Linda Hayes v. Howard Industries, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 6, 2019
Docket2018-WC-01160-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Linda Hayes v. Howard Industries, Inc. (Linda Hayes v. Howard Industries, Inc.) 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
Linda Hayes v. Howard Industries, Inc., (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-WC-01160-COA

LINDA HAYES APPELLANT

v.

HOWARD INDUSTRIES, INC. APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/18/2018 TRIBUNAL FROM WHICH MISSISSIPPI WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALED: COMMISSION ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: FLOYD E. DOOLITTLE ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: RICHARD LEWIS YODER JR. WILLIAM LAWRENCE THAMES NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WORKERS’ COMPENSATION DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/06/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., McDONALD AND C. WILSON, JJ.

C. WILSON, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Linda Hayes sustained a neck injury while working at Howard Industries, Inc. and

filed a compensation claim. The Administrative Judge held an evidentiary hearing on the

matter, and the parties presented conflicting expert testimony. Thereafter, the Administrative

Judge entered an order finding Hayes sustained a loss of wage-earning capacity and requiring

Howard Industries to pay Hayes permanent partial disability benefits and future medical

benefits. Howard Industries filed a petition for review. The Mississippi Workers’

Compensation Commission (the “Commission”) then entered an order declining to accept

the Administrative Judge’s determination and found that Hayes did not sustain a loss of

wage-earning capacity. Hayes now appeals and asserts, among other things, that the Commission’s decision is not supported by substantial creditable evidence. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Hayes sustained a neck injury on March 21, 2012, while working at Howard Industries

using an overhead crane to pick up steel. At the time of her injury, Hayes made $11.83 per

hour as an internal assembler and was at an 11-0 pay-grade level.

¶3. Following the injury, Hayes received medical treatment, which Howard Industries

covered. Hayes initially sought medical treatment from an MEA Medical Clinic before being

referred to Dr. Ross Ward at Laurel Bone and Joint Clinic. On May 10, 2012, Dr. Ward

informed Hayes that she was not a surgical candidate and released Hayes to work full duty

with no restrictions beginning May 11. Dr. Ward also referred Hayes to Dr. Vivek Barclay

for pain management.

¶4. Hayes began seeing Dr. Barclay on May 23, 2012. Dr. Barclay gave Hayes work

restrictions, including no overhead work, no lifting over ten pounds, and eight-hour work

days. On May 24, 2012, Hayes returned to work at Howard Industries. Howard Industries

accommodated Hayes’s restrictions from Dr. Barclay.

¶5. On September 4, 2012, Hayes filed a petition to controvert. On September 28, 2012,

Howard Industries filed its answer, admitting compensability.

¶6. On August 23, 2013, Dr. Barclay placed Hayes at maximum medical improvement

(MMI) and stated that Hayes had permanent work restrictions of no heavy lifting, no

overhead reaching, and eight-hour work days and forty-hour work weeks.1 Dr. Barclay

1 At this time, Hayes made $12.56 per hour at Howard Industries and was at an 11-3 pay-grade level.

2 assigned Hayes a 5% whole-person impairment rating.

¶7. On September 16-17, 2013, Robbie Bishop performed a functional capacity evaluation

(FCE) on Hayes at Southern Bone and Joint Rehab. Bishop noted that Hayes had difficulty

with overhead lifting as well as difficulty with heavy lifting and carrying. Overall, Bishop

noted that Hayes could perform light-level work, was able to lift and carry and push and pull

at least twenty pounds occasionally, and was able to remain upright at a frequent level.

¶8. On January 17, 2014, Dr. Jeffrey Summers performed an independent medical exam

(IME) on Hayes at NewSouth NeuroSpine. Dr. Summers reviewed Hayes’s medical records

from MEA, Dr. Ward, and Dr. Barclay. Dr. Summers reported that he did not feel that Hayes

was at MMI and recommended that she begin both a home exercise program and an active

therapy program. On December 23, 2014, Dr. Barclay again placed Hayes at MMI with the

same restrictions.

¶9. Given the conflicting medical opinions, Howard Industries requested Hayes undergo

another IME. The Administrative Judge granted Howard Industries’s request and ordered

Hayes to undergo an IME with Dr. Leon Grigoryev. Dr. Grigoryev performed this exam on

May 1, 2015. Following the examination, Dr. Grigoryev reported that Hayes had reached

MMI and assigned Hayes a 0% impairment rating. He further reported that Hayes had no

work restrictions and no work limitations and that Hayes did not need any further medical

treatment for her March 21, 2012 injury.

¶10. Hayes worked an accommodated job at Howard Industries from August 2013 to

September 2015. Following Dr. Grigoryev’s IME, Hayes’s supervisor requested Hayes

3 return to work full duty in September 2015 based on the IME findings. Hayes complied and

worked full duty for four months—from September 2015 to December 2015—with no

complaints. Nonetheless, when Hayes returned to work after Christmas in January 2016,

Hayes told her supervisors that she would not work full duty and requested a job that

complied with Dr. Barclay’s restrictions. Howard Industries terminated Hayes on January

5, 2016, for refusal to perform her required work. At the time of her termination, Howard

Industries paid Hayes $12.91 per hour, and Hayes was at an 11-3 pay-grade level.

¶11. After her termination, Hayes’s union appealed her grievance to arbitration. The

arbitrator, Connie M. Stokes, issued an order on August 3, 2016, stating that Hayes should

not have refused to work the job offered by Howard Industries. However, due to the

uncertainty of Hayes’s physical condition on the date of her termination,2 Stokes decreased

Hayes’s penalty to a six-month suspension. Pursuant to Stokes’s arbitration order, Hayes

returned to work on August 11, 2016. But upon returning, Hayes again refused to work full

duty, so Howard Industries terminated Hayes for a second time on August 23, 2016. At the

time of her second termination, Hayes made $12.91 per hour and was at an 11-3 pay-grade

level.

¶12. Hayes’s union appealed Hayes’s grievance to arbitration again, alleging Howard

Industries failed to accept statements from Hayes’s doctor and documentation concerning

Hayes’s work restrictions. The second arbitrator, Steven A. Zimmerman, issued an order on

August 28, 2017, finding that Howard Industries had properly terminated Hayes for violation

2 Hayes testified that she was in pain when she refused to work full duty in January 2016.

4 of company rules and denying all relief requested by Hayes’s union. Zimmerman specifically

noted that Hayes testified that she was not in pain on the day she returned to Howard

Industries in August 2016 and refused to work full duty.

¶13. Even though Dr. Grigoryev performed an IME on Hayes in May 2015, Hayes

continued to see Dr. Barclay in 2016 and 2017. During this time frame, Dr. Barclay

indicated that he had no changes or other recommendations to make after Dr. Grigoryev’s

IME. Dr. Barclay also maintained the same work restrictions for Hayes of no heavy lifting,

no overhead reaching, an eight-hour work day, and a forty-hour work week.

¶14. On July 26, 2017, the Administrative Judge held a hearing to determine Hayes’s

medical rating, restrictions, and permanent disability. At the hearing, Angela Malone3

testified as a vocational expert on behalf of Howard Industries and Kathy Smith4 testified as

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