Knisley v. Charleswood Corp.

211 S.W.3d 629, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 66, 2007 WL 92369
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 2007
DocketED 87605
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 211 S.W.3d 629 (Knisley v. Charleswood Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knisley v. Charleswood Corp., 211 S.W.3d 629, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 66, 2007 WL 92369 (Mo. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

PATRICIA L. COHEN, Judge.

Introduction

Marian Knisley (Claimant) appeals from the final award of the Labor and Industrial Commission awarding her compensation from Charleswood Corporation (Employer) and denying compensation from the Second Injury Fund (SIF). We affirm in part and reverse the Commission’s award with respect to the SIF and remand to the Commission.

I. Background

Claimant was bom on October 26, 1951 and began working for Employer in 1993. Claimant held a variety of positions with Employer, including embosser. As an embosser, Claimant was required to set fifty to seventy pound brass dies in machines which were used to make impressions on wood furniture.

A. The April 6, 1999 injury and subsequent medical conditions

While at work on April 6,1999, Claimant experienced intense back pain after setting up two embossing machines. Because it was near the end of her shift, Claimant returned home, took Tylenol, applied heat to her back and went to bed. The next day Claimant went to work and reported the injury. Employer’s nurse sent Claimant to Doctor’s Hospital, where she was x-rayed and given an injection for pain and oral pain medication. Claimant was instructed to take off the next week of work. When Claimant returned to work, she was placed on light duty. Claimant continued *632 to have pain and was seen by Dr. Doumit, Employer’s physician who prescribed physical therapy and pain medication.

In July 1999, having failed to improve, Claimant returned to Dr. Doumit who ordered an MRI which revealed a herniated disc in Claimant’s lower back as well as moderately severe degenerative disc disease.

Dr. Doumit referred Claimant to Dr. Vellinga, a pain specialist. Dr. Vellinga diagnosed Claimant with multiple herniated discs and, during August and September of 1999, administered a series of three epidural injections to the lower spine. In May 2000, Dr. Vellinga performed a nerve block. As a result of these treatments, Claimant experienced temporary relief.

In October 2000, Claimant discovered a lump in her left breast. The lump was diagnosed as cancerous and claimant underwent a left mastectomy and received chemotherapy. During this time, doctors also diagnosed Claimant with uterine polyps which were surgically removed. Claimant returned to work in March 2001.

In May 2001, after her cancer treatment ended, Dr. Vellinga ordered another MRI of Claimant’s lower back. The MRI showed degenerative disc disease and bulging discs. Dr. Vellinga referred Claimant to Dr. Piper, an orthopedic surgeon, who ordered a lumbar myelogram and suggested conservative treatment for pain. Claimant did not receive any meaningful relief. In September 2001, Dr. Piper concluded that Claimant’s vertebrae were “moving” and recommended a back fusion and ordered her off work.

On November 7, 2001, Dr. Piper performed a discectomy and fusion of the vertebrae in Claimant’s lower back. Claimant continued to experience pain, despite medication. Dr. Piper ordered physical therapy and instructed Claimant to attend work-hardening. Claimant was unable to tolerate the work-hardening regimen.

In January 2003, Dr. Piper determined Claimant was at the maximum medical improvement, and discharged her from his care. Following discharge from Dr. Piper’s care, Claimant saw Dr. Cuellar, her family physician, who referred her to Dr. Kennedy, a neurologist recommended by Employer.

In August 2002, Dr. Kennedy examined Claimant and concluded that she “should be in a job capacity wherein she is not lifting more than 10 pounds, nor doing more than occasional bending, twisting or stooping on a permanent basis.” Dr. Kennedy sent Claimant to Dr. Graham, a pain specialist, who prescribed Neurontin in increasing dosages and also administered a cortisone injection. Claimant continued to have pain.

Claimant later began treatment with Dr. Nasrallah, a chiropractor, who administered electric and heat treatment to her back. Although Claimant experienced temporary relief from these treatments, she eventually discontinued them because of the long drive to Dr. Nasrallah’s office.

B. Pre-April 6, 1999 medical conditions

Prior to the April 6, 1999 injury, Claimant suffered from numerous other medical conditions. In May 1985, Claimant found a lump in her right breast. Dr. James removed the mass and a margin of surrounding tissue. ■ The pathology report showed that the mass was cancerous and Claimant received another surgery to remove approximately twenty-three lymph nodes as well as six months of chemotherapy treatment and four weeks of radiation. In 1990, a mammogram revealed a mass in Claimant’s left breast, requiring surgical removal of the mass along with approxi *633 mately twenty lymph nodes. Claimant underwent another round of chemotherapy and radiation.

In 1990, Claimant was diagnosed with bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome and hypertension and began taking hypertension medication. Claimant underwent a right carpal tunnel surgical release in April 1990.

In 1993, Employer administered a hearing test to Claimant that showed a slight hearing loss in Claimant’s left ear. In 1994, Claimant detected a lump in her right breast, underwent a mastectomy and was treated with Tamoxifen for the next five and one half years. As a result of the surgery, Claimant missed eight weeks of work. In 1996, a physician surgically reconstructed Claimant’s right breast and she experienced complications causing an absence from work of more than ten weeks. In 1998, Claimant experienced heart palpitations and shortness of breath while at work and was subsequently diagnosed with mitral valve prolapse. In February 1999, a divorce precipitated a nervous breakdown and treatment with an anti-depressant.

C. Procedural history

On July 12, 2003, Claimant filed a claim for compensation against Employer and the SIF. An Administrative Law Judge heard Claimant’s claim on March 14, 2005. The ALJ issued her award on May 16, 2005, finding Claimant sustained permanent partial disability of forty-five percent of the body referable to the injury of April 6, 1999. The ALJ found against Claimant with respect to her SIF claim on the basis that Dr. Musich, a specialist in industrial medicine who evaluated Claimant in 2004, “failed to establish that [Claimant] has pre-existing disability significant enough to combine with low back injury” to implicate the SIF. Claimant appealed the award to the Commission. The Commission found the award of the ALJ was supported by competent and substantial evidence and affirmed the decision of the ALJ. Claimant appeals.

II. Standard of Review

Our review of a workers’ compensation award is limited to “a single determination whether, considering the whole record, there is sufficient competent and substantial evidence to support the award.” Hampton v. Big Boy Steel Erection, 121 S.W.3d 220, 223 (Mo. banc 2003).

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W.3d 629, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 66, 2007 WL 92369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knisley-v-charleswood-corp-moctapp-2007.