Manalapan Mining Company, Inc. v. Ralph Morgan

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2006
Docket2005 SC 000790
StatusUnknown

This text of Manalapan Mining Company, Inc. v. Ralph Morgan (Manalapan Mining Company, Inc. v. Ralph Morgan) 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
Manalapan Mining Company, Inc. v. Ralph Morgan, (Ky. 2006).

Opinion

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED OPINION

THIS OPINION IS DESIGNATED "NOT TO BE PUBLISHED. " PURSUANT TO THE RULES OF CIVIL PR OCED SIRE PROHUL GA TED B Y THE SUPREME COURT, CR 76.28 (4) (c), THIS OPINION IS NOT TO BE PUBLISHED AND SHALL NOT BE CITED OR USED AS A UTHORITYINANY OTHER CASE IN ANY COURT OF THIS STA TE. RENDERED : AUGUST 24, 2006 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

,Su~ra~ l9~xtxf of 2005-SC-0790-WC

MANALAPAN MINING COMPANY, INC. APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. 2005-CA-0805-WC WORKERS' COMPENSATION NO. 01-70045 & 02-90652

RALPH MORGAN ; HON. SHEILA C. LOWTHER, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE ; AND WORKERS' COMPENSATION BOARD APPELLEES

MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT

AFFIRMING

The Workers' Compensation Board (Board) and the Court of Appeals have

determined that it was within an Administrative Law Judge's (ALJ's) discretion to rely on

the opinion of a physician who received a history that failed to include a prior injury .

They reasoned that the opinion was supported by other credible evidence, particularly

the opinion of another physician who received a history of both the prior injury and the

injuries at issue. See Cepero v. Fabricated Metals, 132 S .W.3d 839 (Ky. 2004).

Moreover, the ALJ relied explicitly on both physicians . Appealing, the employer asserts

that the ALJ lacked such discretion under Ce ero and that the ALJ erred by considering

impairment due to a pre-existing lumbar condition . We affirm .

On July 19, 2000, the claimant sought emergency room treatment after injuring his back while working on a road maintenance crew for the Harlan County Fiscal Court.

The diagnosis was an acute lumbar sprain . X-rays taken at that time demonstrated

grade I spondylolisthesis at L5-S1 with spondylolysis, but a CT scan revealed no

evidence of herniation or stenosis . On July 21, 2000, Dr. Echeverria, the claimant's

gatekeeper physician, advised him to remain off work for two weeks. He began working

for the defendant-employer's mining company in August, 2001 .

There was no evidence of treatment for back complaints between July, 2000,

and October 31, 2001, when the scoop car in which the claimant was riding hit a bump

and injured his back. He was treated in the emergency room and missed about three

weeks of work, then continued working in pain. While pushing a piece of broken

equipment out of the mine on March 20, 2002, he experienced an acute onset of low

back pain that radiated into his legs. As before, he sought emergency room treatment.

Dr. Bean performed a lumbar fusion with instrumentation on July 25, 2002. The

claimant testified that although his back pain improved initially, it gradually returned to

its original level.

Medical records indicated that the examining physician on October 31, 2001,

noted muscle spasm in the lumbar spine. On November 5, 2001, Dr. Echeverria noted

the 2000 incident and diagnostic studies . He characterized the claimant's present

condition as being an exacerbation of the spondylolisthesis and advised him to remain

off work for two weeks . A lumbar MRI on November 21, 2001, confirmed the previous

diagnostic findings and also revealed diffuse degeneration in the rest of the spine.

On March 20, 2002, the claimant sought emergency room treatment for

complaints of back pain and numbness in the feet. He saw Dr. Echeverria on April 4,

2002, complaining that since the most recent incident he experienced persistent and severe back pain that radiated into his leg. An MRI confirmed the previous diagnostic

findings but also revealed a small central disc bulge and osteophyte at L5-S1 .

Dr. Echeverria referred the claimant to Dr. Bean, who first saw him on May 20,

2002 . Dr. Bean noted a history of the October, 2001, and March, 2002, injuries and

diagnosed symptomatic spondylolisthesis at L5-S1 . After physical therapy proved

ineffective, Dr. Bean performed surgery. The discharge summary noted a history of

progressive back pain following the two injuries. Dr. Bean later completed a Form 107

in which he attributed the claimant's present condition to the injuries and assigned a

20% impairment, relating none of it to a pre-existing active condition . He imposed

numerous work restrictions and stated that the claimant lacked the physical capacity to

return to the type of work he performed at the time of the injury .

Dr. Muffly evaluated the claimant on October 16, 2003. His report indicated that

he received a history of the 2000 episode of pain "when lifting a concrete chute" as well

as a history of the 2001 and 2002 injuries . He diagnosed chronic low back pain, the

fusion at L5-S1, and grade 1 spondylolisthesis at L5-S1 . Dr. Muffly assigned a 23%

impairment, assigned more stringent restrictions than Dr. Bean, and agreed that the

claimant could not return to coal mining.

When deposed, Dr. Muffly stated that the claimant's restrictions due to the

injuries were permanent and that he did not think the claimant could perform sedentary

work. He testified that he reviewed the CT scan and x-rays taken shortly after the 2000

injury . Although he acknowledged that they revealed spondylolisthesis and that the

condition was classified as grade 1 both before and after the subsequent injuries, he

emphasized that the back pain in 2000 was due to a pulled muscle and that the

claimant returned to work. He acknowledged that some impairment could be apportioned to the pre-existing condition but noted that it would have been dormant

until October 31, 2001, because the claimant had recovered from the 2000 episode of

back pain. In his opinion, it was the 2001 injury and 2002 re-injury that aroused the

spondylolisthesis, causing it to become disabling and require surgery .

In January, 2004, Dr. Gleis reviewed the claimant's medical records for the

employer. He assigned a 20% impairment due to the L5-S1 fusion surgery and a pre-

operative impairment of 5% due to muscle spasms . Dr. Gleis stated that the claimant

did have a pre-existing condition before the March 20, 2002, injury. He characterized it

as being multi-level degenerative disc disease and grade 1 L5-S1 spondylolisthesis that

had been active after the July, 2000, injury . Moreover, "[t]he symptoms were severe

enough in July, 2000, to warrant a CT scan." He thought that a successful fusion would

enable the claimant to return to demanding work but that he could not return to mining .

In February, 2004, Dr. Goldman evaluated the claimant for the employer. He

reported a severely restricted range of motion due to back pain, an antalgic gait, and

lumbar lordosis . Dr. Goldman diagnosed pre-existing spondylolisthesis and

spondylolysis that were symptomatic in July, 2000, and unchanged after the 2001 and

2002 incidents . Absent any objective change, he found it difficult to tell whether the

incidents caused new injuries or exacerbated the pre-existing condition . Nonetheless,

they did cause the claimant to undergo surgery, which resulted in a 20% impairment.

Of that amount, he attributed a 7% impairment to the pre-existing condition . He thought

the claimant could not return to mining.

Relying on Ce ero, supra, the employer argued that Dr. Muffly's opinion

regarding the absence of a pre-existing active impairment should be disregarded

because he did not review all of the medical records following the 2000 injury. Moreover, Dr.

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