Hopkins v. Harness Roofing, Inc.

2015 Ark. App. 62, 454 S.W.3d 751, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 4, 2015
DocketCV-14-655
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2015 Ark. App. 62 (Hopkins v. Harness Roofing, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Harness Roofing, Inc., 2015 Ark. App. 62, 454 S.W.3d 751, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 83 (Ark. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge

In this workers’ compensation case, appellant Joey Hopkins appeals the Commission’s findings that (1) denied his claim for additional medical treatment recommended by Dr. Christopher Arnold for an admittedly compensable September 16, 2010 right-knee injury, and (2) rejected his argument that the Commission is biased and its activities unconstitutional. The Commission affirmed and adopted the administrative law judge’s decision. 1 We reverse on point one, and we affirm on point two.

We first address the contention that the Commission’s decision to deny additional medical treatment is not supported by substantial evidence. Appellant, a man in his thirties, worked for Harness Roofing, Inc., for eleven years, and his last six years were served in the h capacity of foreman. It was undisputed that the appellant sustained a compensable injury to his right knee in 2007 and another compensable injury to his right knee in 2008. Both injuries were generally described as medial meniscus tears with effusion as well as a chondral injury. Dr. Terry Sites, an orthopedic surgeon, performed arthroscopic knee surgeries for both injuries. The evidence indicated that the appellant fully recovered from the 2007 and 2008 injuries (sometimes referred to herein as the “2007 injury” and the “2008 injury,” respectively.) On September 16, 2010, the appellant testified that as he was stepping to a higher elevation on the roof, he felt “a tear” and pain in his right knee (sometimes referred to herein as the “2010 injury.”) The injury was promptly reported to his employer.

The following day, the appellant presented to Dr. Corey Jackson for right-knee pain. The medical record dated September 17 provides in pertinent part that the appellant presented with increased pain in the right knee with positive effusion and limited range of motion on flexion. The physician prescribed an anti-inflammatory and a knee brace. The appellant returned to Dr. Jackson ten days later for a followup appointment. The medical record dated September 27 provides in pertinent part that the appellant’s knee was about twénty-five percent back to normal but that his knee was locking up maybe twenty times a day. The physician kept the appellant on the same treatment plan. The appellant returned to Dr. Jackson again three weeks later for a followup appointment. The medical record dated October 18 provides in pertinent part that the right-knee pain was about the same and that the appellant could do pretty well on flat ground but that the right knee was still locking up six or seven times a day. Dr. Jackson referred the appellant to an orthopedic surgeon.

D.Since the appellant was treated by Dr. Sites for both his 2007 and 2008 compensa-ble injuries, the appellant was referred to Dr. Sites for the 2010 injury. On November 3, 2010, the appellant was seen by Dr. Sites. The medical record dated November 3, 2010, provides in pertinent part that the appellant returned to the clinic after sustaining a new work injury. Dr. Sites noted that the appellant initially felt a sudden sharp pain in his right knee and then it locked and he was unable to fully extend it; that the appellant took some time off; and that Dr. Jackson had prescribed some anti-inflammatory medication, which helped. Dr. Sites noted:

Over the last couple of years until his most recent injury his knee has felt essentially normal to him.... He had previous significant chondral pathology and had been doing well until his more recent event[.]

After examination, Dr. Sites’s impression was right-knee pain, possible meniscal tear, loose body, progression of chondral injury or other. The surgeon prescribed conservative treatment, including continuing the NSAIDs and commencing a home-exercise program, and the appellant was advised to return in four weeks. Dr. Sites projected, “With ongoing difficulties at that time, I would recommend re-scoping his knee.” Dr. Sites wrote a report to Gallagher-Bassett, the third-party administrator for the appellee, repeating his findings and treatment plans.

The appellant returned to Dr. Sites for a follow-up on December 1, 2010. Following the appointment, Dr. Sites wrote another letter to Gallagher-Bassett. The letter provides in pertinent part that the appellant returned to the clinic that day and that his right knee was notj^improved, in spite of the use of anti-inflammatory medication. He was noted to have pain, catching, and intermittent locking. Dr. Sites then indicated to Gallagher-Bassett:

Given the mechanical symptoms of catching and lock, his failure to progress with rest, a home exercise program and anti-inflammatories it is medically indicated to proceed with right knee ar-throscopy. He may have sustained additional chondral inury to the knee, a meniscus tear, have loose bodies and/or others.... I will allow him to continue his current no [sic] regular work duties in anticipation of outpatient arthroscopy.

The same day, Dr. Sites filled out a workers’ compensation return-to-work form indicating the stipulated injury date of September 16, 2010, the type of surgery recommended as arthroscopy, and the date of surgery as “pending approval.” At the bottom of the office note record, a handwritten notation appears: Rt knee arthroscopy at Physician’s Specialty Hospital.

The appellant testified that after the December 3, 2010, office visit with Dr. Sites, he waited to receive approval for the arthroscopy from the appellee or Gallagher-Bassett. The appellant stated that he checked with his boss on three occasions for approval without obtaining any answer. Finally, around the first of the year after the holiday break, the appellant called the corporate office and spoke with Gail Zeers in Human Resources about his workers’ compensation claim and the request for approval for the surgery. Ms. Zeers placed a three-way call to Gallagher-Bassett. The participants to the call included the appellant, Ms. Zeers, and a representative of Gallagher-Bassett. At the conclusion of the three-way call, the representative of Gallagher-Bassett advised the appellant and Ms. Zeers that his request for surgery was “under review.”

Jane Tiffell testified that she was the local human resources representative for the appellee and that she was aware of the injury to the appellant that occurred in September |42010. Ms. Tiffell stated that it was the practice of the appellee to report all workers’ compensation claims to Gallagher-Bassett and that after the first report of injury was transmitted, the appel-lee did not participate in the claim at all. Instead, she said, all communication should be made directly with Gallagher-Bassett.

By May of 2011, the appellant still had not received an approval or refusal from the appellee or Gallagher-Bassett for the permission for the arthroscopic surgery submitted by Dr. Sites. The record is unclear if, or when, the appellee or Gallagher-Bassett actually refused the request for approval for the arthroscopic surgery. On May 27, 2011, the appellant voluntarily left the employment of the appellee to attend taxidermy school and pursue a career that was easier on his body. The appellant opened a taxidermy business in October 2011 and works on his father’s golf course during slow times.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 Ark. App. 62, 454 S.W.3d 751, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-harness-roofing-inc-arkctapp-2015.