J.W. Pague v. CATA (WCAB)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 18, 2022
Docket297 C.D. 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of J.W. Pague v. CATA (WCAB) (J.W. Pague v. CATA (WCAB)) 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
J.W. Pague v. CATA (WCAB), (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

John W. Pague, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 297 C.D. 2022 : Capital Area Transit Authority : (Workers’ Compensation : Appeal Board), : Respondent : Submitted: August 12, 2022

BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE CEISLER FILED: November 18, 2022

John W. Pague (Claimant) petitions this Court, pro se, for review of the January 21, 2022 order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board), which dismissed Claimant’s appeal from the decision of a workers’ compensation judge (WCJ). The WCJ denied Claimant’s claim and penalty petitions after concluding that Claimant did not suffer a compensable work injury. The Board held that Claimant’s appeal failed to raise any issues with the requisite specificity and, therefore, those issues were waived. After review, we affirm. I. Background On November 6, 2019, Claimant hit a large pothole while driving a bus in the course of his employment with the Capital Area Transit Authority (Employer). Certified Record (C.R.), Item No. 2. Following this incident, Claimant filed a claim petition, seeking total disability benefits from December 15, 2019, and ongoing, for an alleged aggravation of preexisting neck and back pain. Id. Claimant also filed a penalty petition on the basis that Employer violated the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act)1 when it failed to timely accept or deny liability for Claimant’s alleged work injury. C.R., Item No. 5. Employer denied the allegations in both the claim and penalty petitions. C.R., Item Nos. 4, 7. In support of his claim and penalty petitions, Claimant testified live before the WCJ and presented a narrative report from his treating physician, Stephen Wolf, M.D. Employer presented the deposition testimony of its medical expert, Raymond Dahl, D.O., who conducted independent medical examinations (IME) of Claimant in 2017 as part of a 2016 workers’ compensation claim Claimant filed against Employer (2016 Claim) and who conducted an April 1, 2020 IME in the instant matter. Employer also presented the deposition testimony of Brianna Holmes, one of Employer’s human resources (HR) managers. A. Claimant’s Evidence Claimant testified that the November 6, 2019 work incident occurred when one of the right tires of his bus hit a pothole. C.R., Item No. 14, Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 2/12/20, at 18. The impact cracked the windshield of the bus. Id. Claimant reported the incident to Employer and notified his dispatcher that the impact caused pain in his neck, lower back, and right arm. Id. at 20, 22, 24; C.R., Item No. 20. Claimant acknowledged that he attended physical therapy prior to November 6, 2019, to address preexisting issues with his neck, lower back, and right arm, but he asserted that the November 6, 2019 work incident caused a dramatic increase in his symptoms, including numbness in his right arm. N.T., 2/12/20, at 24-25. Following a December 4, 2019 magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study, Claimant

1 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1041.4, 2501-2710.

2 underwent a cervical fusion on December 16, 2019. Id. at 29. Claimant denied that surgery had been scheduled prior to the November 6, 2019 work incident. Id. at 28. During cross-examination, Claimant acknowledged that he underwent a lumbar laminectomy in 2000, and he experienced numbness in his right arm in 2016. Id. at 40, 45. Claimant agreed that he received treatment in 2018 and 2019 for lower back and neck pain and for right arm numbness. Id. at 46, 48. He maintained, however, that he did not receive a recommendation for surgery until after the November 6, 2019 work incident occurred. Id. at 50. Claimant conceded that he completed a medical history screening form on July 25, 2019, for purposes of back surgery and that his treating physician, Dr. Wolf, considered neck surgery an option if conservative treatment failed to resolve Claimant’s symptoms. Id. at 53. He denied having discussions about future neck surgery with anyone from Employer’s HR department prior to November 6, 2019. Id. at 51. At a subsequent hearing before the WCJ, Claimant testified that conservative treatment did not improve his symptoms, which worsened after the November 6, 2019 work incident. C.R., Item No. 18, N.T., 1/21/21, at 13-14. Claimant stated that his neck was “doing very well,” post-surgery. Id. at 15. Claimant returned to his full-duty position on April 13, 2020. C.R., Item No. 17, N.T., 12/30/20, at 14. Dr. Wolf acknowledged in his narrative report that Claimant had preexisting issues with his cervical and lumbar spine. C.R., Item No. 21. The November 6, 2019 work incident prompted Dr. Wolf to order an MRI, which documented “severe degeneration from C5-C7, with stenosis . . . .” Id. Dr. Wolf opined that Claimant suffered a whiplash injury as a result of the November 6, 2019 work incident, which exacerbated Claimant’s preexisting condition. Id.

3 B. Employer’s Evidence Dr. Dahl testified at an October 23, 2020 deposition that he conducted IMEs of Claimant on January 25, 2017, and November 21, 2017, as part of Employer’s defense to the 2016 Claim, which alleged that Claimant sustained work-related injuries to his lower back, neck, legs, hands, and feet. C.R., Item No. 36, Dahl Dep. at 7-8; C.R., Item No. 29.2 For purposes of the instant claim, Dr. Dahl conducted an IME of Claimant on April 1, 2020. Dahl Dep. at 8. Claimant advised Dr. Dahl at the April 1, 2020 IME that he was injured after hitting a “large pothole” while driving a bus, causing pain in Claimant’s back and neck. Id. at 10. Dr. Dahl reviewed Claimant’s medical records as part of the IME and he understood that Claimant treated with Dr. Wolf for neck and lower back pain prior to the November 6, 2019 work incident. Id. at 12. Based on his review of the medical records, Dr. Dahl opined that Claimant suffered from multi-level degenerative disc disease in his cervical spine with significant disc space collapse and spondylolisthesis and with varying degrees of root entrapment at most levels of the cervical spine. Id. at 8-9. Claimant also suffered from multilevel degenerative disc disease in his lumbar spine. Id. at 9. X-rays of Claimant’s lumbar spine that predated the November 6, 2019 incident revealed “very significant degenerative disc disease” throughout the lumbar spine. Id. at 17. A June 11, 2019 computerized tomography (CAT) scan of Claimant’s cervical spine showed the presence of bony spurring and bulging discs that caused compression of the nerve roots and the cervical spine, as well as

2 The WCJ in the 2016 Claim rejected Claimant’s testimony that his neck and back pain stemmed from driving a bus over speedbumps and potholes, as Claimant’s medical records demonstrated he suffered from chronic back pain. C.R., Item No. 29, Finding of Fact (F.F.) No. 8.

4 significant stenosis at C5-C6 and C6-C7. Id. at 18. The findings in Claimant’s December 4, 2019 MRI were essentially the same as those documented in MRIs from July 30, 2019, and from 2017. Id. at 13, 18. Claimant’s December 4, 2019 MRI contained no evidence of trauma, such as edema or inflammation, or acute injury that could be connected with trauma. Id. at 20. Overall, Dr. Dahl believed that the changes documented in Claimant’s diagnostic studies were all degenerative in nature. Id. Dr. Dahl also reviewed a video taken from the bus when the November 6, 2019 work incident occurred, and he observed that the motion of the bus hitting the pothole would have been “more of a compression type mechanism[,]” as opposed to a “whiplash type of mechanism” or traumatic flexion or extension. Id. at 23. Based on the physical examinations Dr. Dahl conducted for the 2017 and April 1, 2020 IMEs, his review of Claimant’s medical records, and the November 6, 2019 video, Dr.

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