Lewis v. Delhaize America

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedApril 25, 2006
DocketI.C. No. 392979
StatusPublished

This text of Lewis v. Delhaize America (Lewis v. Delhaize America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Delhaize America, (N.C. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

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The Full Commission reviewed the prior Opinion and Award based upon the record of the proceedings before Deputy Commissioner Stephenson and the briefs and arguments on appeal. The plaintiff has shown good grounds to reconsider the evidence. Based on its reconsideration of the evidence, the Full Commission finds different facts than those found by the Deputy Commissioner and reverses the conclusions of law and the award of the Deputy Commissioner.

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The Full Commission finds as fact and concludes as a matter of law the following which were entered into as:

STIPULATIONS
1. The parties are subject to and bound by the provisions of the North Carolina Workers' Compensation Act.

2. Risk Management Services Incorporated is the carrier on the risk.

3. An employer-employee relationship existed on the alleged date of injury of December 18, 2003.

4. Plaintiff's average weekly wage pursuant to payroll records equals $986.32. Plaintiff's corresponding compensation rate equals $656.88.

5. The parties stipulated to the following exhibits:

(1) All of plaintiff's medical records.

(2) Industrial Commission Forms.

(3) Plaintiff's Job Description.

(4) Plaintiff's Personnel and Payroll Records Maintained by Defendant.

(5) North Carolina Highway Patrol Accident Report.

(6) Dunn Rescue Squad Accident Report.

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Based upon the greater weight of the competent and credible record evidence of record and reasonable inferences flowing therefrom, the Full Commission makes the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. At the time of the hearing before the Deputy Commissioner, plaintiff was 59 years old and had worked as a truck driver for defendant-employer from 1983 until December 18, 2003. Plaintiff drove a tractor-trailer for defendant, consisting of a Volvo tractor and a forty-five foot trailer.

2. On December 18, 2003, plaintiff drove his tractor-trailer at a relatively high rate of speed into two or three trailers parked at defendant's loading dock in Dunn. The cab of plaintiff's tractor was demolished as a result of the force of the accident. Emergency personnel needed forty-five minutes to extricate plaintiff from the tractor's cab.

3. Plaintiff cannot recall the events of December 18, 2003.

4. Richard Stump, a Dunn Rescue Squad EMT Paramedic, joined other emergency personnel in responding to plaintiff's accident. Stump initially treated plaintiff at the crash site by climbing on the engine of the truck and in through the shattered front windshield. Stump observed at that time that plaintiff was alert, knew his name and was aware that he was at Food Lion. Stump observed plaintiff moving as best he could in the demolished cab, including both his arms. Stump also observed that plaintiff had good grip strength in both hands. Stump observed that the pupils in plaintiff's eyes were normal, equal, round, and reactive to light. Stump further observed many lacerations and cuts on plaintiff's face and neck. However, as the extraction progressed, plaintiff's pulse became increasingly weak.

5. After plaintiff was extracted from the wreckage, the team of paramedics, including a helicopter rescue team from UNC Hospital, chemically paralyzed plaintiff and intubated him before air lifting him to UNC Hospital in Chapel Hill, NC, for additional medical treatment. After plaintiff's physicians at UNC Hospitals released him, he participated in patient rehabilitation at the Southeastern Regional Rehabilitation Center in Fayetteville, NC. After plaintiff completed his rehabilitation at Southeastern, plaintiff moved to the Mary Gran Nursing Center in Clinton, NC. Plaintiff subsequently moved to a senior citizens village in Dunn, NC. 6. This case is concerned specifically with the causation of plaintiff's stroke and the resulting disability, as his other injuries from the accident were settled by a Partial Compromise Settlement Agreement on November 1, 2004.

7. Upon plaintiff's arrival at UNC Hospital on December 18, 2003, plaintiff was placed on a red trauma activation status, most severe level, and initially attended by Dr. Preston Rich, a trauma care specialist. By the time plaintiff was admitted to UNC Hospital, Dr. Rich found that the left side of plaintiff's body was paralyzed, or in medical terms, he had left hemiparesis. Dr. Rich observed the following injuries: subaraehnoid hemorrhage, a broken bone in plaintiff's left leg and the left hip was dislocated, a right internal carotid artery dissection, a right middle cerebral artery infarct, multiple lacerations about plaintiff's body including the right side of his neck along the carotid artery, and additional lacerations about plaintiff's head, legs, and hands. In layman's terms, the right internal carotid artery dissection and the right middle cerebral artery infarct are called a stroke. Plaintiff also treated with Dr. Zaatreh, a neurologist, at UNC Hospital for the resulting problems after his stroke.

8. All three doctors deposed in this case agree on the nature of plaintiff's stroke. First, plaintiff's right internal carotid artery dissected, which led the artery to occlude, or block, which stopped the blood flow to plaintiff's brain, thereby causing his stroke or infarct. Dr. Rich testified that this process involved a piece of the wall of plaintiff's artery tearing off and the torn piece creating a flap, which then blocked the flow of blood through the artery to plaintiff's brain, thereby causing a stroke. All three physicians deposed in this ease agreed that blunt trauma to an artery can cause the artery to dissect or tear and cause a blockage and stroke.

9. The disagreement in this case between plaintiff's treating physicians, Dr. Rich and Dr. Zaatreh, and the defendants' second opinion doctor, Mitch Freedman, M.D., who has never treated plaintiff, concerns how plaintiff's artery dissected or tore in the first place. Drs. Rich and Zaatreh believe the artery was torn as a result of trauma in the accident. Dr. Freedman believes the artery tore as a result of natural causes and that the torn-artery stroke caused plaintiff to lose control of the truck.

10. Dr. Rich and Dr. Zaatreh both personally treated plaintiff while he was at UNC Hospital. Both physicians observed, and the medical record indicates, that plaintiff had blunt trauma to the right side of his neck. Dr. Rich described in his deposition that plaintiff had a cut on the right side of his neck, located directly over his carotid artery. Further, the stipulated medical records from UNC Hospital show that a CT scan of plaintiff's neck showed a soft tissue injury along the mid right neck with air seen in the jugular veins of the right neck.

11. Dr. Rich emphasized:

The other important piece of information was that he had clear evidence of trauma to his neck. . . . [I]t was clearly a marker that he had sustained blunt force trauma to that neck, which is directly overlying the carotid artery on that side.

12. Dr. Rich also indicated in his deposition that dissections like plaintiff's most commonly occur with trauma to the area. Based on Dr. Rich's personal treatment of plaintiff and a review of plaintiff's medical record he did not believe that this stroke was something caused by a pre-existing condition.

13. Dr.

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Lewis v. Delhaize America, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-delhaize-america-ncworkcompcom-2006.