International Paper Company v. Ronald L. Steward

2024 Ark. App. 465, 700 S.W.3d 204
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 2, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 465 (International Paper Company v. Ronald L. Steward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Paper Company v. Ronald L. Steward, 2024 Ark. App. 465, 700 S.W.3d 204 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 465 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-23-428

INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY Opinion Delivered October 2, 2024 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION V. COMMISSION

RONALD L. STEWARD [NO. H109777] APPELLEE AFFIRMED

BART F. VIRDEN, Judge

International Paper Company (IPC) appeals the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation

Commission’s determination that Ronald Steward proved the presence of a compensable

injury and that he is not barred from receiving temporary total disability (TTD) and medical

benefits due to false statements on his employment paperwork. We affirm.

I. Relevant Facts

Ronald Steward was hired by IPC in February 2021 and worked there until June 2021

as a general box worker. On June 3, Steward left work due to an injury that occurred at work

the week before, around May 27. That day, Steward was performing his job duties inspecting

and bundling boxes as they progressed down a conveyor belt. Steward explained that his job

required him to rotate ninety degrees to the left to push the boxes, which he testified proceed

“really fast. Sometimes it is going so fast that the boxes actually push each other, so you have to be really fast.” Steward stated that as he was pushing the boxes, he heard a “pop” sound

and felt pain in his right upper front shoulder area. Steward finished his shift, and after the

weekend, he returned to work. Steward worked Monday and Tuesday, but by his lunch break

on Wednesday, he could not move his right arm, and he left work. Steward spoke with the

human resources representative and filled out the paperwork for short-term disability. On

June 7, Steward went to the Good Samaritan Clinic and was directed to take ibuprofen. On

June 10, he was still in pain and not getting better, and an MRI was ordered. The MRI

showed

1. Increased signal within the substance of proximal bicep tendon from the origin suggest a partial tear at origin of bicep tendon. Moderate fluid in the bicipital tendon sheath/ganglion. If further assessment is clinically desired, an arthrography may be of use. 2. Partial tear/tendinopathy supraspinatus tendon with mild hypotrophy acromioclavicular joint. 3. Thicken imperial pouch to shoulder joints with mild debris within the imperial pouch, and maybe due to arthritis.

After a few sessions of physical therapy, Steward was referred to orthopedist Dr.

Stephen Smith, who diagnosed him with a bicep tendon tear. Steward testified that he told

every physician he saw as well as his physical therapist that he was injured at work and felt a

pop in his shoulder. Dr. Smith’s records show that he noted Steward “works as a general box

worker at International Paper Company, stacking and had increased pain in his right

shoulder anteriorly where he complains of pain primarily, did not feel a pop, this happened

on June 3.” During the appointment, Dr. Smith injected Steward’s bicep tendon sheath with

Marcaine and betamethasone. Steward continued physical therapy and returned to see Dr.

Smith on August 5, 2021, when he reported that he was better after the injection. Dr. Smith

2 put a fifteen-pound lifting restriction on Steward’s right arm and continued with

conservative care, although Dr. Smith did discuss repeating the bicep tendon injection or

possible arthroscopic surgery. On August 31, 2021, Steward saw physician’s assistant Patrick

Walton, who determined that surgery was necessary to repair the bicep tendon tear. On

September 29, 2021, Dr. Smith performed an open bicep tenodesis (reattaching the tendon

to the bicep), and Steward was prescribed more physical therapy. On January 11, 2022, Dr.

Smith ordered an additional three weeks of physical therapy and released him to return to

work on February 1, 2022, without restrictions; however, Steward stated that he never

received a call regarding the requirement that he see a physician selected by IPC, and he

never followed up with IPC. Steward did not return to work.

In May 2019, before he worked for IPC, Steward was injured in a car accident that

resulted in neck and back injuries. After the accident, Steward suffered numbness and

tingling in his right arm and pain that radiated into both his left shoulder and his right

shoulder and arm. The injury caused him to have muscle spasms, headaches, joint pain, and

difficulty sleeping, working, and doing household chores. His symptoms became worse with

movement. An MRI showed that Steward had disc protrusion and hypertrophy in his cervical

spine and possible nerve contact at C-5 and C-6. Steward was diagnosed with cervicalgia;

strain of the muscles, facia, and tendons at the shoulder and upper-arm level; right shoulder

pain; and insomnia due to his medical condition. He was prescribed hydrocodone and

received trigger-point injections. After physical therapy for Steward’s neck and upper back,

his pain was manageable. The physician’s August 6, 2019 report provided that “due to the

3 injury he sustained and his continued symptoms, it is likely he would need further treatment

in the future, but it is unlikely to fully recover.” The physician’s notes from his final

appointment on October 23, 2019, state that “he may need trigger point injections or CESI’s

for future care.” Steward testified that when he applied with IPC in 2021, he had no physical

problems, was receiving no treatment related to his previous injury, and had not been under

a doctor’s care since October 2019.

In a post-hiring document, Steward denied that he had any previous injuries.

Christopher Atkins, complex environmental health and safety manager for IPC, testified

that after an employee is offered a position, but before beginning work, a health assessment

is performed to ascertain what tasks the employee can perform. Atkins explained that IPC

relies on employees to be honest about their accommodation needs so that the employee can

be placed in a suitable position. On March 16, 2021, Steward filled out the “Post-Offer/Pre-

Placement Health History” form. Steward denied that he had any of the various health issues

listed on the form within the previous five years. The form included a question that asked

whether Steward ever had or now had numbness or pain in his hands or neck pain, shoulder

pain, arm pain, injury, or surgery. Steward responded on the form that he had not. At the

hearing, Steward testified that he thought IPC wanted to know if he had any current issues

or pain related an injury; thus, because he was not experiencing physical problems from the

previous injury, he did not report his symptoms from 2019.

4 The administrative law judge’s (ALJ’s) opinion was entered October 6. In it, the ALJ

found that Steward had proved by a preponderance of the evidence that he sustained a

compensable gradual onset injury to his right bicep. Specifically, the ALJ determined that

[c]laimant’s testimony about when he felt the initial pop in his arm sounded like a specific incident injury, but given that he continued to work for several shifts after that incident and his condition deteriorated as he worked, I am satisfied that claimant met his burden of proof that the injury was caused by the rapid and repetitive nature of his duties.

The ALJ found that Steward was entitled to TTD beginning June 4, 2021, and

continuing through January 31, 2022. The ALJ found that Steward was entitled to

$23,508.36 in medical benefits.

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2024 Ark. App. 465, 700 S.W.3d 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-paper-company-v-ronald-l-steward-arkctapp-2024.