Jerry Hayes v. Christian Retirement Homes, Inc., d/b/a Ridgecrest Village Senior Living Center and West Bend Mutual Insurance Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 1, 2025
Docket24-1991
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry Hayes v. Christian Retirement Homes, Inc., d/b/a Ridgecrest Village Senior Living Center and West Bend Mutual Insurance Co. (Jerry Hayes v. Christian Retirement Homes, Inc., d/b/a Ridgecrest Village Senior Living Center and West Bend Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerry Hayes v. Christian Retirement Homes, Inc., d/b/a Ridgecrest Village Senior Living Center and West Bend Mutual Insurance Co., (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-1991 Filed October 1, 2025

JERRY HAYES, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

CHRISTIAN RETIREMENT HOMES, INC., d/b/a RIDGECREST VILLAGE SENIOR LIVING CENTER and WEST BEND MUTUAL INSURANCE CO., Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Jeffrey Farrell, Judge.

A petitioner appeals the district court’s ruling affirming the Iowa Workers’

Compensation Commissioner’s order, which in turn affirmed the deputy

commissioner’s arbitration decision in its entirety. AFFIRMED.

Nicholas L. Shaull (argued) of Spaulding & Shaull, P.L.C., Des Moines, for

appellant.

Morgan R. Todd Borron (argued) and Michael S. Roling of Peddicord Lillis,

LLP, West Des Moines, for appellees.

Heard at oral argument by Ahlers, P.J., and Chicchelly and Sandy, JJ. 2

SANDY, Judge.

Jerry Hayes appeals the district court’s ruling affirming the Iowa Workers’

Compensation Commissioner’s order, which in turn affirmed the deputy

commissioner’s arbitration decision in its entirety. Hayes petitioned for workers’

compensation benefits against Christian Retirement Homes, Inc. d/b/a Ridgecrest

Village Senior Living Center and West Bend Mutual Insurance Company (together,

“CRH”), alleging that he suffered a permanent disability as the result of a work

injury. The deputy commissioner’s arbitration decision found that Hayes did not

suffer from a permanent disability as a result of his work injury and denied his

petition in its entirety. On appeal, Hayes argues the commissioner’s decision was

not supported by substantial evidence, included an error of law, and was irrational,

illogical, and wholly unjustifiable. He additionally argues he is entitled to an award

of alternate medical care, necessary medical expenses, and independent medical

evaluation (IME) reimbursement. We affirm, finding substantial evidence

supported the commissioner’s decision. We also agree with the commissioner that

the lack of a permanent disability makes Hayes’s remaining issues moot.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In September 2021—the month of his work injury—Hayes was a

dishwasher at Ridgecrest. He had worked there since July following a period of

unemployment and was sixty-seven years old. At the time he was hired, Hayes

had an extensive medical history involving chronic back, neck, and knee problems.

We summarize that history and the associated medical records as they relate to

the back issues here: 3

• March 2003: “[Hayes] continues to display difficulty coping with his chronic pain . . . . [H]e is unsure of the course of treatment regarding his back pain and leg pain.”

• May 2003: “[Hayes] states that his therapy is in the process of possibly developing a support group for individuals who share similar situations as they relate to his chronic back pain.”

• February 2014: “[Hayes] is here with complaints of neck stiffness and low back pain following a [motor vehicle accident]. He was a restrained driver of a car that was hit on the driver side by a[n] F-150 with a plow.”

• January 2015: Hayes fell down his apartment building’s stairwell and injured his lower back.

• March 4, 2015: Hayes experienced a slip-and-fall incident after stepping on a patch of ice. He fell and “hit the back of his head” and reported “lower back pain and left shoulder pain.” The treating physician noted Hayes’s documented history of back pain and “remote history of lumbar surgery.” A spine lumbar CT scan was conducted and the physician noted “degenerative change at L4-5 with mild compression of the anterior aspect of the L5 vertebral body and prior exam. There is anterolisthesis of L4-L5 of 12 mm. There is posterior facet sclerosis and spinal stenosis. These changes were present previously but are unchanged.”

• March 17, 2015: Hayes attended a follow-up from the previous appointment and was referred to physical therapy which he began attending shortly thereafter.

• November 2016: Hayes received a disability exam, complaining of low back pain. “[Hayes] states he can only walk about one block due to low back pain. . . . He used to be on disability due to a history of learning disability and back pain.”

• July 2017: Hayes was involved in another motor vehicle accident in which he was hit on his driver’s side. He was seen by his primary care provider, Dr. Crome, for low back pain and neck pain resulting from the accident. “He has a history of previous surgery on his neck with pins in place. . . . He always has low back pain, feels worse after this.”

• September 2017: Hayes returned to Dr. Crome for a follow-up appointment. He reported continued neck and lower back pain since his most recent accident. Dr. Crome reported that “[Hayes] ha[d] been having some frustration with his chronic pain. He [felt] he [had] been sitting at home more.” 4

• October 2017: Dr. Crome again saw Hayes to address “[a]cute bilateral low back pain with bilateral sciatica” and follow up from continued physical therapy, which seemed to be providing positive results.

• January 2018: Hayes was involved in another motor vehicle accident, this time involving a head-on collision at approximately thirty miles per hour, resulting in airbag deployment. He visited Dr. Crome for “mild low back pain, stiff shoulder, and left periorbital region swelling.”

• March 2018: Hayes visited Dr. Crome for an accident follow-up appointment. Dr. Crome ordered Hayes to continue his physical therapy and to limit his work hours.

• August 2018: Hayes visited Dr. Panozzo for low back pain treatment, where they discussed a bilateral sacroiliac joint injection. Hayes reported “aching, sharp/stabbing” pain which was aggravated by standing. Hayes returned later that month to receive the injection.

• September 2018: Hayes had an injection follow-up appointment which shows “50% overall improvement.” A second injection was performed.

• October 2018: Hayes had a follow-up appointment for the second injection which showed sixty percent overall improvement.

• December 2018: Dr. Crome sees Hayes for a follow-up where Hayes reported that some of his work activities aggravated his back pain. Dr. Crome imposed a permanent restriction on Hayes prohibiting him from lifting more than twenty pounds.

• March 2019: Hayes saw Dr. Taylor following referral by Dr. Crome and reported that his back pain may originate from a lumbar surgery he underwent in the 1990s. Later this month Hayes underwent a CT scan which revealed “[a]bnormal—severe disc space narrowing and degenerative L4 anterolisthesis with severe spinal stenosis at L4–5,” “[d]isc bulging and bilateral facet arthritis with moderate to severe spinal stenosis at L3–4,” and “[m]ild spinal stenosis and disc bulging with facet arthritis at L2–3.”

• April 2019: Hayes reported continuing chronic pain left knee.

• August 2019: Hayes underwent a total left-knee arthroplasty.

• November 2019: Dr. Crome again saw Hayes to address continued low back pain. He reported some success with the tramadol Dr. Crome had prescribed him. 5

• September 2020: Hayes reported daily back pain to Dr. Crome but again stated prescription medication was helping.

• March 2021: Hayes checked in with Dr. Crome regarding back pain, among other issues. Prescription medication continued to provide some relief. When Hayes began his position at Ridgecrest, he did not disclose to his

employer the twenty-pound lifting restriction his doctor had placed on him. He

reported only a “little back pain” and denied previous operations, back injuries, or

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Jerry Hayes v. Christian Retirement Homes, Inc., d/b/a Ridgecrest Village Senior Living Center and West Bend Mutual Insurance Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerry-hayes-v-christian-retirement-homes-inc-dba-ridgecrest-village-iowactapp-2025.