John Brown v. County of Shelby

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 2, 1997
Docket02A01-9512-CV-00284
StatusPublished

This text of John Brown v. County of Shelby (John Brown v. County of Shelby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Brown v. County of Shelby, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE, WESTERN SECTION AT JACKSON _______________________________________________________

) JOHN BROWN, ) Shelby County Circuit Court ) No. 45356 T.D. Plaintiff/Appellant. ) ) VS. ) C. A. No. 02A01-9512-CV-00284 ) COUNTY OF SHELBY,

Defendant/Appellee. ) ) ) FILED Dec. 2, 1997 ) ______________________________________________________________________________ Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate Court Clerk From the Circuit Court of Shelby County at Memphis. Honorable Irving M. Strauch, Judge by Designation

Alan Bryant Chambers, Jeff A. Crow, Jr. CHAMBERS, CROW, DURHAM & HOLTON, Memphis, Tennessee Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellant.

Carroll C. Johnson, Memphis, Tennessee Attorney for Defendant/Appellee.

OPINION FILED:

AFFIRMED AND REMANDED

FARMER, J.

HIGHERS, J.: (Concurs) LILLARD, J. : (Concurs) This appeal concerns an action by the appellant, John Brown (Brown), to recover

workers’ compensation benefits from his employer, the appellee, County of Shelby (County), who

has not elected to come within the provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Law. Brown alleges

that he sustained on-the-job injuries while employed by the County as a counselor at the Shelby

County Jail. The record reflects that the County has implemented its own policy whereby it

compensates its employees for on-the-job injuries and relies to some extent on the Workers’

Compensation Act as a guide in determining benefits. At trial, it was established that under said

policy, the County had paid Brown’s temporary disability benefits and that Brown sought only

permanent disability benefits and the medical expenses incurred from Dr. John P. Howser. The trial

court awarded a permanent partial disability of 7% to the body as a whole and entered a judgment

for Brown in the amount of $5,863.68. No award was made for Dr. Howser’s expenses. Brown

appeals, identifying the issues for review as follows:

1. Whether the Court fixed the percentage of disability to properly compensate for vocational disability.

2. Whether the Court properly fixed the anatomical disability.

3. Whether the Court erred in declining [to] award a medical bill.

For reasons hereinafter expressed, we affirm.

Brown was 52 years old at the time of trial. In 1986, he was employed with

the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department as a deputy jailer. He became a counselor in 1987. He

worked a daily shift of 8 to 12 hours. His duties were “to work with the inmates[,] to handle the

inmates’ problems relating to court information, family problems, . . . to try to deal with that inmate

in terms of his period of stay within the [jail].” He normally visited the inmates on the floors where

they were housed, “going from pod to pod.” A one-on-one conference with an inmate occurred in

Brown’s office only if an inmate had a problem that should not be addressed before the total jail

population.

At issue here are two separate incidents from which Brown alleges to have sustained

work-related injury, necessitating permanent disability benefits. The proof shows that the first occurred on November 8, 1988 when Brown fell through a ceiling onto a concrete floor 10 to 12 feet

below, after discovering evidence of contraband at the jail. Brown testified that he endured injuries

to his leg, including a “crushed” ankle, and back. The second incident occurred on April 16, 1991

when Brown slipped and fell on some soup while at work.

After the 1988 incident, Brown returned to work in September 1990. According to

Brown, his return was with the restrictions that he work only four hours per day and that the inmates

be brought to his office for counseling. Brown stated that the restrictions, however, were never

enforced and that his duties remained the same. He said that he was never medically released to

return to full duty. Brown was also off from work from August 1992 to April 1993. He states that

he was “asked to retire” in 1993 and did so in July.

Brown’s medical history includes a back injury (ruptured disc) from an automobile

accident in April 1969, for which he underwent surgery two years later. He returned to work in 1972

and was employed at various occupations, mostly counseling positions, until the 1988 incident. In

1987, Brown was treated by Dr. Howser for 2 to 3 months for a “flare-up” in his back. Brown

testified that he was experiencing no back problems from last seeing Howser in 1987 until the 1988

episode.

Brown has a bachelor’s degree in business education and attended classes for an

additional year and a half working toward obtaining a master’s degree in theology. He has been a

minister with the Methodist Church since 1972 and at the time of trial was a “supply minister”

(substitute pastor) at a church. Brown identified his main “vocation” as that of minister and his

“avocation” as that of counselor with the sheriff’s department.

He described his present physical ailments as “severe problems with [his] ankle or

. . . leg and likewise with [his] back.” He stated that he is not able to work as a counselor today

because he does “not have the same physical stamina that [he] had prior to 1988. . . . [He cannot]

stand over a great deal of . . . time. [He has] a problem sitting . . . . a very serious problem, with pain

. . . .” He continued, “I can’t physically do anything . . . . I am crippled.” Pam Savage, an employee with the County’s Risk Management Department which

handles on-the-job injury claims, testified regarding the County’s policy of compensating its

employees injured on-the-job. She stated that under such policy, permanent disability is negotiated

“based upon the workers’ compensation guidelines.” Savage said the County paid all of Brown’s

medical bills with the exception of Dr. Howser, for which the County denies responsiblity. She

explained that the County never approved such care and Brown was informed that the treatment was

not authorized.

Deborah Denny, an employee of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department, Jail

Division, stated that Brown was under her supervision upon returning to work after the 1988 injury.

She said that Brown initially worked an 8 hour shift until she was informed by his rehabilitation

nurse, in December 1990, that he was limited to a four hour work schedule. According to Denny,

Brown’s schedule was adjusted accordingly and the inmates he counseled were routed to his office.

Denny said that although it had been arranged so that Brown never had to go into the pods, she

“chided” him at one point for doing so and expressed her concern regarding his “excessive walking.”

Medical expert testimony was given, by deposition, from three physicians who treated

Brown for the injuries at issue. Dr. Thomas Russell first saw Brown at the hospital emergency room

for the November 1988 injuries. Russell said that Brown’s “main problem” was a “deformity of his

leg” which x-rays indicated was a comminuted fracture just above the ankle and a broken fibula.

Russell performed two surgeries on the leg: the first on the day following the accident and the

second, a corrective osteotomy, in February 1990. Russell consulted with Dr. George Wood

regarding Brown’s complaint of back pain. He said that Dr. Woods’ concluded that Brown’s back

pain was “an exacerbation of a preexisting condition” and that he sustained no new impairment to

his back. Russell said that Brown reached maximum medical improvement regarding his leg in

November 1991.

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