Holloway, Christopher v. Natchez Trace Youth Academy

2024 TN WC 1
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedJanuary 29, 2024
Docket2023-07-2338
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 TN WC 1 (Holloway, Christopher v. Natchez Trace Youth Academy) 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
Holloway, Christopher v. Natchez Trace Youth Academy, 2024 TN WC 1 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

FILED Jan 29, 2024 12:03 PM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

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

CHRISTOPHER HOLLOWAY, ) Docket No.: 2023-07-2338 Employee, ) v. ) ) NATCHEZ TRACE YOUTH ) State File No. 94215-2021 ACADEMY ) Employer, ) And ) Judge Robert Durham ) AIU INSURANCE CO., ) Insurance Carrier. )

COMPENSATION ORDER GRANTING BENEFITS

The Court held a Compensation Hearing on January 4, 2024, to determine the appropriate impairment rating for Mr. Holloway’s permanent disability and his entitlement to increased benefits. Mr. Holloway contended his benefits should be based on an impairment that includes left-knee arthritis, not just a meniscal tear, and that he could not return to work. The Court holds the appropriate rating is one percent based on the meniscal tear only and that Mr. Holloway is entitled to increased benefits.

History of Claim

Mr. Holloway, age 47 with a high school education, suffered a left-knee injury while breaking up a fight between two teens on December 15, 2021. He received unauthorized emergency room care that day. The history revealed that Mr. Holloway said he had knee pain for two or three months, but the incident caused his pain to worsen. X-rays revealed “tricompartmental joint space narrowing and osteophyte spurring.” He was returned to work but also was advised to follow up with an orthopedist.

Mr. Holloway then received authorized treatment on February 24, 2022, at a walk- in clinic. X-rays showed “mild tricompartmental arthritis.” He eventually had an MRI that

1 showed a “loose body” in the back of the medial compartment as well as a cartilage deficit.

Natchez Trace then authorized treatment with orthopedic surgeon Dr. Kyle Stephens, who saw Mr. Holloway in April. Dr. Stephens noted Mr. Holloway was deaf, making communication difficult. X-rays again identified “mild” patellofemoral and medial joint arthritis.

When conservative treatment failed, Dr. Stephens surgically repaired a torn meniscus, removed the loose body, and smoothed out unstable cartilage. During surgery, he observed areas of full cartilage loss in both the patellofemoral and medial compartments.

Dr. Stephens felt Mr. Holloway recovered well, and he released him to return to work without restrictions in October. He placed Mr. Holloway at maximum medical improvement and assigned a one percent impairment for the meniscal tear only on January 3, 2023.

Dr. Stephens testified that the meniscal tear and the loose chondral body were primarily due to the fall at work. He also attributed some of the “rough” cartilage edges he smoothed out to the injury. Further, he unequivocally said the injury “contributed more than fifty percent to the aggravation of [Mr. Holloway’s] pre-existing arthritis.” Still, he awarded an impairment for the meniscal tear only because he believed that the “bone on bone” arthritis existed before the injury based on the x-rays, MRI, and his observations during surgery. Thus, he believed that an impairment for arthritis, as well as any further treatment for it, would not be work-related.

Given Dr. Stephens’s opinion, Mr. Holloway’s counsel obtained an evaluation from orthopedic surgeon Dr. Lawrence Schrader. Dr. Schrader believed that all, or at least most, of Mr. Holloway’s arthritis is “post-meniscectomy or post-traumatic.” He based this belief on Mr. Holloway’s assertion that he was asymptomatic before the fall and on the immediate post-injury x-ray reports. He conceded that the reports showed Mr. Holloway had some preexisting arthritis, but he discounted this fact because they defined the arthritis as “mild.” He contrasted these findings with Dr. Stephens’s surgical findings of severe arthritis some months later, which corroborated his own x-ray findings. He also found it significant that Mr. Holloway had more cartilage in his uninjured right knee than the left, again suggesting the arthritis was post-traumatic and not simply degenerative.

Dr. Schrader felt that Mr. Holloway’s cartilage loss due to arthritis significantly worsened in the months-long interval between his fall and surgery. He also believed that the meniscectomy and chondroplasty further damaged the cartilage. Thus, he was confident in saying the injury primarily caused Mr. Holloway’s arthritis and assigned a seven percent impairment rating.

Because of the differing opinions, the parties agreed to use the Medical Impairment

2 Rating Registry and agreed for orthopedic surgeon Dr. Kurtis Kowalski to give an impairment opinion. Dr. Kowalski did not believe the injury primarily caused the arthritis, nor did he believe the chondroplasty contributed to it. He based this belief on the post- injury x-ray findings of arthritis and on the fact that the meniscal repair did not temporarily alleviate Mr. Holloway’s symptoms, as it should have if the arthritis developed post- traumatically. He also found it significant that arthritis was in all three knee compartments and was “end-stage” in both the patellofemoral and the medial. He said if trauma had primarily caused the arthritis, it would only be severe in the medial compartment where the tear occurred.

Dr. Kowalski said the injury “got the ball rolling” as to Mr. Holloway’s symptoms, but he maintained that the aggravation was only an increase in pain. He said the arthritis itself preexisted the injury, which differed from Dr. Schrader’s opinion. Thus, he agreed with Dr. Stephens as to the arthritis and assessed a one percent impairment based only on the meniscal tear.

He explained that Natchez Trace is a school and home for troubled teenage boys. His job required him to monitor and control the boys’ behavior during school hours and he had to stand, climb stairs, and walk outside the building. He said he had no knee pain before the incident and believed the emergency room record stating otherwise was in error because he did not have an interpreter during that treatment.

He testified he worked nights while on light duty after his injury which allowed him to periodically check the rooms and then sit down. That allowed him to work because it required less walking and standing. After Dr. Stephens returned him to full duty on October 6, Natchez Trace offered to return him to work on the day shift. However, Mr. Holloway did not feel he could return to that job because of his knee, so he resigned without attempting the job. He admitted that he did not personally tell anyone at Natchez Trace he was resigning or ask if he could remain on the night shift. He also did not seek restrictions from Dr. Stephens.

He attempted to work for another employer in manufacturing as a machine operator in mid-August but only worked for a month, citing an inability to stand and walk for as long as the job required. He is currently monitoring students at a school for the deaf in Texas, where he can sit most of the time.

Other than the emergency room report, Natchez Trace offered no evidence that Mr. Holloway suffered from knee pain before his work injury. It also submitted no evidence that it could have offered accommodations for full duty work if Mr. Holloway had asked.

3 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

Mr. Holloway has the burden of proving the essential elements of his workers’ compensation claim by a preponderance of the evidence. Tenn. Code. Ann. 50-6-239(c)(6) (2023). In this case, the parties agreed on all issues but two—Mr. Holloway’s permanent disability from his work-related injury and his entitlement to increased benefits. Each issue shall be considered in turn.

Permanent Disability

In this case, the doctors all agreed that Mr. Holloway suffered a work-related meniscal tear in his left knee resulting in a permanent impairment and that he suffers from severe arthritis.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

§ 50-6-102
Tennessee § 50-6-102(12)(E)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 TN WC 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-christopher-v-natchez-trace-youth-academy-tennworkcompcl-2024.