Lane v. S & S Tire, Inc., No. 15

182 S.W.3d 501, 2005 WL 3131453
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 2006
Docket2005-SC-0141-WC
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 182 S.W.3d 501 (Lane v. S & S Tire, Inc., No. 15) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. S & S Tire, Inc., No. 15, 182 S.W.3d 501, 2005 WL 3131453 (Ky. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Douglas Lane sustained a work-related injury on July 28, 2000, and died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in March, 2001. Priscilla Lane filed an application for benefits as his surviving spouse and the admin-istratrix of his estate. An Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) rejected her allegation that Douglas’s suicide was work-related and awarded Priscilla survivors’ benefits under KRS 342.730(3) rather than the death benefits she sought under KRS 342.750. The ALJ refused to increase the income benefit by a factor of 0.02 on the ground that Douglas had a GED diploma and also rejected a request for sanctions under KRS 342.040 and KRS 342.310 on the ground that the employer’s insurance carrier had a reasonable basis for refusing to pay temporary total disability (TTD) and medical benefits voluntarily. The Workers’ Compensation Board (Board) and the Court of Appeals affirmed, and we affirm. The claimant began living with Douglas Lane in September, 1999, shortly before his sixteen-year marriage ended in a tumultuous divorce. Douglas began working for the defendant-employer in April, 2000, as a mechanic. It required regular lifting of up to 75 pounds and long periods of reaching overhead. The claimant testified that on July 28, 2000, Douglas experienced a sharp pain in his right shoulder while hammering and that he notified his supervisor before taking the rest of the day off. She testified that he continued to work thereafter but that he experienced increasingly severe pain in his shoulder, neck, and back, and co-workers had to help him.

The claimant testified that Douglas’s health insurance had not become effective at the time of his injury because he had not been employed for six months. In early August she contacted the employer’s workers’ compensation carrier. She stated that she was told the claim would be investigated and that the carrier instructed her to submit Douglas’s medical bills to his supervisor. She stated that she did so, but they were not paid. She stated that she contacted the carrier again in October and was told that it had not received the bills. She stated that Douglas’s pain became so severe that he quit working altogether on November 13, 2000, and that the employer failed to file an injury report until then. At that point, the carrier’s representative began to investigate the claim. Douglas completed a questionnaire, and the claimant requested a report from Dr. Alvarado, who had provided the initial treatment after the injury.

Based on Dr. Alvarado’s notes and statements by Douglas’s supervisor regarding a pre-existing shoulder problem, the carrier denied the claim and notified Douglas on December 4, 2000. The claimant testified that she contacted Dr. Alvarado immedi *504 ately about his failure to include the work-related incident in Douglas’s history and requested a corrected report, but his subsequent letter reiterated only that Douglas reported a 1995 accident. She testified that she also informed the carrier that the report was inaccurate but was told that the previous decision was final, a position that the carrier continued to maintain even after she submitted reports from Drs. Tutt and Kibler stating that the July 28, 2000, work-related incident had exacerbated preexisting neck and shoulder conditions.

The claimant testified that Douglas was in constant pain, had difficulty sleeping, and had difficulty bathing or dressing without assistance. By mid-February, 2001, he had used the entire month’s supply of prescription pain medication and had no income or health insurance to pay for more. He had also been ordered to appear in court on March 1 for non-payment of child support. She testified that when she was unable to rouse him that morning, she went to court on his behalf but was accused of being intoxicated and jailed overnight. That evening, Douglas’s daughter visited him and informed him of the claimant’s whereabouts. The claimant returned the next day and found him in bed, dead from a self-inflicted shotgun wound. She stated that amongst the sheets were Lortab and Klonopin pills that she had received for a work-related injury.

Dr. Alvarado’s treatment notes indicated that he first saw Douglas on August 24, 2000, complaining of back, shoulder, and head pain. He reported that he had been involved in a 1995 automobile accident and that a physician in Michigan had prescribed Fioricet, Vicodin, and Soma. Douglas had since moved to Kentucky and relied on various over-the-counter medications. Dr. Alvarado ordered MRI imaging of the thoracic spine and right shoulder. The notes did not mention a recent injury or Douglas’s work. As pertinent to this claim, Dr. Alvarado’s assessment on October 9, 2000, included: cervical degenerative disc disease, spinal canal stenosis, and partial rotator cuff tear. He prescribed Lortab and recommended orthopedic and neurosurgical evaluations, noting that Douglas had assured him that he would have insurance coverage at the end of the month and would see the specialists then. In a letter dated December 7, 2000, and addressed “To Whom It May Concern,” Dr. Alvarado reiterated the history he had noted on August 24, 2000. Based on that history, he did not believe that Douglas’s back, shoulder, and head pain were caused by a work-related injury. Dr. Alvarado also indicated that he had dismissed Douglas as a patient and that any farther statement would have to come either from him or his new physician.

Douglas first saw Dr. Tutt, a neurosurgeon, on December 28, 2000. He complained of neck and right shoulder pain and of numbness in his right arm since a work-related incident on July 28, 2000. Dr. Tutt noted significant cervical spondy-losis and possible mechanical problems in the shoulder for which he referred Douglas to Dr. Kibler. In a letter dated June 4, 2001, Dr. Tutt stated that the July, 28, 2000, incident caused a pre-existing cervical arthritic condition to become disabling. In a subsequent letter, he stated that the cervical condition caused a 15% impairment and that the claimant was unable to work when he last saw him. After reviewing Dr. Alvarado’s notes at the employer’s request, he stated that if the history Dr. Alvarado recorded was correct, his own opinions regarding the cause of Douglas’s cervical complaints would not be correct.

Dr. Kibler diagnosed a torn rotator cuff and concluded that the work-related incident had exacerbated a previous condition. He explained subsequently that he did not *505 know precisely when “the full clinical expression” of the rotator cuff tear occurred but that “obviously there was something going on before his injury but the clinical extent was not as bad as after the injury.” In his opinion the resulting impairment was 4% and would have been 5% after surgery. As of January 9, 2001, he would have limited pushing and pulling and would have limited lifting to no more than 20 pounds regularly.

Among other things, the employer maintained that no work-related injury occurred on July 28, 2000; that Douglas failed to give timely notice of such an injury; and that his death was not work-related.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.3d 501, 2005 WL 3131453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-s-s-tire-inc-no-15-ky-2006.