Henrico County School Board v. Etter

552 S.E.2d 372, 36 Va. App. 437, 2001 Va. App. LEXIS 519
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 25, 2001
Docket1317002
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 552 S.E.2d 372 (Henrico County School Board v. Etter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henrico County School Board v. Etter, 552 S.E.2d 372, 36 Va. App. 437, 2001 Va. App. LEXIS 519 (Va. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

CLEMENTS, Judge.

Henrico County School Board (employer) appeals an award by the Workers’ Compensation Commission (commission) of temporary total disability benefits to Cathy Mae Etter (claimant) upon her change-in-condition application. Employer contends the award is unsupported by the evidence. 1 Finding no error by the commission, we affirm the award.

*441 To prevail on her change in condition application, claimant had to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that she suffered an incapacity to work that was causally related to the October 11, 1996 compensable injury she suffered while working for employer. See King’s Market v. Porter, 227 Va. 478, 488, 317 S.E.2d 146, 148 (1984); Rossello v. K-Mart Corp., 15 Va.App. 333, 335, 423 S.E.2d 214, 216 (1992). In reviewing the commission’s decision, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to claimant, the party prevailing before the commission. See Allen & Rocks, Inc. v. Briggs, 28 Va.App. 662, 672, 508 S.E.2d 335, 340 (1998).

So viewed, the evidence established that claimant, who had previously undergone surgery on her right knee in March 1995, suffered a compensable injury to her right knee on October 11,1996, while driving a school bus for employer. Dr. Frederick S. Fogelson operated on her knee in November 1996, and claimant returned to work on December 2, 1996. Pursuant to an award of the commission, employer paid claimant temporary total disability benefits for the period October 11,1996 through December 1,1996.

Claimant continued to work as a school bus driver until she moved to Chesterfield County in January 1997. There, she worked approximately once a week as a house cleaner and provided childcare for at most two children during the summers. The problems with her right knee, claimant testified, never went away after the November 1996 surgery. She continued to experience ongoing pain. She saw Dr. Fogelson on March 6, 1997, complaining of pain and buckling in her knee after going up and down the steps in her home. She received additional medical treatment for her knee in June 1997 and October 1997, respectively.

Following Dr. Fogelson’s retirement, claimant came under the care of Dr. William E. Nordt, III. On July 29, 1998, Dr. Nordt examined claimant, who complained of persistent knee pain, and diagnosed her with early degenerative disease of the right knee. On August 18,1998, Dr. Nordt performed arthroscopic surgery on claimant’s right knee. On September 2, *442 1998, Dr. Nordt wrote that claimant’s knee condition was a continuation of her previous compensable industrial injury. On October 12, 1998, responding to a questionnaire from claimant’s counsel, Dr. Nordt wrote:

Patient’s arthroscopic findings indicated a problem that was primarily degenerative in nature. An acute injury, such as that occurring in [sic] 10/11/96, could have exacerbated this condition.

On February 23, 1999, the first operation and subsequent physical therapy having failed to relieve claimant’s condition, Dr. Nordt performed another arthroscopic surgery on claimant’s right knee. On June 8, 1999, in response to another questionnaire from claimant’s counsel, Dr. Nordt indicated that claimant’s October 11, 1996 accident aggravated, accelerated, or exacerbated an underlying condition and that that aggravation, acceleration, or exacerbation resulted in or contributed to her need for surgery on August 18, 1998 and February 23,1999, respectively.

When asked at his deposition on June 28, 1999, about the differences between the responses he gave in the two questionnaires, Dr. Nordt acknowledged that, after the first arthroscopic surgery, he had some doubt about the causal relationship between claimant’s current condition and her industrial injury. He confirmed his opinion that claimant’s condition was primarily degenerative in nature. He admitted, however, that he struggled with the question of “to what degree the problem [was] chronic, degenerative in nature and to what degree one can expect this to be acute, the result of an injury.” The question, Dr. Nordt conceded, was “almost too difficult to know.”

Dr. Nordt went on to say in his deposition, however, that, after the second surgery, he “firmed [his] opinion” about the causal contribution of claimant’s work-related injury to her symptoms and need for the surgeries. Dr. Nordt opined that the industrial “accident probably contributed to the minutest degree” to claimant’s need for the August 1998 and February 1999 surgeries. Claimant’s symptoms, Dr. Nordt stated, *443 made the surgeries necessary. Dr. Nordt explained his use of the phrase “to the minutest degree” to describe the industrial accident’s causal connection with claimant’s current condition, as follows:

[Claimant’s counsel] discussed [the second questionnaire] with me and talked a little bit about Virginia law and asked if he were able to ... use the term “contribute,” is what seems to have stuck out in my mind anyway, the term he used ... and what I agreed with was “even one iota,” can we say with a degree of medical certainty that these conditions were related, and having put it in sort of that minute of category, my answer to that would be yes.

It was, Dr. Nordt testified, “to that degree, that one iota, that minute degree” that he answered the questions on the second questionnaire. Dr. Nordt confirmed that his June 8, 1999 responses to the second questionnaire still accurately reflected his opinion.

Claimant filed a change-in-condition application with the commission on August 27, 1998, seeking temporary total disability benefits for the periods July 29, 1998 through November 15,1998, and February 8,1999 through May 9,1999. The commission found, based on the uncontradicted opinion of Dr. Nordt, that claimant met her burden of proving that her August 18, 1998 and February 23, 1999 surgeries and the associated recovery periods during which she was disabled from working constituted a change in condition causally related to her October 11, 1996 industrial injury. Accordingly, the commission awarded claimant temporary total benefits for August 18, 1998 through October 12, 1998, and February 8, 1999 through April 12,1999.

Appealing from that award, employer contends claimant failed to prove that her 1996 work-related injury causally contributed to her need to have the 1998 and 1999 operations. We disagree.

The commission’s determination of causation is a finding of fact. American Filtrona Co. v. Hanford, 16 Va. App. 159, 165, 428 S.E.2d 511, 515 (1993). The factual findings *444 of the commission are conclusive and binding on appeal if supported by credible evidence in the record. Southern Iron Works, Inc. v. Wallace, 16 Va.App.

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Bluebook (online)
552 S.E.2d 372, 36 Va. App. 437, 2001 Va. App. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henrico-county-school-board-v-etter-vactapp-2001.