Hale v. Ruleville Health Care Center

687 So. 2d 1221, 1997 WL 45334
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1997
Docket93-CC-00855-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 687 So. 2d 1221 (Hale v. Ruleville Health Care Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Ruleville Health Care Center, 687 So. 2d 1221, 1997 WL 45334 (Mich. 1997).

Opinion

687 So.2d 1221 (1997)

Frankie Lee HALE
v.
RULEVILLE HEALTH CARE CENTER and the Travelers Insurance Company.

No. 93-CC-00855-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

February 6, 1997.

*1222 John G. Jones, Jackson, Robert L. Crook, Ruleville, for Appellant.

Roy D. Campbell III, Campbell DeLong Hagwood & Wade, Greenville, Richard O. Burson, Laurel, for Appellee.

Before PRATHER, P.J., and JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr., and MILLS, JJ.

PRATHER, Presiding Justice, for the Court:

I. INTRODUCTION

This workers' compensation case calls upon this Court to review the reversal by the Sunflower Circuit Court of a ruling of the Workers' Compensation Commission, which found the claimant to have suffered a five percent permanent partial disability. Finding the ruling of the Commission to be neither arbitrary nor capricious, this Court reverses the ruling of the circuit court and reinstates the ruling of the Commission. This Court also affirms the failure of the Commission to award total permanent disability benefits in light of the findings of fact of the Commission, which indicate a lack of diligence on the part of the claimant in securing additional employment.

II. STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

On July 17, 1989, Frankie Lee Hale ("Hale") sustained an injury to her back while lifting a patient pursuant to her duties as a nurse's aide at the Ruleville Health Care Center in Ruleville, Mississippi. Hale had worked for Ruleville Health Care for nine years prior to her injury, and her job required her to perform a substantial amount of physical activity, including lifting patients, bending, and stooping to retrieve items. *1223 Hale has only a ninth grade education, and she has never received a GED or any special training, thus seriously limiting her prospects for securing employment.

During her testimony before the Administrative Judge, Hale indicated that her prior back problems were limited to a back injury suffered in 1986, for which she missed approximately two weeks of work and received workers' compensation benefits. With the exception of this limited period, however, Hale claimed on direct examination to have had no back problems prior to or since 1986.

On cross-examination, however, it was revealed that, beginning in February 1984, Hale had sought treatment from Dr. Anne Brooks, an osteopathic physician. Dr. Brooks' records indicate that Hale had in February 1984 complained of pain in her legs, side, shoulder, and head. Dr. Brooks expressed an opinion in her deposition testimony that Hale suffered "from what we call a `sacrotortion.' It was the change in axis of the motion of the sacrum; so that instead of going forward commonly, evenly, it was torqued."

Dr. Brooks' records further indicate that Hale could recall "no unusual activity or trauma" which might have caused the pains she was experiencing. In September 1984, Hale returned to Dr. Brooks, complaining that she had hurt her back while lifting a patient at the Health Center. However, Dr. Brooks was of the opinion that Hale's problem was the result of abnormalities in her posture, which gave rise to "acute lumbosacral spasm." Dr. Brooks also noticed that, while Hale's sacrum had improved, she nevertheless suffered from a marked decrease in range of motion. Hale returned to Dr. Brooks in 1985 and in December 1987, complaining of further low back and leg pains as a result of lifting patients at work.

Hale returned to Dr. Brooks in April 1989, a few months prior to the injury with which the present appeal is concerned. Dr. Brooks reported that:

On examination, I did not find the sacral problem that she previously had. She was bending forward at the waist approximately 30 degrees, although she was unable to side bend very much. There was again noted the increase in lordotic curve. She was quite tender from L-3 to L-5 on palpation and also on her right sciatic area. Both trapezius muscles were very tight and tender to palpation.

The record indicates that Dr. Brooks treated Hale months after her injury, but neither the plaintiff nor defendant questioned her as to her medical findings. On cross-examination, the plaintiff's attorney did elicit that Dr. Brooks considered Hale to be disabled and unable to perform her duties at the Health Center. However, Dr. Brooks did not testify that she considered Hale's disability to have resulted from having lifted patients, and her testimony indicated that she considered Hale's problems to be more of a structural nature.

Following her injury, Hale sought treatment from Dr. W. Craig Clark, a board certified neurosurgeon at the Semmes-Murphy Clinic in Memphis. Dr. Clark testified that he was unable, following a complete medical examination of Hale, to explain the cause of her back and leg pain. Dr. Clark further testified that Hale reached maximum medical improvement on September 25, 1990, and that she did not sustain any permanent impairment or limitation of function. When asked on direct examination whether he felt that Hale was exaggerating her symptoms, Dr. Clark responded that, given that he was unable to find any medical cause for her complaints, "I guess the terminology best be used would be one maybe of symptom magnification."

The primary medical evidence cited by Hale in support of her claim was provided by Dr. Azordegan, a neurologist to whom Hale was referred by her attorney. Dr. Azordegan expressed his opinion that Hale had suffered two distinct injuries, namely a stretched "long posterior sacroiliac ligament" and bruising of the "lumbosacral joint." Dr. Azordegan further opined that Hale had reached maximum medical recovery on August 13, 1991, and that she sustained a five percent permanent partial impairment to her body as a whole and a lifting restriction.

The Health Center entered into evidence records which indicate that Hale had complained *1224 of or sought treatment for back pain on several occasions prior to the injury in question. The Ruleville Health Center records reveal that Hale had a extensive history of back and leg pains, including complaints of back injuries from lifting patients in December 1983 and September 1984. Hale complained of back pain again in May 1986, at which time she was treated by a Dr. Aquino at the North Sunflower County Hospital. Following a relapse three months later, Dr. Aquino referred Hale to a Dr. Warrington, who admitted her to Quitman County Hospital for treatment of a "lumbosacral strain."

Rosal Burden, Administrator at the Ruleville Health Care Center, revealed that, according to company records, Hale had worked full days on the three days following the accident from which the present case arose. Burden's testimony further revealed that Hale brought a return-to-work slip from a Dr. Barr, which stated that Hale could not lift more than twenty pounds for one month. According to Burden, she then informed Hale that the Health Center could provide her with light duty, such as cleaning closets and wheelchairs, which would not involve lifting. Hale responded that she was unable to bend over and thus unable to accept said light jobs. The return-to-work slip, however, contained no such restriction against bending.

Hale testified that her only other attempts to find employment were during a weekend in November 1991, approximately one month prior to the hearing before the Administrative Judge ("AJ"). The AJ noted in his ruling that "when confronted with the limited extent and duration of her work attempts, claimant then testified that she had made other `attempts' to find work before November 1991, but could only specifically recall one such effort."

III.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
687 So. 2d 1221, 1997 WL 45334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-ruleville-health-care-center-miss-1997.