Harris, Jessie v. Express Employment Professionals

2026 TN WC 28
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedMarch 23, 2026
Docket2025-60-7980
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 TN WC 28 (Harris, Jessie v. Express Employment Professionals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris, Jessie v. Express Employment Professionals, 2026 TN WC 28 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

FILED Mar 23, 2026 07:00 AM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT NASHVILLE

Jessie Harris, Docket No. 2025-60-7980 Employee, v. Express Employment Professionals, State File No. 74312-2025 Employer, and AIU Insurance Co., Judge Kenneth M. Switzer Carrier.

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER GRANTING BENEFITS

Jessie Harris suffered a devastating crush injury while working for Express Employment Professionals last fall.

The Court held an expedited hearing on March 10, 2026, on his entitlement to specialist panels after an authorized provider made referrals. Express honored a referral for treatment with an orthopedist but declined to offer panels for the three remaining specialties. It later denied the entire claim.

Express raised defenses of willful misconduct and illegal drug use, further contending that its participation in the Tennessee Drug-Free Workplace Program entitled it to a presumption that Mr. Harris’s drug use was the proximate cause of the accident. It additionally challenged whether the need for specialist treatment arose out of the work accident and whether the referrals are reasonable and necessary.

These defenses are unpersuasive. Rather, the Court grants Mr. Harris’s requests, awards attorney’s fees, and refers Express to the Compliance Program for the imposition of penalties.

1 Claim History

Mr. Harris’s proof

Mr. Harris worked for Express, a staffing agency, and was placed at Crescent Brands, LLC, where he worked as an anodizing technician.

On October 14, 2025, he was working in an area designated for anodizing personnel only. On the instruction of his direct supervisor, Anthony Buck, Mr. Harris checked the plumbing in a lower-level dye tank that he had cleaned and repaired earlier in the day.

Mr. Harris then returned to the raised catwalk in his normal work area. Once there, his role was to observe automated, unmanned cranes and ensure they functioned properly. He looked down into the tank, checking from that viewpoint whether the plumbing in the tank was working.

Suddenly a crane carrying a rack rolled toward his back. When he looked up and turned around, one of the crane’s hooks pressed forcefully into his ribs, pushing and pinning his body against the dye tank. Mr. Harris said he had little time to react, but he moved his arms to prevent a worse injury.

The crane was in automated mode and should not have been moving, he explained. The crane was supposed to be positioned in front of him, according to Mr. Harris. He said, “I did everything that was asked of me that day.” He also said that if he had known the crane was moving, he would not have looked down into the tank when he did.

Mr. Harris said he was written up for attendance early in his employment with Express/Crescent Brands but never for job performance. He never went to any location on the plant where he was not permitted to be. Mr. Harris said his initial training largely consisted of watching a PowerPoint presentation about topics such as wearing personal protective equipment.

As for Mr. Harris’s drug use, Express pointed to three separate post-accident drug-test results showing THC in his system. The records say “pos” for THC but do not suggest an amount. Mr. Harris acknowledged the results and testified that “in late September” about two weeks before the accident, he consumed a THC edible at home. Mr. Harris emphasized that he has never gone to work under the influence of

2 drugs or alcohol and his consumption of the edible had no effect on him becoming injured.

Mr. Harris additionally said no one explained the consequences of failing a drug test and specifically that it could affect his eligibility for workers’ compensation. He learned of this after the accident. Mr. Harris agreed that he knew any drug use was prohibited for employment with a member of the Drug-Free Workplace Program.

He could not recall getting any documentation that Express is a member of the Drug-Free Workplace Program at the time of hire. Mr. Harris likewise did not recall knowing that it is a member or signing a document pledging to abstain from drugs. Mr. Harris said he was drug-tested when he started at Express. He could not recall any training on the Drug-Free Workplace Program—its requirements or why it was implemented.

Mr. Harris testified that his mental health currently is “not what I want it to be, honestly.” He easily “gets overwhelmed” with his children, a toddler and an infant, and he becomes winded quickly on any physical exertion.

He requested that Express give him panels for the other three referrals: pulmonology, neurology, and mental-health; reinstate treatment with Dr. Fish and temporary disability benefits; and award attorney’s fees.

Express’s proof

Express offered the testimony of two Crescent Brands employees, Joe Gunnels and Ronnie Loftus, neither of whom witnessed the accident but assisted Mr. Harris until emergency medical services arrived.

Mr. Gunnels, plant manager, explained that the cranes have an “operational side,” so anodyzers can manually operate them, and a “nonoperational side” with no controls. Mr. Gunnels testified that the accident occurred on the “nonoperational side” of the crane, where Mr. Harris was not supposed to be. Anodyzers are supposed to stay on the operational side, and this would be conveyed during training. He did not know why Mr. Harris was in that location before the accident and said it was “unsafe.”

Anodyzers should be aware of the cranes’ movement at all times, Mr. Gunnels said. When an anodyzer is watching the cranes, they should do no other tasks at the 3 same time. To clarify, anodyzers perform other tasks beside observing the cranes— but they should not attempt to do both at the same time.

Training at Crescent Brands is not in the classroom. Rather, Mr. Gunnels stated that all new employees receive “hands-on training,” meaning they observe an individual coworker performing the actual job and then do the task themselves. It typically takes about two months to learn the anodyzer job.

Mr. Buck and Mr. Loftus trained Mr. Harris. Mr. Gunnels agreed it was “fair” to say that, despite “corporate oversight,” in practice, decisions might be made within the plant that do not comply with corporate vision. Mr. Gunnels had no “reason to believe” that Mr. Harris “willfully” went against the job rules to repair the tank. Further, no policy prohibits an anodyzer from having his back to the crane. Mr. Gunnels could not recall if he saw Mr. Harris before the accident on the day of injury.

As for Mr. Loftus, he is an anodyzer and lab tech, who said that on the date of the accident, the cranes were operating “normal[ly].” Cranes are switched into nonoperational mode when an anodyzer is checking the rack to inspect its color, he explained. Mr. Loftis said Mr. Harris should have been on the control side to check the rack, which is company “policy.”

In addition to the witnesses, Express offered proof of its participation in the Drug-Free Workplace Program. It submitted a copy of an application and a July 2025 memo from the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation confirming its acceptance into the program. The memo contains a disclaimer: “By accepting this application the State of Tennessee is not certifying the accuracy or completeness of either your application or your Drug-Free Workplace Program.”

Medical proof

Immediately after the accident, Mr. Harris was intubated and life-flighted to a hospital, where he underwent level-one trauma treatment for “polytrauma, respiratory failure.” He sustained multiple rib fractures and small bilateral pneumothoraxes. He was discharged on October 16.

On October 19, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2026 TN WC 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-jessie-v-express-employment-professionals-tennworkcompcl-2026.