In the Matter of the Worker's Compensation Claim Of: Christina S. Hirsch, an Employee of Border Foods, Inc. v. State of Wyoming ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety and Compensation Division

2014 WY 61
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 2014
DocketS-13-0162
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2014 WY 61 (In the Matter of the Worker's Compensation Claim Of: Christina S. Hirsch, an Employee of Border Foods, Inc. v. State of Wyoming ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety and Compensation Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In the Matter of the Worker's Compensation Claim Of: Christina S. Hirsch, an Employee of Border Foods, Inc. v. State of Wyoming ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety and Compensation Division, 2014 WY 61 (Wyo. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING

2014 WY 61

APRIL TERM, A.D. 2014

May 12, 2014

IN THE MATTER OF THE WORKER’S COMPENSATION CLAIM OF:

CHRISTINA S. HIRSCH, AN EMPLOYEE OF BORDER FOODS, INC.,

Appellant (Petitioner/Claimant), S-13-0162

v.

STATE OF WYOMING ex rel. WYOMING WORKERS’ SAFETY AND COMPENSATION DIVISION,

Appellee (Respondent/Objector).

Appeal from the District Court of Teton County The Honorable Timothy C. Day, Judge

Representing Appellant: Jack D. Edwards of Edwards Law Office, P.C., Etna, Wyoming

Representing Appellee: Peter K. Michael, Wyoming Attorney General; John D. Rossetti, Deputy Attorney General; Michael J. Finn, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Samantha Caselli, Assistant Attorney General

Before KITE, C.J., and HILL, DAVIS, and FOX, JJ., and WALDRIP, D.J. NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third. Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be made before final publication in the permanent volume. DAVIS, Justice.

[¶1] Appellant Christina Hirsch sought worker’s compensation benefits for back pain she believed was related to an earlier workplace accident. The Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) upheld the Wyoming Workers’ Safety and Compensation Division’s (Division) denial of temporary total disability and medical pay benefits, and the district court affirmed the OAH decision. Ms. Hirsch appeals to this Court, claiming that the OAH erred by failing to find a causal connection between the workplace accident and her delayed back pain.1 We affirm.

ISSUES

[¶2] While Ms. Hirsch raises several issues on appeal, we find the dispositive question to be whether there is substantial evidence to support the OAH’s denial of benefits before a remand from the district court for supplementation of the record. We therefore restate the controlling issue as follows:

Were the OAH’s Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence?

FACTS

[¶3] In 2003, Ms. Hirsch slipped while working for Taco Bell in Gillette, Wyoming. She felt immediate back pain and soon had numbness in her left leg, as well as urinary incontinence. As a result, an emergency laminotomy and discectomy were performed at the L5-S1 levels of Ms. Hirsch’s lumbar spine on November 6, 2003. The initial surgery alleviated her symptoms somewhat, but pain and incontinence returned soon thereafter, necessitating a follow-up procedure on March 26, 2004. After her second surgery, Ms. Hirsch was pain-free and had no problems with bladder control.

[¶4] In August of 2004, Ms. Hirsch again fell at work and strained her back. Although she experienced lower back pain, she had neither numbness nor loss of bladder control. A Wyoming worker’s compensation claim was opened and benefits were awarded. Ms. Hirsch participated in physical therapy throughout the remainder of 2004.

[¶5] Things were going well until she slipped and fell again while leaving work on December 20, 2004. According to a physician’s note reflecting a visit two days later, Ms.

1 Ms. Hirsch presents additional arguments that the OAH erred in its analysis of evidence used to supplement the record after remand from the district court. The supplemented evidence was proffered by the Division and provides further support for the denial of Ms. Hirsch’s claim. We need not address these arguments because we find that the initial OAH order was supported by substantial evidence, irrespective of the evidence with which the record was supplemented. See Fieseler v. State ex rel. Wyoming Workers’ Safety & Comp. Div., 2013 WY 116, ¶ 14 n.3, 309 P.3d 1233, 1236 n.3 (Wyo. 2013).

1 Hirsch had pain in her back and tailbone region with numbness in her right leg. She reported that she still had occasional episodes of incontinence, which, according to the treating doctor, “stem back to her original large disc herniation and presumed cauda equina syndrome.” A radiologist’s report concerning an MRI conducted on December 27, 2004, found no evidence of recurrent disc herniation at L5-S1, but it did note loss of disc height and endplate degenerative change.

[¶6] From the end of 2004, Ms. Hirsch was generally pain-free and asymptomatic until 2009. On May 17, 2009, she slipped and fell while working at a Taco Bell restaurant in Jackson, Wyoming. At the hearing before the OAH, she testified 2 that

I went to hand an order out and go back to make a new order, and that’s when I slipped and my foot went behind me. And I tried to catch myself on a rolling table that had a Quesadilla machine on it. I did go to the ground. It did hurt, but I got up and continued to make orders because we got really busy.

When it slowed down, I went to the lobby to look at my foot and that’s when it was swollen and blue and purple and huge.

The only pain that Ms. Hirsch described feeling at the time of the incident was that her “whole right leg hurt” and that her ankle was “killing” her.

[¶7] After finishing her shift, Ms. Hirsch went to the local hospital emergency room, where orthopedic surgeon David Khoury treated her ankle injury. Dr. Khoury diagnosed Ms. Hirsch with an ankle “sprain,” and over the next several months treated her with “four different casts, a couple of boots, and . . . crutches.”

[¶8] Ms. Hirsch was eventually referred to orthopedic surgeon and ankle specialist Dr. Heidi Michelsen-Jost for further treatment. While being treated by Dr. Jost, she complained of severe right ankle and lower leg pain, which she described as aching, numbing, shooting and tingling. Dr. Jost then referred her to Dr. Philip Blum, an anesthesiologist who specializes in pain management.

[¶9] Dr. Blum first examined Ms. Hirsch on July 17, 2009, at which time she complained only of ankle and lower leg pain, and not of back pain. He recommended lumbar sympathetic nerve block treatments. He administered nine sympathetic block

2 The Wyoming report of injury, although not filled out by Ms. Hirsch, states that she “was handing a drive thru order out when I turned around to go make an order, slipped, caught myself with table. I heard a pop in my foot.”

2 treatments over several months. These caused serious pain at the injection site in her back, as well as incontinence which started after the third injection, according to Ms. Hirsch.

[¶10] Dr. Jost eventually determined that Ms. Hirsch’s ankle required reconstructive surgery, which she performed on August 18, 2009.3 The ankle was cast after the surgery, and Ms. Hirsch began physical therapy several weeks later. A second surgery to remove hardware installed in the ankle was performed in November of 2009.

[¶11] Ms. Hirsch applied for medical benefits and temporary total disability payments related to her right ankle injury. The Division found that the ankle injury was compensable and approved the benefits, opening a 2009 file which was separate from the file it had opened in 2004 for her back injury. Ms. Hirsch was released to return to work after her ankle injury on April 30, 2010.

[¶12] Months after her ankle surgeries, Ms. Hirsch began to experience back pain. While she contends that certain records4 reflect implied or indirect complaints of back pain, the record in which that pain was first clearly documented was dated December 17, 2009, seven months after the May 2009 incident. Dr. Jost referred Ms. Hirsch to Dr. Geoffrey Skene, D.O., a specialist in physical and rehabilitative medicine, and his clinical note of December 17 states that her chief complaints at the time were “low back and (L) leg pain.” Dr. Skene summarized Ms.

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