Marshall Durbin Companies v. Warren

633 So. 2d 1006, 1994 WL 20988
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1994
Docket91-CC-1133
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 633 So. 2d 1006 (Marshall Durbin Companies v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall Durbin Companies v. Warren, 633 So. 2d 1006, 1994 WL 20988 (Mich. 1994).

Opinion

633 So.2d 1006 (1994)

MARSHALL DURBIN COMPANIES and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company,
v.
James H. WARREN.

No. 91-CC-1133.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

January 27, 1994.
Rehearing Denied March 31, 1994.

*1007 W. Scott Collins, Mitchell McNutt Threadgill Smith & Sams, Tupelo, for appellant.

John R. Coleman, Tupelo, for appellee.

Before DAN M. LEE, P.J., and McRAE and SMITH, JJ.

McRAE, Justice, for the Court:

This appeal arises from the October 9, 1991 judgment of the Lee County Circuit Court which reversed the Workers' Compensation Commission order of October 25, 1989. The Commission order affirmed the administrative judge's finding that James H. Warren, due to his on-the-job injury, was entitled to temporary total disability. The Commission, however, amended the award of temporary total disability benefits finding that Warren had reached maximum medical improvement and that he suffered no permanent disability. Circuit Court Judge Frank Russell reinstated the ruling of the administrative judge and held that the Commission's findings were erroneous. The Employer and Insurance Carrier have now appealed to this Court and raise the following issue on appeal:

The findings of the Workers' Compensation Commission are supported by substantial evidence and the Circuit Court erred in reversing the Commission.

I.

This case involves an all-too-familiar workers' compensation story. The employee, James H. Warren, a truck mechanic, suffered a back injury on August 28, 1986, in an admittedly compensable truck collision. He was taken to the emergency room where he was examined by the company doctor, Dr. Lawrence Brisco. He was discharged, given medication, and treated by Dr. Brisco thereafter as an outpatient. Within a few days after the accident, Warren returned to his job and worked, painfully performing his duties until six months later when the back pain, leg pain and numbness became unbearable.

Ultimately, on November 14, 1988, Dr. Samuel E. Hunter performed surgery on Warren removing two ruptured discs. Dr. Hunter causally related the ruptured discs to the compensable injury of August 28, 1986. He was the only doctor to physically see the ruptured discs. Dr. Hunter concluded that Warren was temporarily and totally disabled *1008 from the date of the injury through February 28, 1989, the date Warren was last in his office for post-operative examination. Dr. Hunter was deposed after the conclusion of the hearing before the administrative judge, but his testimony through deposition was received into evidence by the full Commission.

Warren sought Dr. Hunter's services on the recommendation of Dr. John McFadden, a pain specialist, who had treated him for a previous back injury in 1983. Dr. McFadden examined Warren in February, 1988, and placed him on anti-inflammatories and pain medication. He diagnosed Warren as suffering from a disc injury. After he administered several tests and procedures to reduce the pain, Warren failed to improve. Thereafter, McFadden performed tests which revealed the disk to be completely ruptured. He testified that Warren could only sit or stand for a short period of time without experiencing increasing pain and any type of lifting or activity increased his pain.

Warren had previously seen three neurosurgeons and a neurologist who conducted a battery of diagnostic tests and examinations and concluded that there were no objective findings to support the back pain. The initial neurosurgeons treated Warren conservatively. They classified Warren ready to return to his job and perform all of his duties without limitation. None of the four experts, however, examined Warren once the ruptured discs were discovered.

Warren had earlier seen Dr. Thomas McDonald, a neurosurgeon, who diagnosed his condition as "back and neck pain." Dr. McDonald classified him as temporarily and totally disabled. Following several office visits and physical therapy, he discharged Warren on April 28, 1987, and concluded that he was able to return to work. Dr. McDonald testified through his deposition that Warren informed him that his pain was partly due to the use of a garden tiller (a fact vehemently denied by Warren). He concluded that Warren had recovered from the "soft tissue" injury with no permanent disability although Warren was still having neck, back and leg pains. Warren was later terminated from his employment for unrelated reasons.

On February 26, 1988, Liberty Mutual's claim supervisor filed a B-31 (Report of Payment and Settlement Receipt) initiating commission action. The B-31 showed total costs of $4,648.41, including compensation of $560.00 for four weeks of temporary total disability between April 5, 1987, and May 4, 1987. Warren, without a job and still suffering back and leg pain, employed counsel and, on March 22, 1988, filed a motion to controvert. The employer and carrier answered, denying Warren suffered from any disability. They claimed, as an affirmative defense, an apportionment for a previous back injury incurred by Warren in 1983. They also claimed the occurrence of an intervening cause.

Warren attempted to work for a construction company in the months of August, September and October of 1987; however, because of his back problem, he was unable to perform the necessary tasks. This, being his last work, ended in November 1987.

The hearing was conducted on October 13, 1988, a month before Warren had the ruptured discs surgically removed. Thereafter, Tulane Posey, Administrative Judge, entered his findings of fact, concluding that Warren was temporarily totally disabled from the last day he worked in November, 1987, until at least the hearing of October 13, 1988. He held that Warren had not reached maximum medical recovery at the time of the October 13, 1988, hearing. The administrative judge lastly concluded that it was too early to ascertain whether Warren's pre-existing back injury might be a material contributing factor to his condition.

The employer and carrier were ordered to pay compensation to Warren in the form of reasonable and necessary medical services and temporary and total disability benefits at the rate of $140.00 a week from the last day Warren worked in November, 1987, until he reached maximum medical recovery, or at least until October 13, 1988. A future hearing was also ordered to determine the extent and degree of permanent disability and/or loss of wage-earning capacity, if any, after Warren reached maximum medical recovery.

*1009 The full Commission entered its order of October 25, 1989, affirming in part, amending in part and reversing in part the order of the administrative judge. The Commission held that Warren had not met the burden of proof regarding the causal connection between the medical disability to his lower back and the admittedly compensable truck accident of August 28, 1986. The Commission, apparently ignoring the overwhelming proof of Warren's two ruptured discs, found that Warren had reached maximum medical recovery by April 28, 1987, and sustained no permanent occupational disability as a result thereof. The Commission finally determined that the November, 1988, surgery which removed two ruptured discs from his back did not relate to the compensable injury of August, 1986.

The Commission then ordered that the employer and carrier pay Warren temporary total disability benefits at the rate of $140.00 per week from August 28, 1986, until April 28, 1987, with proper credit for any compensation already made to Warren.

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Bluebook (online)
633 So. 2d 1006, 1994 WL 20988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-durbin-companies-v-warren-miss-1994.