Mendoza v. Honeywell American Meter Co.

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 2024
DocketA-23-807
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mendoza v. Honeywell American Meter Co. (Mendoza v. Honeywell American Meter Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mendoza v. Honeywell American Meter Co., (Neb. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

MENDOZA V. HONEYWELL AMERICAN METER CO.

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

MARGOT MENDOZA, APPELLEE, V.

HONEYWELL AMERICAN METER CO., APPELLANT.

Filed May 28, 2024. No. 23-807.

Appeal from the Workers’ Compensation Court: JULIE A. MARTIN, Judge. Affirmed. Timothy E. Clarke and Eric J. Sutton, of Baylor, Evnen, Wolfe & Tannehill, L.L.P., for appellant. Michael P. Dowd, of Dowd & Corrigan, L.L.C., for appellee.

MOORE, ARTERBURN, and WELCH, Judges. MOORE, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION Honeywell American Meter Co. (Honeywell) appeals from the order of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court, which awarded Margot Mendoza temporary total disability benefits and payment of medical expenses and future medical care for an injury she suffered in an accident arising out of and in the course of her employment with Honeywell. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm. II. STATEMENT OF FACTS 1. PLEADINGS On July 28, 2022, Mendoza filed a petition in the compensation court, alleging that on or about January 28, 2022, she sustained “cumulative trauma injuries secondary to repetitive job

-1- duties to her cervical spine resulting in radicular symptoms down her left arm and right trigger finger” and seeking compensation for that accident and injury. In its answer, Honeywell admitted that it had employed Mendoza on the date in question, but it denied the other allegations of her petition and alleged that any disability suffered by Mendoza was not attributable to her employment. 2. TRIAL Trial was held before the compensation court on June 26, 2023. The court heard testimony from Mendoza, via an interpreter, and received medical records and other exhibits offered into evidence by the parties. Among other things, the parties stipulated that Mendoza’s average weekly wage was $1,040, and that she was off work from February 22, 2022, through April 24, 2022, and from May 18, 2022, through the time of trial. (a) Mendoza’s Employment Mendoza was born in Peru and had lived in the United States for more than 20 years prior to trial. She began working for Honeywell in February of 2019, on an assembly line making electrical meters. She rotated about every 2 hours between a station where she assembled cranks, the meter/hydro station, and a station where she screwed down plates. Work at the crank station required prolonged standing and assembling small, lightweight pieces. The next station required Mendoza to lift meters, weighing around 20 pounds, and place them in water to check for leaks. If a meter had a leak, Mendoza had to place it back on the line, repair it, and return it to the water again. Once any leaks were eliminated, Mendoza had to lift the meter and hang it on a line above her head. She estimated that she processed about 90 meters per hour at this station. At the third station, Mendoza placed screws into lids/plates on the sides of the meter and tightened them using a screwdriver. If there was no platform available for her to stand on, she had to reach up to pull down the screwdriver suspended overhead. During her last year at Honeywell, Mendoza frequently worked 10-hour days, which meant performing a second 2-hour shift at the hydro station. (b) Prior Neck and Finger Treatment There was evidence about treatment Mendoza received for neck pain and finger pain (right index, rather than right middle finger, which is the finger at issue in this case) prior to January 2022. In 2009, Mendoza went to the emergency room for “left upper back” pain extending “into her left side” with “some tightness in the muscles with a little bit of soreness into her arm and forearm” following a motor vehicle accident. She was treated and released. The diagnosis was of “[l]eft upper back strain secondary to motor vehicle accident.” At trial, Mendoza acknowledged her involvement in the 2009 car accident and subsequent treatment. She described it as a “light accident,” testifying that she went to the emergency room to be checked out on the advice of a police officer who responded to the accident, that she did not have to be hospitalized, and that she went “straight to work” afterwards. When asked at trial about the location of the pain she experienced after the 2009 accident, Mendoza responded that she did not remember “because it was a long time ago” and “after that [she] went to work,” and she “kept on working for many years.”

-2- Nine years later, on November 20, 2018, Mendoza was seen at a health center for a follow up to an emergency room visit for right arm swelling. She presented with facial swelling, neck pain, including tight muscles and no history of trauma, and right breast pain. Heat was recommended for her neck, and she was prescribed Cyclobenzaprine. At a return visit in December, she reported that the medication had resolved her pain. Mendoza denied the need for further treatment, but she indicated that she wanted to keep using the medication because it helped her sleep and that she did have “some” pain if she did not take it. The exam of her neck was normal, and the status of her neck pain was “chronic and resolved.” Mendoza visited the health center again in May 2021. At this visit, she described sharp pain in her right index finger when bending at “the distal interphalangeal joint” and “some swelling to all fingers at times.” She also reported neck pain over 4 months that had “worsened” and no known injury. She mentioned that she “[d]oes stand for 8-10 hours” at a time. Examination showed tenderness with palpation of the “bilateral trapezius muscles and posterior neck,” “left low back,” and “[r]ight index finger at distal interphalangeal joint,” but no gross neurological deficits were noted. Mendoza was assessed with what appeared to be osteoarthritis in her finger joint and in her neck with “[p]ossible [sic] just muscle tension or tightness.” She was prescribed Cyclobenzaprine for her neck and Meloxicam for her finger pain, and labs were drawn to check for possible osteoarthritis in her fingers. In June, the medical center was preparing to schedule a hand x-ray for Mendoza; during phone contact with the center, Mendoza inquired as to whether she also needed “an x-ray for her neck/back as well.” A June 15 staff note in the center’s records indicates that someone from the imaging center had sought “clarification on the neck x-ray referral before calling [patient] to schedule.” On June 18, a staff member clarified that “as a proxy,” she had ordered imaging for Mendoza on June 7 “due to chronic neck.” Mendoza acknowledged her 2021 treatment for neck and finger pain at trial. She agreed that at the time she sought treatment in May 2021, she had been experiencing neck pain for at least 4 months. She testified that it was “a light pain,” the doctor gave her medication (she did not remember the name of the medication), and the pain “went away.” When asked if she had had other episodes of neck pain prior to 2021, she testified, “No, because I would remember if I had a very strong pain.” When asked about a medical note from December 2021 that referenced her having “chronic neck pain,” she replied, “No, I do not remember.” (c) January 2022 Accident and Treatment On January 28, 2022, Mendoza was working the meter assembly line when she experienced pain in her neck and down her left arm so severe that it brought her to tears. She testified that she stopped working at 9 a.m. that morning because the pain was “unbearable.” Mendoza reported the pain to her supervisor, and she went home, even though she had more than 5 hours left on her shift. Later that day, she sought medical care at a health clinic where she saw Dr. Cristina Hurlbut.

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Mendoza v. Honeywell American Meter Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendoza-v-honeywell-american-meter-co-nebctapp-2024.