Kantar v. Grand Marques Café

900 A.2d 295, 169 Md. App. 275, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 7, 2006
DocketNo. 0665
StatusPublished

This text of 900 A.2d 295 (Kantar v. Grand Marques Café) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kantar v. Grand Marques Café, 900 A.2d 295, 169 Md. App. 275, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 83 (Md. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

ADKINS, J.

Alleging worsening of the disability for which she receives workers’ compensation benefits, appellant Inci Kantar unsuccessfully petitioned to increase her permanent partial disability to permanent total disability. She appealed the Workers’ Compensation Commission’s denial of her petition to the Cir[278]*278cuit Court for Montgomery County. At the close of Kantar’s case, the trial court granted the employer’s and insurer’s1 motion for judgment on the ground that Kantar failed to present any expert medical testimony to show that her disability worsened as a result of accident-related conditions. Kan-tar challenges that ruling, arguing that it amounted to an erroneous shifting of the burden of proof, and that an expert medical opinion is not necessary. We disagree with both contentions and affirm the judgment.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

On August 24, 1998, Kantar slipped and fell while working at the Grand Marques Café, a restaurant that she owned jointly with her husband.2 On June 15, 2001, the Workers’ Compensation Commission determined that Kantar had a 75% permanent disability to her head, neck, and back, with 5% of that disability being the result of pre-existing conditions unrelated to her compensable accident.

In 2004, the Commission granted Kantar’s petition to reopen her case in order to consider her claim that her accident-related disabilities had worsened as a result of accident-related causes. At the outset of the hearing, counsel for the employer and insurer pointed out that Kantar had a significant history of non-accident-related conditions, both before and after the 2001 order. These included coronary artery bypass surgery in 2000; ongoing treatments for diabetes, hypertension, and thyroid conditions; and surgery to relieve carpal tunnel conditions. Kantar admitted that she had neither sought nor received medical treatment for her 1998 injury since the last Commission hearing in August 2001. She also testified that she had not worked since the 1998 accident.

On August 26, 2004, the Commission rejected Kantar’s contention that her condition had worsened to the point of [279]*279permanent total disability as a result of accident-related conditions. Instead, the Commission found that “any increase in the claimant’s permanent disability is due to a post accidental injury, non-related conditions[.]”

Kantar appealed the Commission’s decision and the matter proceeded to a jury trial. Kantar testified on cross-examination that, since August 2001, she experienced “sharp pain” in her “left leg.” She admitted that she complained at the 2001 Commission hearing about many of the same symptoms that she was complaining of now—severe headaches, an inability to walk more than a block and a half, and limited movement in her neck. When counsel questioned her with a transcript of her 2001 testimony that she had been suffering numbness, shaking, and pain in both legs and her toes, Kantar testified that, although her legs and neck were “bothering” her in 2001, they “hurt her more now[.]” It was “really getting worse — [I]t’s not like before.”

With respect to her heart condition, Kantar testified that since her 2000 coronary surgery, she had been under doctor’s care and medication. She was under instruction “to slow down” and avoid “heavy work” or lifting more than 10 pounds. She denied that, although her husband and son continued to own and manage the restaurant, there was any job that she could do there, given her limitations on standing, walking, and sitting.

Kantar’s counsel also read into the record portions of the May 4, 2005 deposition testimony of Dr. Clifford Hinkes, who examined Kantar in both 2001 and 2004. Dr. Hinkes offered the following opinion:

The great bulk of Ms. Kantar’s problems are unrelated to the accident. Clearly, her medical problems are the most significant ones. And they are heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, ulcer disease, hyperthyroidism, obesity, carpal tunnel syndrome, pinched nerve in the arms. Those conditions dwarf the neck issue and the back issues. The neck issue, which in my opinion is due to the accident is relatively a more minor problem for her.

[280]*280Kantar’s final witness was Trudy Koslow, a vocational rehabilitation counselor who met with Kantar in November 2000. She reviewed medical records at that time, as well as Kantar’s efforts to find a sedentary job in which she would not be required to lift more than 10 pounds. Koslow opined in 2001 that “there really weren’t any sedentary jobs for which she qualified.” Koslow reviewed reports prepared by Dr. Macht in both 2000 and 2004, noting that in 2004 Macht “indicate[d] that at this time that she would be disabled from any job that requires any stress or strain or her neck____[b]ack, or right leg.”

On cross-examination, Koslow confirmed that she had not seen Kantar since November 28, 2000. Moreover, she does not “offer medical opinions.” With respect to Dr. Macht’s opinion that Kantar needs to avoid strain and stress on areas of her body that were injured in 1998, Koslow merely assumed that opinion was correct. She received all the records she reviewed from Kantar’s attorneys, and did not know that there were other medical records and reports on Kantar from Dr. Hinkes.

At the close of Kantar’s case, the trial court granted judgment in favor of the employer and insurer:

[W]e have exactly the same case in 2001 recooked in 2004 with no medical testimony to indicate how the condition [has] worsened and how that’s going to impact on her employability— [I]n light of [S.B. Thomas, Inc. v. Thompson, 114 Md.App. 357, 689 A.2d 1301 (1997)] and the testimony in this case, even looking at it in a light most favorable to the plaintiff,] ... the plaintiff has not made a prima facie case and I don’t believe can do so without medical testimony to talk about the ... total disability now being as a result of the head, neck and back injury worsening, as opposed to[,] as the Commission found, any increase in the ... disability [being] ... due to a post-accidental injury non-related conditions. (Emphasis added.)

Kantar filed this timely appeal.

[281]*281DISCUSSION

Kantar complains that, “on the issue of whether or not she has sustained any increase in disability as a result of her head, neck and back injury, ... the evidence is legally sufficient to generate a question for the jury[.]” In addition, she asserts that the court improperly placed the burden on her to prove worsening even though the Commission’s grant of her petition to reopen her case constituted a ruling in her favor on the issue of whether her disability had worsened. We find no merit in either argument.

Burden Of Proving Worsening

We begin with the threshold question whether the court erred in requiring Kantar to prove worsening of her accident-related disability. Kantar contends that the Commission’s decision to reopen her case must be treated as a substantive decision that her condition did worsen, and accorded a presumption of correctness pursuant to Md.Code (1991, 1999 Repl.Vol., 2005 Cum.Supp.), section 9-745(b) of the Labor and Employment Code (LE), which provides that, in appeals from the Workers’ Compensation Commission to the circuit court,

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Bluebook (online)
900 A.2d 295, 169 Md. App. 275, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kantar-v-grand-marques-cafe-mdctspecapp-2006.