Howard Industries, Inc. v. Satcher

183 So. 3d 907, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 1, 2016 WL 46539
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 2016
DocketNo. 2014-WC-01750-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 183 So. 3d 907 (Howard Industries, Inc. v. Satcher) 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
Howard Industries, Inc. v. Satcher, 183 So. 3d 907, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 1, 2016 WL 46539 (Mich. 2016).

Opinion

BARNES, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1; Howard Industries Inc. (Howard Industries) appeals the Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Commission (Commission) order, which affirmed the administrative judge’s (AJ) award of permanent total disability benefits to Bennie Satcher. The sole issue before the AJ was the extent of the loss of wage-earning capacity attributable to Satchér’s work-connected injury. We find no error with the Commission’s ruling and affirm.'

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. On December 8, 2011, Satcher filed a petition to controvert, stating he injured his neck,, shoulder, and arm while lifting and pulling at his welding-job at Howard Industries on September 15, -2010. At the time of the injury, Satcher was forty-eight years old. He has resided at the same address in Heidelberg, Mississippi, for nearly his entire life. He completed the eleventh, grade but never received his high-school diploma. Satcher has no other formal education.

¶ 3. After his injury, Satcher received treatment from several physicians. Satcher saw Dr. Jack McHenry, his family physician, after injuring his neck at.work in September 2010. Dr. McHenry referred him to Dr. David Malloy. In March 2011, an MRI showed a herniated cervical disc. Dr. Malloy tried to treat Satcher conserva-: tively with physical therapy. In February 2012, Dr. Rahul Vohra performed an independent medical examination on Satcher, and referred him to Dr. Jack Moriarity. In July 2012, Dr. Moriarity performed a cervical fusion on Satcher.

¶4. On February 11, 2013, Dr. Vohra determined Satcher had reached maximum medical improvement (MMI), and assessed permanent work restrictions in accordance with Satcher’s functional-capacity evalúa[910]*910tion (FCE). Satcher was released to do medium-duty work, and limited to the rare lifting of no greater than forty pounds. Dr. Vohra assigned an eleven-percent impairment rating to Satcher’s body as a whole as a result of his work injury and surgery. Satcher testified that he takes Lortab and Percocet up to three times a day for pain. Satcher attempted to return to his welding job in April 2013, but he could not tolerate wearing his required protective face shield due to neck pain. Because of the pain, Satcher was medically restricted from work as a welder, and Howard Industries did not offer him any other employment.1

- ¶-5. In May 2013, Howard Industries retained Brawner & Associates (Brawner), a vocational-services company, to evaluate Satcher for post-injury employability and wage-earning capacity. Satcher testified that he had previously worked as a floor hand, derrickhand, and roughneck on oil-drilling rigs, a welder for other companies, a. concrete-sidewalk finisher for the City of Laurel, and in' the maintenance department at Sanderson Farms. However, all of these jobs required- him to lift more than forty pounds. Previously, Satcher had a commercial driver’s license, but it was. suspended because of his failure to pay child support.

¶ 6. Angela Malone, a vocational counsel- or with Brawner, testified at Satcher’s AJ hearing and'was recognized as an expert in vocátional rehabilitation. ‘ In November 2013, after a' personal interview with' Satcher, Malone found him employable based on his physical capabilities and FCE. Earlier that year, in July and August, Brawner had begun sending Satcher’s attorney employment suggestions within Satcher’s physical capabilities. Satcher waited until October to begin applying to some of these jobs, but never found employment. Malone tendered approximately twenty-six jobs to Satcher, including work as a salesperson, delivery person, auto salesperson, dispatcher, hotel desk clerk, and oil-lube technician — all jobs for which Satcher had no experience. Malone testified that it was her opinion Satcher was capable of earning $10.93 an hour in the qpen labor market,2

¶ 7. One of the jobs Satcher had applied for through the WIN Job Center in Laurel was reemployment at Howard Industries. Isaac Garrison, human-resources manager for Howard Industries, testified that he received Satcher’s application from the center a few weeks prior to Satcher’s AJ hearing. Garrison noticed on Satcher’s new application that he had previously been convicted of aggravated assault. Since 2007, it has been Howard Industries’ policy to prohibit the hiring of individuals convicted of certain violent crimes, including aggravated assault. When Garrison checked Satcher’s original employment application from 2008, he discovered Satcher had stated that he pleaded guilty to a crime, but he did not specify which crime. Garrison admitted that Howard Industries failed to investigate the issue in 2008, and Satcher had been allowed to work there for four years in violation of the company’s policy. It is unclear from the record, but at some point either before or after this discovery, Satcher was terminated from Howard Industries. Satcher had not secured or maintained full-time employment [911]*911since he reached MMI on February 1, 2013.3

¶ 8. In March 2014, after a hearing on the matter, the AJ found that Satcher had a total loss of wage-earning capacity due to his work-connected injury on September 15, 2010. Satcher was awarded total disability benefits of $422.31 per week for 450 weeks beginning on the date of the injury. Satcher was also awarded all medical services and supplies for his recovery under the statutory medical-fee schedule. The AJ considered Satcher’s age, education, permanent work restrictions, the testimony of Malone, the FCE, loss of access to the job market, Sateher’s geographic location, his past work experience, his incapacity to return to his past jobs, his reasonable but unsuccessful job search, and his lack of computer, clerical, or sales experience. The AJ also noted that Howard Industries did not reemploy Satcher because it contended he falsified his 2008 employment application; yet, when Satcher was initially hired, it did not question his omission of the aggravated-assault charge.

¶ 9. In November 2014, the Commission, in a vote of two to one, affirmed the order of the AJ and incorporated her findings. It also provided additional analysis to support its decision. Satcher’s hourly wage at the time of his injury was $12.98, or $519.20 per week, but the parties stipulated to an average weekly wage of $837.09, meaning Satcher consistently earned $317.89 per week in overtime. Testimony from Malone indicated Satcher had a sixty percent loss of access to the job market but he would be competing with individuals with a high-school diploma or higher. Also noted was the fact Howard Industries did not offer Satcher another job within. his physical restrictions. Rather than retain Satcher in “some accommodated capacity,” Howard Industries hired vocational experts to find other jobs for him. The Commission stated:

Considering the Employer’s refusal to mitigate its exposure in this case by retaining the Claimant in a different position within his restrictions, the Commission finds that the weight of the vocational experts’ opinions that appear to contradict that of the other is less compelling and carries less weight than the Claimant’s valid, unsuccessful job search. The Employer has essentially taken the position that the Claimant is not disabled and can work, just not for the Employer.

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Bluebook (online)
183 So. 3d 907, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 1, 2016 WL 46539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-industries-inc-v-satcher-miss-2016.