Hughes v. Dakota Mill & Grain

959 N.W.2d 903, 2021 S.D. 31
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 2021
Docket29091
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 959 N.W.2d 903 (Hughes v. Dakota Mill & Grain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. Dakota Mill & Grain, 959 N.W.2d 903, 2021 S.D. 31 (S.D. 2021).

Opinion

#29091-a-DG 2021 S.D. 31

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

**** TAYLOR HUGHES, Claimant and Appellee,

v.

DAKOTA MILL AND GRAIN, INC. and DAKOTA TRUCK UNDERWRITERS, Employer, Insurer and Appellants.

****

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT HUGHES COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE CHRISTINA L. KLINGER Judge

BRAD J. LEE of Beardsley, Jensen & Lee, Prof. PLLC Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for claimant and appellee.

CHARLES A. LARSON LAURA K. HENSLEY of Boyce Law Firm, LLP Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for employer, insurer, and appellants.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS APRIL 20, 2020 OPINION FILED 05/12/21 #29091

GILBERTSON, Retired Chief Justice

[¶1.] Taylor Hughes filed a workers’ compensation claim for an alleged

work-related back injury. The Department of Labor (Department) denied his claim

because he failed to meet his burden of proof. The circuit court reversed the

Department’s decision. It held Hughes was entitled to recover for his injury. The

employer and its insurer appeal. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶2.] Hughes worked various construction and heavy labor jobs from the

time he left high school in ninth grade (2004) until his employment with Dakota

Mill & Grain in 2017. In 2010, he began having back pain after three years of doing

general construction and operating heavy machinery for Rose Construction.

Hughes testified that he became aware of his first back injury after he woke up one

morning and experienced serious back pain. For this injury, he saw a doctor after a

few weeks when the pain started radiating down his left leg. In January 2011,

Hughes had a lumbar microdiscectomy. He had to have another microdiscectomy in

August 2011, because a painful cyst grew over the site of the first surgery.

[¶3.] Hughes reported that he experienced no back problems after the

second surgery. However, his medical records reflected that he had an injection in

August 2012 for pain in his back and left leg, and he refilled his hydrocodone

prescription periodically in 2012 and 2013. Hughes was also electrocuted on a job in

2014 and reported some temporary back pain from the incident. Hughes testified

that he had no real symptoms from 2014 to 2017 but would occasionally slow down

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at work to avoid another back injury when his left leg or toes would start feeling

numb.

[¶4.] Hughes completed a physical before starting work with Dakota Mill &

Grain in 2017. During the physical, he reported no symptoms, and the examining

doctor approved Hughes to work with no restrictions. Hughes’s job with Dakota

Mill & Grain involved heavy labor, including: unloading trucks, dumping grain into

grain bins or train cars, maintaining belts and equipment, pouring concrete,

landscaping, and performing other activities as needed. During the two weeks

leading up to the at-issue incident, Hughes was removing a concrete floor in order to

move pipes underground. To complete the project, Hughes used a concrete saw,

jackhammer, and a Bobcat.

[¶5.] Hughes claimed that on Thursday, June 22, 2017, as he was finishing

the project, he exited the Bobcat and fell, feeling a pain in his back. He testified

that the Bobcat jostles a person around because it has no shock absorbers. Hughes

told his supervisor, Jeremy Hand, and the office manager, Brittany Huber, that he

was sore and requested to take some time off to recuperate. He went home for a few

hours then felt well enough to return to work and performed light-duty work for the

remainder of the day. That day, Hughes did not document the injury or seek

medical attention. The following day, he did light-duty work for a full 9.5-hour day

and then took the weekend off. He attended Oahe Days in Pierre that weekend,

listening to the bands and watching the rodeo. He testified that his soreness

increased over the weekend, but not greatly.

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[¶6.] On Monday, June 26, Hughes woke up and got ready for work. He

testified that around 7 a.m. he tried to get off his couch and his legs collapsed.

Hughes claimed the pain prohibited him from getting up, and he had to call his

mother to take him to the emergency room. The emergency room record contains

Hughes’s statement of the events but does not mention that he fell out of the

Bobcat. It also reflects the date his pain started as June 26.

[¶7.] An MRI reflected a herniated disc creating a bulge in his lower back.

To treat the pain, he received multiple steroid injections in his spine. He also

received physical therapy and medications, with surgery being a future option.

Hughes testified that his pain was in a similar area as his 2010 and 2011 pain, but

the at-issue pain radiates with more intensity, and he now feels pain in both his

right and left leg. On June 29, Hughes filed a report of injury with Dakota Mill &

Grain and made a workers’ compensation claim.

[¶8.] Hughes consulted Dr. James MacDougall in July 2017 and October

2017. Dr. MacDougall compared Hughes’s MRIs from 2011 and 2012 to his 2017

MRI. He found that the MRIs showed an increased herniation at L4-5 in Hughes’s

spine. In his deposition, Dr. MacDougall testified that Hughes’s pain in one leg

changing to pain in both his legs offered more indication of the injury’s occurrence

than the slight change in the MRIs. He also stated that the type of work Hughes

had been performing supported that work activities could have caused the injury.

Dr. MacDougall based his opinion on Hughes’s recitation of the events, Hughes

being asymptomatic prior to employment at Dakota Mill, and Hughes’s medical

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records. His overall opinion was that “work could be considered a major

contributing factor in this current problem.”

[¶9.] Dr. Grant Shumaker examined Hughes and his medical records on

behalf of Dakota Mill & Grain and its insurer, Dakota Truck Underwriters

(collectively Dakota Mill). Dr. Shumaker based his opinion on Hughes’s reported

pain symptoms beginning June 26, whereas Dr. MacDougall relied on Hughes’s

symptoms starting June 22. Dr. Shumaker concluded that work was not clearly a

major contributing factor of Hughes’s injury, because he believed Hughes’s story

differed from the documentation of his injury and his medical records. However, he

stated that work activities “may have been a contributing cause, but I can’t say that

they were the major contributing cause given his story.” He noted the change in

Hughes’s MRIs between 2012 and 2017 could show a natural progression of a

degenerative back condition rather than a specific injury. Dr. Shumaker could not

say with medical certainty which caused Hughes’s injury.

[¶10.] After a hearing, the Department concluded that Hughes had not

proven by a preponderance of the evidence that his disability “was caused by a work

place injury” and that his work activities were “a major contributing cause” of his

disability. The Department found that Hughes’s version of the events was not

credible in comparison to the medical records. It also rejected Dr. MacDougall’s

opinion because it was based on Hughes’s version of events and was not persuasive.

The Department determined that other factors contributed to Hughes’s injury so

that Hughes’s work activities could not qualify as a “cause which cannot be

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Bluebook (online)
959 N.W.2d 903, 2021 S.D. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-dakota-mill-grain-sd-2021.