Insteel Industries v. WCAB (Litzenberger)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 18, 2016
Docket1064 C.D. 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of Insteel Industries v. WCAB (Litzenberger) (Insteel Industries v. WCAB (Litzenberger)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insteel Industries v. WCAB (Litzenberger), (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Insteel Industries, : Petitioner : : v. : No: 1064 C.D. 2015 : Submitted: January 22, 2016 Workers’ Compensation : Appeal Board (Litzenberger), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT FILED: May 18, 2016

Insteel Industries (Employer) petitions for review of an adjudication of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) granting a claim petition for medical expenses filed by Mark Litzenberger (Claimant) under the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act).1 In doing so, the Board reversed the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ), who held that the injuries for which Claimant received medical treatment were not work-related. For the reasons that follow, we reverse. Claimant was employed as a machine operator for Employer. On October 10, 2012, Claimant filed a claim petition alleging that on July 25, 2012, he passed out and hit his head on a roll of steel wire and the concrete floor at Employer’s facility. According to the claim petition, Claimant sustained “[c]losed head trauma resulting in blood clot and bleeding in/on the brain.” Reproduced

1 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§1 – 1041.1, 2501 – 2708. Record at 4a (R.R. ___). He sought total disability benefits from July 26, 2012, and ongoing as well as payment of his medical bills and counsel fees. Employer filed a timely answer denying the allegations of the claim petition. The matter was assigned to a WCJ. At the initial hearing on November 13, 2012, Claimant’s counsel advised the WCJ that Claimant had returned to work with a different employer on November 4, 2012. When the hearing continued on February 12, 2013, Claimant’s counsel amended the claim petition to seek payment of medical bills only. Claimant’s counsel further agreed that the inciting event, i.e., Claimant fainting, was not work-related. Rather, Claimant’s theory was that he sustained a work- related injury, which he described as a “headache and neck pain,” when he hit his head on the roll of steel wire. Notes of Testimony, 2/12/2013, at 11 (N.T. ___); R.R. 34a. Claimant testified that he had worked for Employer for two days when the fainting incident occurred on July 25, 2012. That morning, Claimant was being trained by a co-worker, Jorge Perez, to operate an overhead crane when he “got such like a headache and I felt faint and I just fell --- I just remember falling backwards. When I fell backwards, I could see stars, like a flash.” N.T. 14-15; R.R. 37a-38a. Claimant passed out for a period of time and when he regained consciousness he was lying “up against the steel roll [with his] neck ... to the left on the concrete floor.” N.T. 15; R.R. 38a. Claimant testified that when he tried to get up an unidentified person said “stay, you can’t get up, you fell backwards, you hit your head.” Id. Claimant testified that the pain he experienced after the fall in the right side of his head and at the base of his skull was “20 times” worse than the “unusual headache” he experienced before he passed out. N.T. 16, 17, 21; R.R.

2 39a, 40a, 44a. Claimant had no recollection of striking his head, and the fall produced neither blood nor a bump on his head. Claimant testified that he was transported by ambulance to the Hazleton Health Alliance. The doctors were not sure whether he had a stroke or hit his head. Claimant was in and out of consciousness at the time. Claimant testified that he was transported by helicopter to Lehigh Valley Hospital because of a blood clot at the base of his head. Diagnostic tests done at Lehigh Valley Hospital were negative. Claimant testified that he was released from Lehigh Valley Hospital the same day and cleared to go back to work. In support of his claim petition, Claimant submitted medical bills totaling approximately $65,000 for the treatment he received on July 25, 2012, July 26, 2012, and August 3, 2012. R.R. 91a-103a. Employer presented the testimony of Jorge Perez, the crane operator who was training Claimant at the time of the incident. Perez testified that Claimant was standing approximately two feet away from him when he observed Claimant faint. According to Perez, Claimant “dropped like a rag doll. Just kind of like coiled up.” N.T. 34; R.R. 57a. According to Perez, Claimant did not strike his head on the steel coil or the concrete; rather, Claimant’s body twisted and he struck the coil with his shoulder and slid down the coil to the floor. Perez yelled for someone to call 911 and went to tend to Claimant. Perez did not observe any bleeding or bumps on Claimant’s head. Scott Stumpf, Employer’s lead maintenance man, testified that he did not observe Claimant fall and arrived on the scene approximately one minute after the incident. He observed Claimant lying with his shoulder against the steel coil. He laid Claimant flat on the floor and rubbed his sternum. He also spoke to

3 Claimant, who was in and out of consciousness and appeared confused. Stumpf did not observe any bumps, bruises or blood on Claimant’s head. Stumpf denied telling Claimant that he struck his head. Stumpf further testified that he did not speak to the EMS personnel about the mechanism of Claimant’s fall and did not have any conversations with Claimant’s wife. Claimant’s wife, Christine Litzenberger, testified that she received a telephone call from an employee named Maureen in Employer’s Human Resources Department, who advised her that Claimant had some kind of accident at work. Claimant’s wife went to Employer’s facility and spoke to a shift manager/supervisor named Dave, who informed her that Claimant “fell against the big steel rolls [and] really banged his head off ... the concrete floor.” N.T. 54; R.R. 77a. In response to the testimony of Claimant’s wife, Employer presented the testimony of William Gary Logan, who confirmed that he was the manager who spoke to her the day of Claimant’s accident.2 Logan testified that he told Claimant’s wife that he thought Claimant possibly had a stroke or heart attack. He did not tell her that Claimant had struck his head. Employer offered into evidence the EMS Report from July 25, 2012. It stated that EMS personnel were dispatched to Employer’s facility “for a man down with chest pain.” R.R. 104a. It also stated that the patient complained of weakness and chest pain with numbness in his arms; there were no outward signs of trauma. The report stated that EMS personnel were told that Claimant was seen “passing out landing backwards into rolls of wire then falling to ground.” Id.

2 Claimant’s wife was recalled to the stand and confirmed that Logan was the gentleman she talked to at Employer’s facility. 4 A report from Hazleton General Hospital stated that Claimant “was at work [and] apparently collapsed. Fell against some steel rolls stacked against a wall.” R.R. 107a. Claimant reported “a headache and chest pain,” “[n]o head injury,” and “weakness of the right arm, right leg and right foot.” Id. The clinical impression was an “acute cerebrovascular accident (thrombotic stroke).” R.R. 109a. A teleneurology consultation report done at Hazleton General Hospital on the day of the incident noted that Claimant “started having [a] headache with neck pain and fell backwards.” R.R. 122a. The doctor concluded that Claimant had a “probable basilar clot causing a brainstem ischemic stroke” and recommended he be immediately flown to Lehigh Valley Hospital for treatment. R.R. 123a. Upon admission to Lehigh Valley Hospital for a stroke alert, Claimant reported that

[a]t 6:15 a.m., he had a sudden onset of sharp pain in the right side of his head. He also felt the right side of his body go numb. At the same time, he saw a quick flash of light in both his eyes.

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Insteel Industries v. WCAB (Litzenberger), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insteel-industries-v-wcab-litzenberger-pacommwct-2016.