively, Appellees). After review, we affirm.

Green, a career truck driver, had been working for Samuel Coraluzzo

and Company (Coraluzzo) transporting fuel when he sustained a shoulder

injury. Green’s job required him to fill up a tanker trailer with fuel at a local

terminal, transport the fuel to a local gas station, and then unload the fuel at

the gas station. See N.T. Jury Trial, 4/19/22, at 57. Green’s job description

required that he be able to lift 60 pounds waist high. See N.T. Deposition of

Richard Zamarin, M.D., 4/14/22, at 44. Green explained the fuel filling

process as follows:

You enter the terminal, and then you pull into what you call a rack. The racks . . . are where you fuel the trucks up. [] Externals are J-A05005-23

units attached to the trailer that come out, and what I would do, I would take [the] loading arm, and lock [it] on, make sure it’s secure, and I would lock it onto each of the units, and that’s how the fuel comes from the terminal into the trailer[.]

Id. at 57-58.

Green testified that his injury occurred between the late-night hours of

September 18, 2019, and the early morning hours of September 19, 2019,

while filling his tanker trailer with fuel at the G Street Terminal in Philadelphia

for the fourth time that shift. See N.T. Jury Trial, 4/19/22, at 54-55, 71, 87.

At the time, Appellees Monroe Energy and MIPC owned, operated and

managed the G Street Terminal.1 Additionally, Appellee Palfrey, an agent or

employee of Monroe Energy and MIPC, was the person responsible for

operating the G Street Terminal. Green stated the accident occurred as, “[he]

was lifting the arm . . . trying to line it up with the trailer, [when he] felt a

burning sensation, and then [he] felt a pop.” Id. at 68; id. at 69 (Green

testifying “[his shoulder] started stinging and radiating”). Green explained

that the G Street Terminal fill arm, which he used at least four times each

night, was “very hard to move . . . very stiff . . . [and it] required a lot of

____________________________________________

1 MIPC, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Monroe Energy, owns and operates Monroe Energy’s fuel storage and distribution networks. MIPC has three facilities, including the G Street Terminal. See Monroe Energy: https://www.monroe-energy.com/ (last accessed 4/24/23). John Palfrey is a terminal operator at MIPC.

-2- J-A05005-23

strength to move those particular arms.”2 Id. at 66-67; id. at 56 (Green

recalls using G Street Terminal every day since working at Coraluzzo).

That same day, Green called his supervisor, who told Green to go to

Concentra, a medical clinic, where Green was prescribed pain medicine and

physical therapy. Id. at 71; see Zamarin-4 (Concentra report stating Green

injured while lifting loading arm at work and felt right shoulder pain

immediately). Concentra performed an MRI, which revealed a rotator cuff

tear in his right shoulder. Id. at 71. Concentra advised Green to receive

treatment by an orthopedic specialist. He then saw Richard Zamarin, M.D.,

an orthopedic specialist, who performed arthroscopic (joint) surgery on

Green’s right shoulder on January 10, 2019. Id. at 74. Doctor Zamarin

testified regarding an August 10, 2021 report he had authored, in which he

concluded: “[Green’s partial rotator cuff tear in his right shoulder] was due

to a work-related injury [incurred] o[n] September 19, 2018.” N.T. Deposition

of Richard Zamarin, M.D., 4/14/22, at 20.

Green also testified that on September 15, 2018, four days prior to the

G Street Terminal incident, he had gone to Roxborough Memorial Hospital

2 Charles Lyons, a self-employed commercial truck driver, presented similar testimony. He testified that he used the fill arm at the G Street Terminal in September 2018, when he worked for Coraluzzo, that the arm was “difficult to maneuver,” and that “[he] had to put some force, some brute force behind it just to get the arms to [] line up with the loading portals on the truck.” N.T. Jury Trial, 4/19/22, at 139. Lyons attempted to testify that the G Street Terminal fill arm was more difficult to maneuver as opposed to other fill arms. However, defense counsel objected and the court sustained his objection “as to other locations.” Id.

-3- J-A05005-23

complaining of soreness, weakness, and burning in his right shoulder. N.T.

Jury Trial, 4/19/22, at 77-78, 95; see Zamarin-6 (Roxborough Memorial

medical record stating “[Green] reports right shoulder pain for one week.

[Green] was moving heavy objects and fel[t] a pulling/burning sensation in

the shoulder, the plain is starting to cause numbness and tingling down the

arms and fingers.”). Green testified that he did not explain the “arms”

involved in fuel transport to the hospital but told the emergency room

physician that he had “lifted some heavy equipment prior to this.” Id. at 79

(Green stated, “telling [the hospital] about arms and stuff like that[,] they

wouldn’t understand”). Prior to discharging Green, hospital personnel

performed an x-ray and prescribed Green a muscle relaxer. Id. at 105; id.

at 80 (Green explaining doctors at Roxborough Memorial did not tell Green his

shoulder was injured). The following exchange took place during cross-

examination between defense counsel3 and Green:

Attorney Boyle: Do you see on that record where it says you have a suspected rotator cuff pain on exam?

Green: Yes, I see that highlighted.

Attorney Boyle: And you understood on September 15[, 2018,] that they suspected you had a rotator cuff injury, correct?

Green: No, I didn’t.

***

3 Defendant John Palfrey is represented by Christopher Boyle, Esquire.

-4- J-A05005-23

Green: I’m telling you that the emergency room discharged me with a muscle relaxer and did not inform me that I had a torn rotator cuff.

Id. at 100-01; see id. at 97-98 (Green stated he signed Roxborough Memorial

Hospital document stating “strained right arm, muscle fascia and tendons of

shoulder and upper arm”); see Zamarin-6, at 7 (Roxborough Hospital medical

record stating x-ray shows “minimal spurring at acromioclavicular joint”)

(unpaginated).4

Doctor Zamarin testified that at the time he prepared his report, he was

only aware of the September 19, 2018 incident where Green lifted the metal

hose and suffered a right shoulder injury. See N.T. Deposition of Richard

Zamarin, M.D., 4/14/22, at 25; see id. at 30 (Doctor Zamarin testifying

Green’s September 15, 2018 hospital visit not mentioned in Concentra

records). After learning of Green’s September 15, 2018 hospital visit and

reading the Roxborough Memorial Hospital Emergency Room report, which Dr.

Zamarin testified is the type of report he would normally review and rely on

in his practice, he agreed he would not be able to determine, within a

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