Kimberly Taylor v. Hino Motors Manufacturing U.S.A., Inc.; And Sompo American Insurance Co.

2025 Ark. App. 405
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 3, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 405 (Kimberly Taylor v. Hino Motors Manufacturing U.S.A., Inc.; And Sompo American Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimberly Taylor v. Hino Motors Manufacturing U.S.A., Inc.; And Sompo American Insurance Co., 2025 Ark. App. 405 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 405 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-24-738

KIMBERLY TAYLOR Opinion Delivered September 3, 2025

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION V. COMMISSION [NO. H009300] HINO MOTORS MANUFACTURING U.S.A., INC.; AND SOMPO AMERICAN INSURANCE CO. APPELLEES AFFIRMED

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

Kimberly Taylor appeals from an order of the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation

Commission (“the Commission”) finding that she had not sustained a compensable low back

injury, was not entitled to additional temporary total-disability benefits for her compensable

right shoulder injury, and was not entitled to attorney’s fees. We find no error and affirm.

I. Factual and Medical Background

This dispute centers on the nature and extent of injuries Taylor claims she sustained

when she tried to dislodge an axle on a conveyor belt on her third day working for appellee

Hino Motors Manufacturing U.S.A., Inc. (“Hino”). On October 21, 2020, as she was

attempting to pull an axle that had become stuck, Taylor felt “a little pull and sting to her

right upper back.” The pain became worse as she continued to work. After she reported the

incident, she went to see APN Christopher Gross at Coast to Coast Medical. He noted her chief complaint or concern was “hurt lower right side back pulling on part.” Upon

evaluation, Gross found her tender to palpation to the right upper back and resistant to

evaluation secondary to pain. He diagnosed her with right upper back strain and prescribed

Toradol, ice, and over-the-counter Motrin or Aleve for pain. He then released Taylor to work

the same day with no restrictions.

Taylor returned to APN Gross on November 6, 2020. On that date, Gross repeated

Taylor’s description of the incident––that she felt “a little pull and sting to her right lower

back” and added that when she woke up on October 22, she noticed a pain in her right

shoulder that caused decreased function to that shoulder. Taylor reported that she had been

working that day, but the pain was worse than when the injury occurred. Gross noted that

Taylor was tender to palpation to her right lower back, right upper back, and shoulder and

had limited range of motion in her shoulder. His updated diagnosis reflected “right upper

back strain, right shoulder pain, lower back pain,” and he prescribed physical therapy; heat

to her back and shoulder; and tramadol, Zanaflex, and Motrin. At that time, Gross took

Taylor off work until she was released from physical therapy.

A radiology report from November 6 noted that Taylor had a “normal right shoulder”

with no fractures or dislocations, with normal-appearing soft tissues, and no lesions or

significant arthritic changes identified. Views of her lumbar spine also showed no acute

abnormalities, fractures, or dislocations, although mild arthritic changes were noted.

Taylor began physical therapy on November 19, 2020. Medical records from her first

visit showed that her chief complaint was pain in her right shoulder following an injury to

2 that shoulder at work. Her physical-therapy records, dated from November 19 through

December 15, 2020, reflected treatment for her shoulder only.

On December 28, 2020, APN Gross noted Taylor’s report that she had been going

to physical therapy, and the pain in her shoulder had only been getting worse, while the pain

in her lower back was about the same. Gross reiterated the diagnoses of right upper back

strain, right shoulder pain, and lower back pain and kept Taylor off work until released by

the physical therapist. He prescribed Tylenol-Codeine #3, Zanaflex, and Motrin and ordered

an MRI of her right shoulder.

Taylor underwent an MRI of her shoulder on March 23, 2021. The findings of the

MRI showed that “[t]he AC joint is normal. A trace of fluid and edema is present in the

subacromial bursa compatible with mild bursitis. The tendons of the rotator cuff are intact.

Biceps tendon is intact. Irregularity of the mid to posterior portion of the superior labrum

is compatible with SLAP tear. The labrum is otherwise intact. . . . OPINION: 1. SLAP tear.

2. Mild subacromial bursitis.”1

After the MRI, Taylor saw Gross again on March 25, 2021. She continued to

complain that the pain in her shoulder was worse than when she began treatment, and the

pain in her lower back was now radiating into her right leg. Gross referred her to an

orthopedist and suggested an MRI of her lumbar spine.

1 A SLAP tear, or “Superior Labrum, Anterior to Posterior” tear, is an injury that happens when a person tears cartilage in the inner part of his or her shoulder joint. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21717-slap-tear.

3 Taylor saw Dr. David Brown at OrthoSouth on May 6, 2021. His notes from that visit

reflect the following:

This is a 40 year old female who is being seen for a chief complaint of right shoulder pain. The pain began on 10/21/20 after she pulled on a piece of equipment at work that strained her shoulder. She describes a sharp, throbbing pain located diffusely throughout the shoulder that radiates down the arm. The pain worsens when getting dressed and with reaching motions. She also complains of swelling.

X-rays of the right shoulder reveal no obvious fractures. Her glenohumeral joint is reduced. She has a downsloping acromion.

The patient continues to complain of pain over 6 months out from her injury. She has tried physical therapy, rest, and anti-inflammatories. She describes her pain as sharp. Her medical records state that she has a possible SLAP tear. I will obtain the patient’s right shoulder MRI and make further recommendations. In the meantime, I will give the patient a prescription for diclofenac. She will work on range of motion exercises. I will see her back once the MRI has been obtained. In the meantime I will place her on light duty with no use of her right arm restriction.

Taylor followed up with Dr. Brown on May 18, 2021. He noted that “by report, the

patient has a SLAP tear in her right shoulder.” He said he was “concerned about proceeding

with surgery with the patient’s current stiffness.” He gave her a steroid injection, started her

back on physical therapy, said he would see her again in four weeks, and kept her on light-

duty work.

Dr. Brown reviewed the MRI of Taylor’s shoulder in June 2021 and concurred that

it revealed an abnormal signal at the superior labrum along with mild subacromial bursitis;

he recommended continued physical therapy. Taylor saw Dr. Brown again in July, by which

time Taylor had been to only one physical therapy appointment. Taylor advised that there

had been “scheduling and communications issues with Workmen’s Comp.” Dr. Brown was

4 still hesitant to recommend shoulder surgery, although he believed she would benefit from

it. He also stated he thought she would benefit from a second opinion to discuss treatment

options.

After an August 12 follow-up visit, Dr. Brown wrote as follows:

[Taylor] continues to complain of pain and stiffness. Her daughter recently passed away with Covid. She has not been able to do physical therapy secondary to her daughter’s situation. I am very hesitant to proceed with any sort of surgery considering the amount of patient’s stiffness and apprehension with range of motion. She has evidence of a SLAP tear that occurred in October 2020. I recommend the patient undergo an independent medical exam with an option to treat via a second opinion.

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