Green v. GKN Automotive
This text of Green v. GKN Automotive (Green v. GKN Automotive) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE. IT SHOULD NOT
BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS
PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 239(d)(2), SCACR.
THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
In The Court of Appeals
Donna A. Green, Employee, Claimant, Appellant,
v.
GKN Automotive, Employer, and Zurich American, Carrier, Defendants,
Of whom GKN Automotive is the, Respondent.
Appeal from Richland County
Reginald I. Lloyd, Circuit Court Judge
Unpublished Opinion No. 2005-UP-566
Submitted October 1, 2005 Filed October 26, 2005
AFFIRMED
J. Marvin Mullis, Jr., of Columbia, for Appellant.
William Lee Duda, of Columbia, for Respondent.
PER CURIAM: Donna A. Green appeals the denial of her request for workers compensation benefits. The single commissioner and appellate panel of the commission (the Commission) found Green failed to sustain her burden of proving her claimed injury was causally related to her employment. The decision was affirmed by the circuit court. We also affirm.[1]
FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Claimant Donna A. Green was employed by Respondent GKN Automotive as an assembly line worker in the companys Columbia automotive parts factory. Green had worked for GKN for approximately two years when, on February 7, 2002, she claims she was injured on the job. In her testimony before the single commissioner, Green described what she was doing on February 7 and how she was purportedly injured. She testified that she had been given a new job assignment that day working on a GMX 320 machine performing operations 30 and 40, tasks Green asserted were not her regularly assigned work. These operations required Green to assemble steel automobile prop shafts. When assembled, these prop shafts were roughly seven feet in length and each weighed about 20 pounds. Green was then required to hang each of the finished shafts on a rack approximately seven feet tall. Green claimed that, because of her height (about five feet, two inches tall), she had to lift the assembled prop shafts above her head and shoulders, stretch, and stand on the tips of her toes in order to place shafts on the rack. Green claimed this exertion caused her great strain, resulting in muscle spasms down her left and right side. She testified that she also began to feel pain and numbness in her arms during her hour-long drive home on the evening of February 7.
When Green returned to the factory the next morning, she claimed the pain and numbness she experienced the night before continued and became more severe as she began her days work. She reported the problem to her supervisor and the safety officer at the factory who sent her to Providence Occupational Health Services for examination. Green was examined by Dr. Richard Boyer, who determined she was suffering from Paresthesia, or a tingling sensation, in her left arm. He prescribed heat and ibuprofen to reduce the discomfort, and found she was fit to return to work without any restrictions on her activities.
Green continued working normal hours until February 25, 2002, when she visited her personal physician complaining of continued upper body pain and numbness. Greens doctor examined her and determined she should be excused from work and that she should be treated with a regimen of physical therapy. Green followed her doctors adviceleaving work and attending regular therapy. After several months of treatment, Green returned to work in May 2002, but she was only able to work one week. Shortly thereafter, Green filed a Form 50 seeking temporary total disability benefits.
At the hearing before the single commissioner, it was brought to light that Green had offered vague and contradictory reports to her employer concerning how she was injured. A critical inconsistency was discovered in a Personal Injury Report Green had filled out and submitted to GKN on February 8, 2002, the day after her alleged injury at the factory. In this report, Green indicated that she was injured while performing operation 50 which she further indicated was her regularly assigned worknot the new, unfamiliar work of operations 30 and 40 on the GMX 320 machine as she testified to before the single commissioner. Green also wrote in this report that the injury occurred because the pedestal wheel [was] too tightagain, contrary to her testimony that she was injured while attempting to lift the steel prop shafts onto a rack. Green also acknowledged that when she initially reported her injury to the factory safety officer and her supervisor, she was unable to tell either person exactly how she was injured.
Another inconsistency was discovered in a form requesting short-term disability benefits Green had filled out and submitted to GKNs insurance carrier in March 2002. This form required Green to describe the physical ailment that was preventing her from working, and specifically asked: Is this condition work related? and If Yes, do you intend to file a Workers Compensation claim? Green did not answer either of these two questions, leaving that portion of the form blank.
Further questions were raised concerning similar inconsistencies reflected in the medical reports prepared by Greens treating physicians. For example, Dr. Boyer, the first doctor Green visited the day after her claimed injury, reported that Green complained of pain in her left arm, with no mention made of any other part of her body. However, the report prepared by Greens personal physician after her examination two weeks later indicates that her pain started in her right arm.
After the hearing, the single commissioner entered an order denying Greens request for workers compensation benefits. In reaching this decision, the single commissioner noted the material inconsistencies in how Green reported her alleged injury to her employer and treating physicians. The commissioner found that Green was unable to recall any specific incident that resulted in her injury, noting that she could not tell her GKN supervisor or the safety specialist how she was injured, nor could she provide this basic information to Dr. Boyer. The commissioner also found that Green failed to indicate that her injuries were work-related when she applied for short-term disability benefits. Based on these findings, the commissioner concluded Green had not met her burden of proving she had suffered an accident or injury as those terms are defined under the Workers Compensation Act or that the physical ailments she claimed to have suffered were causally related to her employment.
Green appealed the single commissioners order to the Commission, arguing the single commissioner erred in failing to find she had suffered a repetitive trauma injury. The Commission denied the appeal and adopted the single commissioners findings of fact and conclusions of law. Subsequent appeal was taken to the circuit court which was also denied. This appeal followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The South Carolina Administrative Procedures Act (APA) establishes the standard for judicial review of decisions of the Workers Compensation Commission. Lark v. Bi-Lo, Inc., 276 S.C.
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Green v. GKN Automotive, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-gkn-automotive-scctapp-2005.