Massey v. City of Raleigh

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedMay 22, 2001
DocketI.C. NO. 439210
StatusPublished

This text of Massey v. City of Raleigh (Massey v. City of Raleigh) 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
Massey v. City of Raleigh, (N.C. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

Upon review of all of the competent evidence of record with reference to the errors assigned, and finding no good ground to receive further evidence or to rehear the parties or their representatives, the Full Commission upon reconsideration of the evidence reverses the Opinion and Award of the Deputy Commissioner and enters the following Opinion and Award.

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The Full Commission finds as fact and concludes as matters of law the following which were entered into by the parties through the Pre-trial Agreement and at the hearing before the Deputy Commissioner as:

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

2. Plaintiffs alleged date of injury is 3 March 1994.

3. On 3 March 1994 the employee-employer relationship existed between the parties.

4. The City of Raleigh is self-insured.

5. Plaintiffs compensation rate is $347.83.

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Based upon the competent evidence of record, the Full Commission rejects the findings of the Deputy Commissioner and makes the following additional:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. Plaintiff is a male who was born on 16 September 1942. He completed the ninth grade and has no special skills other than on-the-job training. Plaintiff has experience operating equipment such as a backhoe and has a commercial drivers license. Plaintiff was employed by defendant as an Equipment Operator II. His primary job duty for the City of Raleigh was the operation of a backhoe, and he worked on a crew which usually consisted of five workers, including two workers assigned solely to physical labor.

2. On 3 March 1994, plaintiff sustained an admittedly compensable injury by accident to his right shoulder which arose out of and in the course of his employment with defendant when he attempted to lift a water main pipe off the back of a truck. This type of labor was not part of plaintiffs regular duties or normal work routine. Plaintiff is right-handed. This injury was the subject of a Form 21 agreement and two subsequent Form 26 agreements. A Form 28T Notice of Termination of Compensation by Reason of Trial Return to Work dated 15 July 1996, was filed with the Commission. No Form 28U Employees Request that Compensation be Reinstated After Unsuccessful Trial Return to Work has been filed.

3. The nature of plaintiffs injury was an impingement syndrome of the right shoulder, with tendinitis and bursitis. Plaintiff presented to orthopedist Dr. George Benedict. Following unsuccessful conservative treatment, plaintiff underwent a right shoulder arthroscopy.

4. Plaintiff continued to have pain without much improvement after surgery. On 24 April 1995, plaintiff presented to Dr. Kevin Paul Speer, an orthopedic specialist at Duke University Medical Center. Following Dr. Speers examination, he found plaintiff to be suffering from a right shoulder impingement, a possible rotator cuff tear, and acromioclavicular arthritis. Dr. Speer scheduled a right shoulder arthroscopy with an open rotator cuff tear and distal clavicle resection. On 19 May 1995, Dr. Speer performed a second shoulder arthroscopy, and removed the end of plaintiffs collar bone and some scar tissue.

5. Plaintiff did not experience any complications following his 19 May 1995 surgery; however, Dr. Speer testified that plaintiff never attained full, normal function and strength, and he continued to have quite a bit of pain and discomfort. Dr. Speer tried several means of conservative treatment, including injections, oral medicines, narcotics, activity moderations, writing plaintiff out of work and changing his work status; however, nothing affected plaintiffs continuing pain. Plaintiff collected workers compensation for some period of time, then on 21 August 1995, he attempted a return to work upon defendants request. During this period, plaintiff returned to his pre-injury wages and was not paid compensation pursuant to the Form 21 agreement. Although plaintiff ostensibly returned to his previous job, he was only required to perform minor tasks, ride around with his co-workers, or stay at the shop. When plaintiff attempted to operate a backhoe, he was unable to so for more than an hour. Thereafter, he stood and watched while his supervisor finished the job. Plaintiff received his pre-injury wages in this employment; however, because the job was so modified to fit plaintiffs limited work capacity, this employment was make work and did not constitute a suitable job which was readily available in the competitive market place. Plaintiffs earnings in this modified job were not indicative of his wage earning capacity.

6. Dr. Speer found plaintiff had reached maximum medical improvement as of 24 January 1996. On 1 February 1996, Dr. Speer released plaintiff to return as needed, and assigned plaintiff a rating of 10% permanent partial impairment to the right shoulder. There is no evidence that defendant paid plaintiff for his permanent partial disability rating. Dr. Speer also imposed work restrictions of no lifting more than 20 pounds intermittently to a maximum of two hours per day, and no more than intermittent climbing for a maximum of one hour per day.

7. On 11 March 1996, plaintiff returned to see Dr. Speer with complaints of increased shoulder pain, particularly in the afternoon and evening. Dr. Speer prescribed medication and wrote plaintiff out of work for two weeks. On 19 March 1996, the parties executed a Form 26 Supplemental Agreement as to Payment of Compensation, agreeing to pay plaintiff temporary total disability compensation beginning on 11 March 1996 and continuing for "necessary weeks. On 22 March 1996, defendants filed a Form 28T terminating plaintiffs compensation as of 15 March 1996, based upon a trial return to work.

8. On 27 May 1996, plaintiff returned to Dr. Speer with complaints of pain in the shoulder area and over his biceps. Although the bicep area was different from the shoulder, Dr. Speer testified and the Full Commission finds as a fact that plaintiffs bicep condition was causally related to the same impingement syndrome. Dr. Speer ordered an MRI of plaintiffs right shoulder and bicep.

9. The MRI confirmed a medial biceps subluxation, which Dr. Speer determined required an open biceps tenodesis. On 2 July 1996, Dr. Speer performed the additional surgery on plaintiffs right shoulder and arm. He removed the biceps tendon attachment to the shoulder and attached it further down the arm. On 9 July 1996, the parties executed a second Form 26 Supplemental Agreement as to Payment of Compensation, agreeing to pay plaintiff temporary total compensation from 2 July 1996 for "necessary weeks. A Form 28T terminating those benefits by reason of a trial return to work was filed by defendants on 15 July 1996, effective on 11 July 1996.

10. Following his 2 July 1996 surgery, plaintiff returned to work for defendant and again was limited in his activities due to his shoulder injury. On 10 July 1996 Dr. Speer filled out a work restriction form which limited plaintiff to lifting no more than 0-10 pounds and no lifting with his right arm at all, no climbing, and only intermittent bending, squatting, kneeling and twisting for up to two hours per day. Plaintiff could not drive any type of motor vehicle, or work above his shoulder with his right arm. When plaintiff returned to work he was not assigned any specific duties and no longer drove a backhoe. His activities were limited to minor janitorial tasks or watching others work. Plaintiffs job duties were so modified that they constituted make work.

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Bluebook (online)
Massey v. City of Raleigh, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massey-v-city-of-raleigh-ncworkcompcom-2001.