Kitchens v. Jerry Vowell Logging

874 So. 2d 456, 2004 WL 1154309
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 25, 2004
Docket2003-WC-01464-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 874 So. 2d 456 (Kitchens v. Jerry Vowell Logging) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kitchens v. Jerry Vowell Logging, 874 So. 2d 456, 2004 WL 1154309 (Mich. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

874 So.2d 456 (2004)

Vernon Lamar KITCHENS, Appellant
v.
JERRY VOWELL LOGGING and Mississippi Loggers Self-Insured Fund, Inc., Appellees.

No. 2003-WC-01464-COA.

Court of Appeals of Mississippi.

May 25, 2004.

*458 Yancy B. Burns, attorney for appellant.

Steven D. Slade, Meridian, attorney for appellees.

Before SOUTHWICK, P.J., THOMAS and CHANDLER, JJ.

SOUTHWICK, P.J., for the Court.

¶ 1. There are two broad and important categories of issues in this workers' compensation case, neither of which should detract from the other. One is a set of procedural matters arising from the assistance that a commissioner provided to the administrative judge who was evaluating this claim. The other is the merits of the resolution of the claim by the Workers' Compensation Commission. We find no error arising from the role that one of the commissioners assumed. We conclude, though, that the issue of permanent disability has not yet been properly resolved. The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause is remanded to the Commission for further proceedings.

FACTS

¶ 2. Vernon Kitchens was employed by Jerry Vowell Logging, a company that cuts timber and provides the logs to International Paper Company. Kitchens was a truck driver who injured his back in February 1999. The employer Vowell admitted the injury and its compensability but did not accept that its effects were permanent.

¶ 3. Kitchens was about forty years old at the time of his 1999 injury. He has an eighth grade education. His background included employment in automobile body repair and as a driver of tractor-trailer rigs. According to his testimony, his work as a driver for logging companies required him occasionally to lift more than fifty pounds, to use a chainsaw to trim loads, and to wrap and secure thirty-pound chains around the loads. Kitchens also stated that the job required that he sit in *459 his truck for as long as sixteen hours on some especially busy workdays.

¶ 4. The 1999 injury occurred when Kitchens attempted to jump onto a large logging vehicle called a "skidder." One of the skidder doors struck him across his lower back. He was treated first at a hospital and then at a number of clinics to which he was referred. Early in the treatment Kitchens' degenerative disc disease was diagnosed. The utility of surgery was initially doubted. Kitchens was referred for pain management treatment. Injuries to both of Kitchens' shoulders were discovered; an arthroscopic surgical procedure was performed.

¶ 5. Management of Kitchens' back problems proved difficult. Eventually a neurosurgeon evaluated his condition and recommended treatment by Dr. Howard Katz, who is a rehabilitation specialist called a "physiatrist." Dr. Katz provided the testimony that the Commission found especially enlightening and on which it largely relied. We will review that and the other evidence when we analyze the merits of the Commission's decision. Vowell Logging offered to rehire Kitchens at his former job at the same wage, with accommodations for certain work restrictions.

¶ 6. The hearing before the administrative judge occurred in February 2002. Her decision was not rendered until October 2002. She found that Kitchens had suffered no loss of wage earning capacity as a result of his injury while employed by Vowell Logging. That decision was affirmed by a 2-0 vote of the Commission. Commissioner Lydia Quarles did not participate in the appellate decision for reasons that we will analyze. The Attala County Circuit Court affirmed on the first level appellate review. Kitchens' further appeal has been deflected to this Court.

DISCUSSION

I. Commissioner's assistance to administrative judge

¶ 7. Just prior to oral argument on this appeal, the claimant moved to supplement the record with a November 18, 2003 report prepared by the Joint Legislative Committee on Performance Evaluation and Expenditure Review, Mississippi's so-called "PEER Committee." PEER reported on some of the activities of the Workers' Compensation Commission that appeared to affect this case. The report indicated that a commissioner had assisted an administrative judge who was having workload problems on six of her cases. One of the identified cases was the present one.

¶ 8. The PEER Committee gave its opinion about the validity of that assistance, a legal opinion that is not binding on the judiciary. The fact of the assistance, though, had been raised. We determined that the record should be supplemented. We are authorized to require a supplementation of the record so that it "truly discloses what occurred" and will "convey a fair, accurate, and complete account of what transpired" in the lower tribunal. M.R.A.P. 10(e) & (f). The possibility that the administrative judge's role in making the initial decision in the case may not have been what the record indicated, is what caused the order for supplementation.

¶ 9. The Commission responded by order of February 23, 2004. The agency took issue with our requiring the supplementation and simply presented a legal objection. Fortunately, Commissioner Lydia Quarles, whose role in certain cases has been questioned, was forthcoming. As a concurring opinion to the Commission order, she presented her explanation of events. This is the relevant factual portion *460 of her opinion, with most footnotes omitted:

I took documentary evidence (generally medical records, medical depositions, vocational reports, average weekly wage sheets and/or job search lists) and prepared a synopsis for [Administrative] Judge [Cindy] Wilson to utilize in her orders as she wished. As such, I have no independent recollection of the cases about which I assisted Judge Wilson; I only recall that I assisted her over the long 4th of July weekend in 2002. I kept no records or copies of my work product. I merely put the information on a floppy disk and delivered it to Judge Wilson. Judge Wilson identified the orders in question for PEER's investigator, as I was unable to do so. The Kitchens order in particular is, according to Judge Wilson, one of the orders for which I provided her an evidentiary synopsis. That may be so. But I neither drafted nor wrote the Kitchens order for Judge Wilson. Nor did I take any part in Judge Wilson's decision-making process. Actually, I cannot even say affirmatively to the Court that Judge Wilson utilized my material in whole or in part in the Kitchens order because she has never told me to what extent she relied on my assistance....
The PEER's report reflects that Judge Wilson had fallen substantially behind in releasing orders. This is true. There are complicating explanations which caused the delay, but no excuses for it.5 It had become apparent in the spring of 2002 that Judge Wilson was behind. However, the Commissioners were aware of the various complications of her situation and were willing to "work" with Judge Wilson. On various occasions, I suggested that the Commissioners do something to assist Judge Wilson. In the past, the Commission has handled these problems in the various ways explained in note 5, and I explained these various ways to Chairman [Ben Barrett] Smith. However, no action was taken for over three months after the Commissioners realized that the problem had become acute. Thus, there existed an exceptional period of delay with regard to certain claims which had been heard by Judge Wilson, but not yet decided. Therefore, I determined to assist Judge Wilson.

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Bluebook (online)
874 So. 2d 456, 2004 WL 1154309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitchens-v-jerry-vowell-logging-missctapp-2004.