Jenkins v. Public Service Co. of NC

518 S.E.2d 6, 134 N.C. App. 405, 1999 N.C. App. LEXIS 805
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 3, 1999
DocketCOA98-1072
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 518 S.E.2d 6 (Jenkins v. Public Service Co. of NC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. Public Service Co. of NC, 518 S.E.2d 6, 134 N.C. App. 405, 1999 N.C. App. LEXIS 805 (N.C. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

GREENE, Judge.

Public Service Company of North Carolina, Inc. (PSC) and its servicing agent (collectively, Defendants) appeal from the Opinion and Award of the North Carolina Industrial Commission (Commission) in favor of Michael E. Jenkins (Plaintiff).

Plaintiff received a compensable back injury on 25 October 1993 while working for PSC. A Form 21 “Agreement for Compensation for Disability” was entered into by the parties, and pursuant to that agreement, Plaintiff received temporary total disability compensation. Plaintiff’s authorized treating physician immediately following [407]*407his injury, R. Mark Rodger, M.D. (Dr. Rodger), performed surgery on Plaintiff in 1993. Early in 1994, Plaintiff was referred to J. Robinson Hicks, M.D. (Dr. Hicks), who then became Plaintiffs authorized treating physician.

On 7 February 1996, Plaintiff attempted a trial return to work with PSC as a meter reader. Plaintiff worked as a meter reader for approximately one week. Plaintiff then filled out a Form 28U, “Employee’s Request that Compensation be Reinstated After Unsuccessful Trial Return to Work,” because he felt he could “not physically perform the job duties of a meter reader. The job requires constant walking, driving, and getting in and out of a truck. I am in severe pain.” On 22 February 1996, Plaintiff took the Form 28U and x-rays to his authorized treating physician, Dr. Hicks, for certification that his return to work had been unsuccessful due to his disability. Plaintiff testified:

[Dr. Hicks] looked at [the Form 28U] and took it out and talked to my rehab nurse out in the hall, come back. First he was going to sign it, I thought, and he said, “Well, I need to talk to your rehab nurse about it.” So he took it out in the hall and talked to her a few minutes, come back in and handed it back to me and said he couldn’t sign it.

Dr. Hicks testified that prior to discussing a trial return to work with Plaintiff, his test results had not shown signs of symptom magnification; however, “about three weeks after [they] discussed for the first time returning to work,” Plaintiff’s test results suggested symptom magnification. Dr. Hicks felt the meter reader position was “appropriate” for Plaintiff and “had no medical reason for keeping [Plaintiff] out of work”; he therefore refused to sign the Form 28U. Dr. Hicks further testified that he had no recollection of any conversation with Nancy Lipscomb, R.N. (Nurse Lipscomb), Plaintiff’s rehabilitation professional, prior to declining to sign Plaintiff’s Form 28U. Dr. Hicks stated: “I sometimes talk to the rehabilitation nurse outside the presence of a patient, but I have no idea in this particular case whether I did, and if I did, what the subject was.” Dr. Hicks noted that it would not have been unusual for him to confer with a patient’s rehabilitation professional outside the patient’s presence.

In her 24 March 1996 Progress Report, Nurse Lipscomb noted:

On 2/22/96, I met [Plaintiff] at Dr. Hicks’ office. From [Plaintiff] I learned that he is not working now, and he walks with a limp. . . .
[408]*408[Plaintiff] was examined by Dr. Hicks by himself. Dr. Hicks did discuss with me that the patient brought a paper to him today to have him reinstate his Worker’s [sic] Compensation. Dr. Hicks did state he can’t take him out of work, as he needs to know why, and [Plaintiff] was given a consent paper to sign, so that Dr. Hicks’ office could obtain [Plaintiff’s medical records from other physicians he had seen], and then perhaps [Dr. Hicks] could help him. Dr. Hicks did tell the patient that he would write to the Industrial Commission to the effect that [Plaintiff] is having so much pain that he says he is unable to work. Dr. Hicks did plan to get another [functional capacity evaluation]. Dr. Hicks did state that he would write to the other doctors to obtain records and the x-rays to see if he would concur with their diagnosis. However, the patient did not sign the consent [for the other doctors to release his medical records to Dr. Hicks]... .

Following Dr. Hicks’ refusal to sign the Form 28U, Plaintiff took the Form 28U to Dr. Rodger. Dr. Rodger had not seen Plaintiff as a patient in nearly two years, since 11 March 1994. Dr. Rodger testified, in relevant part, as follows:

I did some x-rays, and my best supposition was that it was this problem at L5-S1. A lot of what, you know, what he can and can’t do, I have to rely on what the patient tells me. You know, I don’t have hard documentation of what he is being observed physically to be able to do, like a functional capacity assessment or something. I didn’t have access to that. So my interpretation is subjective and based on what the patient tells me. ... He convinced me that he wasn’t able to do it. . . . Just coming to tell me you can’t do it doesn’t always mean that I agree that you can’t do it. ... I have to be convinced, and he was able to convince me.

Plaintiff’s attorney asked Dr. Rodger if he had an “opinion satisfactory to yourself and to a reasonable degree of medical certainty as to what specific restrictions or limitations [Plaintiff] has as a result of his physical condition?” Dr. Rodger testified that his “impression was that [Plaintiff] was functionally unable to do any significant lifting and probably required frequent position changes for relief of his back pain.” Dr. Rodger x-rayed Plaintiff, and testified the x-rays revealed that Plaintiff “had a good fusion. It looked okay to me.” Dr. Rodger stated that “the history [he] had about [Plaintiff’s] fusion ... was from [Plaintiff] and from supposition and guesswork based on his x-rays.” Dr. Rodger further testified:

[409]*409I don’t think I took a detailed history of the actual occupation [Plaintiff] was involved with [(i.e., the meter reader position)]. We did talk in general terms about the fact that he had gone back to a light-duty job, but hadn’t been able to tolerate it. The actual details of how much time he spent sitting, standing, lifting, I don’t have it detailed in the chart. And I can’t remember if I asked him specifically about that or not.

Dr. Rodger testified that “in [his] opinion, he couldn’t do the job that they wanted him to do.” Dr. Rodger did not require Plaintiff to perform objective tests to determine whether his complaints of pain were exaggerated or nonphysiogenic; rather, because he believed Plaintiff’s subjective complaints, he signed Plaintiff’s Form 28U certifying that Plaintiff’s return to work had been unsuccessful due to his injury.

The Commission gave “no weight” to the testimony of Dr. Hicks, finding that Dr. Hicks “left at least the appearance of undue influence by the rehabilitation nurse by stepping outside the presence of the plaintiff and into the presence of the rehabilitation nurse before saying whether or not he would sign the Form 28U.” In addition, the Commission found “Dr. Rodger to be the proper party, under the circumstances, to sign the Form 28U,” and concluded Plaintiff had complied with its rule 404A requiring the Form 28U to be signed by the authorized treating physician.

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Jenkins v. Public Service Co. of NC
518 S.E.2d 6 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
518 S.E.2d 6, 134 N.C. App. 405, 1999 N.C. App. LEXIS 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-public-service-co-of-nc-ncctapp-1999.