Hutchings v. Labor Commission

2016 UT App 160, 378 P.3d 1273, 818 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 169, 2016 WL 4074005
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 29, 2016
Docket20150429-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2016 UT App 160 (Hutchings v. Labor Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchings v. Labor Commission, 2016 UT App 160, 378 P.3d 1273, 818 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 169, 2016 WL 4074005 (Utah Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

ROTH, Judge‘

T1 Kayla Hutchmgs seeks review of the Labor Commission's (the Gommlsswn) deci- - sion to deny her claim for permanent total disability. We declme to dlsturb the Commxs— sion's dec151on |

. BACKGROUND

2 In August 2008, Hutchings was employed by the Washington County School District as a cafeteria worker, One day in late August, she and a coworker were loading boxes of food into the school's walk-in freezer. After continuously lifting and loading boxes that weighed up to forty pounds for about half an. hour, Hutchings and her coworker had to lift a box that weighed approximately eighty pounds onto a shelf in the freezer. When Hutchings pushed the box onto the shelf, she experienced a sudden pain in her back and immediately felt sick to her stomach, Subsequently, Hutchings refrained from tasks that required ber to bend and lift.

13 Hutchings, however, did not miss any work due to the incident, and she did not immediately seek medical attention for pain that may have resulted from it, Nor did she mention the incident or any back or leg pain during a November 2008 appointment with Dr. Britt, a WorkMed physician, regarding *1276 another accident she also suffered while at work-a steam burn on her arm. Instead, Hutchings first reported to a medical professional that she was suffering from low back or radicular leg pain in December 2008 during the course of an annual visit to her primary care physician, Dr. Staheli. Dr. Staheli ordered an MRI of her lumbar spine, which showed that Hutchings suffered from degenerative disc disease on multiple spinal levels as well as other degenerative phenomena in her lower back.

{4 Shortly after the MRI was completed, the school's principal referred Hutchings to WorkMed for her low back and leg pain. At this second WorkMed appointment, Dr. Britt noted that Hutchings reported "[nlo specific trauma" but indicated that at the first of the school year there was always heavy lifting required; he also noted that Hutchings's pain began around that time and that her pain had "to be work related." He indicated that the pain had worsened within the four weeks preceding the appointment and that she had had no medical treatment for the problem until her Detember appointment with Dr. Staheli. Dr. Britt diagnosed Huteh-ings with lower back pain and a dise extrusion. He referred Hutchings to Dr. Snook, a neurosurgeon, but he otherwise released her back to work with modified duty.

T5 Dr. Snook diagnosed Hutchings with degenerative disc disease as well as nerve-root compression from a cyst in her lower back. In February 2009, he performed surgery to decompress the affected nerve root. He noted that while there had been "some suggestion" prior to surgery that a herniated dise in Hutchings's lower back was also compressing the nerve root, during surgery he found the dise at issue to be "flat," with no sign that it was compressing on the nerve root. Consequently, he performed no dise surgery. >

16 While the surgery initially alleviated Hutchings's pain, by June 2009, Hutchings had again seen both Dr. Staheli and Dr. Snook, complaining that her leg and back pain had returned. From this point forward, Hutchings continued to experience lower back and radicular leg pain and she tried many treatments, including epidural shots and electrotherapy. In May 2012, she sought another opinion by Dr. Major, who diagnosed her with a degenerative vertebral condition and joint disease in her lower back, though he was uncertain regarding the exact source of her pain. He opined that Hutchings needed a "2-level spinal fusion" to relieve her symptoms.

T7 In January 2012, Hutchings filed an application for a hearing with the Commission to determine whether she was entitled to disability compensation due to the accident that occurred at the end of August 2008. After an evidentiary hearing, the administrative law judge (the ALJ) determined in an August 2018 decision that at the time of her accident, Hutchings had been suffering from a preexisting degenerative back condition, The ALJ noted that because of the preexisting condition, Hutchings was required to show not just that the injury "ar[ose] out of and in the course of [her] employment," see Utah Code Ann,. § 34A-2-410 (LexisNexis 2015), but "that the work exertion at the time of the accident was unusual or extraordinary as compared to the exertions of nonemployment life," see Allen v. Industrial Comm'n, 729 P.2d 15, 26 (Utah 1986) ("[Where the claimant suffers from a preexisting condition which contributes to the "injury, an unusual or extraordinary exertion is required to prove legal causation."). The ALJ ther concluded that Hutchings's exertion was not unusual under the cireumstances, and as a result, Hutchings had failed to establish legal causation.

18 Hutchings sought review by the Commission of the ALJ's order denying her benefits. The Commission determined that "[wJhile there is evidence of pre-existing degenerative changes in Ms. Hutehings's lumbar spine, the record does not clearly show that she suffered from a pre-existing condition that contributed to her work injury." It therefore concluded that, contrary to the ALJ's determination, "the more stringent standard of legal causation does not apply to Ms. Hutchings's claim." Instead, the Commission determined that under the less stringent standard, legal causation was established by the evidence before the ALJ. The Commission then decided that there was a *1277 conflict in the medical opinions over whether her work accident was the medical cause of her "current low-back condition" and that the issue of medical causation should be referred to a medical panel. Accordingly, the Commission set aside the ALJ's order and remanded the case "for consideration of the medical cause of Ms. Hutchings's current low-back problems with the participation of an impartial medical panel qualified to assess her condition." ©

T9 The ALJ then instructed the medical panel that it was to answer three related questions: |

Is there any medically demonstrable causal connection between [Hutchings's] low back condition and the industrial accident which occurred in August 20087?
Please state the percentage of whole person impairment, if any, sustained by [Hutchings] as a result of the medical problem caused by the industrial accident.
Please identify any medical or functional capacity limitations which apply to [Huteh-ings] and specifically indicatel ] whether the limitation is a result of injury sustained in the August 2008 industrial accident.

The medical panel ultimately concluded that there was no medically demonstrable causal connection between the August 2008 accident and Hutchings's low back condition, and as a consequence, the accident itself did not result in any impairment or cause any "functional capacity limitations." |

10 The panel reasoned that Hutchings's history of "four medical encounters for low back pain ... beginning 20 months before the alleged injury," with the last one "only 20 days prior" to the event itself, indicated "significant lumbar degenerative.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 UT App 160, 378 P.3d 1273, 818 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 169, 2016 WL 4074005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchings-v-labor-commission-utahctapp-2016.