Kimberly-Clark Mill v. W. Moss, Jr. (WCAB)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 12, 2025
Docket1371 C.D. 2024
StatusPublished

This text of Kimberly-Clark Mill v. W. Moss, Jr. (WCAB) (Kimberly-Clark Mill v. W. Moss, Jr. (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
Kimberly-Clark Mill v. W. Moss, Jr. (WCAB), (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Kimberly-Clark Mill, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1371 C.D. 2024 : Argued: June 3, 2025 William Moss, Jr. (Workers’ : Compensation Appeal Board), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge

OPINION BY JUDGE WALLACE FILED: August 12, 2025

Kimberly-Clark Mill (Employer) petitions for review of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board’s (Board) opinion and order (Order) affirming the decision (Decision) of a Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) which granted William Moss, Jr.’s (Claimant) Claim Petition. After review, we affirm. BACKGROUND Claimant worked for Employer for approximately 17 years as a machine operator and firefighter. Certified Record (C.R.) at 202.1 On August 18, 2021, Claimant filed a Claim Petition seeking benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act).2 Id. at 8-9. In his Claim Petition, Claimant alleged he was electrocuted

1 References to the certified record reflect electronic pagination.

2 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1041.4, 2501-2710. while vacuuming at work on November 28, 2018. Id. at 9. Claimant asserted the electrocution caused him severe tremors. Id. Employer denied Claimant’s allegation that he was injured at work and alleged Claimant’s injuries were pre- existing. Id. at 16. Claimant submitted testimony to the WCJ via an October 14, 2021 deposition transcript and testified at a hearing before the WCJ on July 14, 2022. Id. at 143, 197. In his testimony, Claimant explained he had previously been electrocuted at work in 2013, and afterwards, he experienced “shaking every once in a while.” Id. at 212. Following the 2013 incident, Claimant was off work for the weekend but returned the following week. Id. Claimant indicated that after the 2018 electrocution, his tremors worsened. Id. at 218. Claimant explained he sought treatment from his primary care physician, Dr. Zoranski, who referred him to a neurologist, Dr. Farmer. Id. at 218-19. Claimant testified he received Botox injections from Dr. Farmer to help control the tremors. Id. He also stated he took an antiseizure medication. Id. Claimant indicated he stopped working in February 2020, and he remained off work until November 2020. Id. at 222. Claimant then returned to work from November 2020, until January 2021. Id. Claimant testified he requested an accommodation from Employer to enable him to continue working, but Employer denied his request. Id. at 224. When asked what part of his job as a machine operator he was no longer able to perform in November 2020, Claimant explained:

I was tremoring hard. I wasn’t strong at all. I was in . . . physical therapy to try to build muscle mass because I can’t lift any weights. I can’t lift anything heavy, so I . . . did physical therapy for stretching, learn how to stretch the muscles so they’re not hurting.

But I couldn’t pull. I can’t lift. Sitting here- and I truthfully would like to stand, but I don’t want to come off of my phone. But this is what happens, and this is what hurts all day long. It makes it to where your

2 muscles cramp, and it looks like there’s a frog jumping out of your leg or your chest and it hurts. It’s just muscles jumping, and then I can’t do anything after that. It’s almost like working out. Right now my body is working out and I’m not working out. I just shake all day. So it’s very impossible- it’s very tiring.

Id. When asked if he felt capable of returning to his machine operator job at any time since January 2021, Claimant responded: “No . . . . Because I don’t feel safe on the floor. I don’t feel steady on my feet. I can’t do the jobs I used to do and mentally, it [a]ffects me and physically.” Id. at 234. In addition to working for Employer, Claimant testified he owned a health and wellness business, and he went to the business’s location every day. Id. at 230. He explained he had a bed and his medications at the business, and his wife was there to ensure he was safe if he fell. Id. He indicated that while he was there, he would primarily sit in a chair and occasionally answer questions from customers. Id. In support of his Claim Petition, Claimant presented the testimony of Robert Sing, D.O. (Dr. Sing). Id. at 319. Dr. Sing is board certified in sports medicine, emergency medicine, and family medicine. Id. at 320. In addition to his family practice, Dr. Sing testified he served as the medical director for school districts, fire companies, ambulance companies, a youth club, and the Athletic Association, as well as a second opinion physician for the National Football League Players Association. Id. at 321. Dr. Sing testified he first saw Claimant in September 2021. Id. at 328. According to Dr. Sing, Claimant presented with uncontrollable shaking and tremors of extremities, sometimes stuttering with a shaky voice, pain, muscle spasms, and chronic fatigue. Id. Dr. Sing testified that Claimant reported receiving an electrical injury on November 28, 2018, and after that injury, he experienced tremors and muscle spasms so pronounced that he had significant difficulty using his hands to

3 perform manual tasks. Id. at 329. Dr. Sing explained he examined Claimant and found Claimant had significant muscle spasms and tenderness over the cervical spine extending into the upper dorsal area and to the bilateral trapezius musculature. Id. at 329-30. Additionally, Dr. Sing indicated Claimant exhibited tremors in the upper and lower extremities and muscle spasms over the upper extremities, lower extremities, and spinal areas. Id. Dr. Sing testified that he contacted Dr. Farmer, Claimant’s neurologist, to discuss medications and treatment options for Claimant. Id. Dr. Sing diagnosed Claimant with cervical dystonia and a functional movement tremor status post electrical injury. Id. at 334. According to Dr. Sing, Claimant was capable of working in a sedentary position but was not capable of physical labor such as climbing, crawling, or stooping. Id. Dr. Sing testified that in addition to his examinations of Claimant, he also reviewed records from Claimant’s other medical providers. Id. at 335. According to his review of Dr. Farmer’s records, Dr. Sing testified Dr. Farmer also diagnosed Claimant with cervical dystonia and a functional movement disorder, and that she provides Botox injections to Claimant to alleviate Claimant’s muscle spasms. Id. at 336. When asked whether he believed Claimant’s tremors were voluntary or involuntary, Dr. Sing stated: “In my opinion, they’re involuntar[y]. I’ve seen him on multiple occasions and these are involuntary.” Id. at 339. When asked about a notation in Dr. Farmer’s notes that she observed Claimant did not have a tremor when he put on his hat in her office, Dr. Sing explained:

Significant to that is that a patient can – when you are having the involuntary spasms and the involuntary shaking, a patient can override the shaking by stopping it on purpose or performing a motion, where – you understand, in dystonic motion, the firing from the brain and from the spinal cord is disjointed. It’s all coming out at the same time versus

4 an active motion like putting on your hat where your brain is now coordinating all the muscles, so the shaking stops until you put your hat on. And once you relieve the responsibility of the hand after putting the hat on, you go back to the shaking. So you can override that by an active motion.

Id. at 340. Additionally, when asked how the electric shock led to cervical dystonia, Dr. Sing explained:

When the electrical shock went into his body, it entered the neck and got to the spinal cord. He had a shock . . . . [T]he cycle completed on the electric circuit that caused him to receive an electrical blow to his system. Generally, it follows nerves. Injured his neck, causing the dystonia and the severe spasms in his neck.

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