Lackawanna County v. WCAB (Rosky)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 4, 2019
Docket1084 C.D. 2018
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lackawanna County v. WCAB (Rosky) (Lackawanna County v. WCAB (Rosky)) 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
Lackawanna County v. WCAB (Rosky), (Pa. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Lackawanna County, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1084 C.D. 2018 : Submitted: November 21, 2018 Workers’ Compensation : Appeal Board (Rosky), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON FILED: June 4, 2019

Lackawanna County (Employer) petitions for review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board), dated July 13, 2018. The Board affirmed the decision of Workers’ Compensation Judge Joseph Grady (WCJ Grady), granting the reinstatement petition filed by William R. Rosky (Claimant).1 For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the Board’s order. Claimant worked for Employer as a Deputy Sheriff. On January 31, 2013, Claimant sustained a work-related injury to his left shoulder, neck, and upper back. By decision and order dated May 26, 2016, Workers’ Compensation

1 WCJ Grady also denied Employer’s termination petition. Employer’s termination petition is not relevant to this appeal, and, therefore, we do not address it in this opinion. Judge Howard Spizer (WCJ Spizer) amended Claimant’s injury description to include cervical radiculopathy2 and terminated Claimant’s workers’ compensation benefits with respect to the injury to Claimant’s left shoulder and upper back as of October 24, 2014. Thereafter, on September 8, 2016, Claimant filed a reinstatement petition, alleging that the work-related injury to his left shoulder had recurred as of June 6, 2016. Before WCJ Grady, Claimant testified that, on January 31, 2013, he was transporting a highly intoxicated female prisoner from Employer’s processing center to an ambulance, when the female prisoner started to fall forward. (R.R. at 87a-88a.) Claimant explained that he was concerned that the female prisoner would fall onto her face because her hands were handcuffed to a court belt located around her waist, so he “yanked” the court belt back with his left hand, causing him to experience a sharp, shock-like pain up his left arm and into his shoulder and neck. (Id. at 87a-89a.) Immediately following the work-related incident, Claimant experienced “excruciating” pain in his left shoulder joint and “running down [his] arm,” as well as tingling and numbness in his hand and fingers. (Id. at 93a-94a, 97a-98a.) Claimant has not returned to his regular duties as a Deputy Sheriff since January 31, 2013, but he did work light duty for one month in the summer of 2013. (Id. at 89a.)

2 There appears to be some discrepancy regarding the nature of Claimant’s amended injury description. In his May 26, 2016 decision, WCJ Spizer amended Claimant’s injury description to include cervical radiculopathy. (See Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 301a; WCJ Spizer’s Decision at 8, Conclusion of Law No. 4.) In WCJ Grady’s August 14, 2017 decision and Claimant’s brief, however, WCJ Grady and Claimant indicate that WCJ Spizer amended Claimant’s injury description to include a disc herniation at C5-6. (See WCJ Grady’s Decision at 3, Finding of Fact No. 3; Claimant’s Br. at 6.) While we have noted this discrepancy for the record, we will not address it in any further detail as Claimant’s neck/cervical injury is not the subject of this appeal.

2 Claimant testified further that he has treated with various doctors for the work-related injury to his left shoulder, including Hans Olsen, M.D., who performed surgery in February 2014. (Id. at 90a-91a, 100a.) Following the surgery, Claimant continued to experience pain in his left shoulder that radiated down his arm into his bicep and elbow. (Id. at 94a.) Claimant explained, however, that the radiating pain had decreased and his range of motion had improved. (Id. at 94a-95a, 104a.) He continued to treat with Dr. Olsen for his left shoulder until 2015. (Id. at 100a.) Michael Haak, M.D., the surgeon who performed surgery on Claimant’s neck, referred Claimant back to Dr. Olsen in 2016 based on Claimant’s complaints of continued left shoulder pain. (Id. at 115a.) Claimant indicated that he treated with Dr. Olsen on two separate occasions in 2016 and that, on those occasions, Dr. Olsen examined Claimant’s left shoulder, ordered an MRI, reviewed the results of the MRI with Claimant, and referred Claimant to Joseph J. Chun, D.O., for pain management. (Id. at 101a-03a, 116a.) Claimant testified that he began treating with Dr. Chun in spring/early summer 2016, and Dr. Chun referred him to John D. Kelly, M.D., who scheduled a full rotator cuff tear surgery on his left shoulder. (Id. at 92a-93a.) Claimant testified further that he continues to experience a stabbing pain in the front and towards the top of his left shoulder joint. (Id. at 97a.) While he has good days, his left shoulder joint has never been pain free since the January 31, 2013 work-related injury. (Id. at 104a-05a.) He did not believe that he was capable of returning to work as a Deputy Sheriff due to the weakness and pain in his left shoulder. (Id. at 98a.) Claimant further indicated that he has not sustained any additional injuries to his left shoulder since the January 31, 2013 work-related incident. (Id. at 113a.)

3 Claimant also presented the deposition testimony of Dr. Chun, who is board certified in pain medicine and physical medicine and rehabilitation. (Id. at 166a.) Dr. Chun first treated Claimant on June 6, 2016, for complaints of pain in his left shoulder and neck. (Id. at 167a-68a.) At that time, Claimant reported persistent pain in the anterolateral area of his left shoulder and the left upper trapezius/upper shoulder region since the January 31, 2013 work-related injury. (Id. at 168a-69a.) Claimant also reported that his left shoulder pain was constant, achy and stabbing in nature, and aggravated by activity. (Id. at 169a-70a.) Dr. Chun’s physical examination of Claimant’s left shoulder revealed painful and restricted range of motion above 90 degrees, positive impingement signs, a positive biceps tendon provocative maneuver, and a positive labrum maneuver. (Id. at 171a-72a.) Following his examination of Claimant, Dr. Chun’s initial impression was that Claimant’s January 31, 2013 work-related injury caused him to suffer persistent left shoulder pain. (Id. at 172a-73a.) Dr. Chun diagnosed Claimant with a “left shoulder injury requiring shoulder arthroscopic labral tear repair and decompression and . . . cervical fusion at the C5-6 level[,] . . . persistent rotator cuff tendonitis, bursitis and possible bicipital tendonitis and probably persistent pain related to the superior labral tear.” (Id. at 173a.) Based on his diagnosis, Dr. Chun recommended a diagnostic ultrasound of Claimant’s left shoulder, a steroid injection into Claimant’s left glenohumeral joint, and the use of a topical compound pain cream. (Id. at 173a-74a.) Dr. Chun testified that Claimant returned to him on July 11, 2016. (Id. at 174a.) Despite the steroid injection into Claimant’s left glenohumeral joint, Claimant’s condition remained the same. (Id. at 174a-75a.) As a result, Dr. Chun recommended that Claimant undergo a platelet-rich plasma injection in his left

4 glenohumeral joint. (Id. at 176a.) Dr. Chun also continued Claimant’s work restrictions of sedentary duty with no activities involving the left shoulder. (Id.) Thereafter, on July 25, 2016, Claimant underwent a diagnostic ultrasound of his left shoulder, which revealed moderate subacromial subdeltoid bursal thickening, supraspinatus tendinopathy, possible subtle interstitial tearing of the tendon, and a small partial-thickness tear of the infraspinatus tendon. (Id. at 177a-78a, 221a-22a.) Dr. Chun indicated that these results were consistent with both his physical examinations of Claimant and the May 2016 MRI of Claimant’s left shoulder. (Id. at 178a.) Claimant again returned to Dr. Chun on September 28, 2016. (Id.

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