Metal Trims Industries, Inc. v. Stovall

562 So. 2d 1293, 1990 WL 72292
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 30, 1990
Docket07-CC-59350
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 562 So. 2d 1293 (Metal Trims Industries, Inc. v. Stovall) 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
Metal Trims Industries, Inc. v. Stovall, 562 So. 2d 1293, 1990 WL 72292 (Mich. 1990).

Opinion

562 So.2d 1293 (1990)

METAL TRIMS INDUSTRIES, INC. and The Home Insurance Company
v.
Annie STOVALL.

No. 07-CC-59350.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

May 30, 1990.

*1294 James M. Anderson, Markow Walker Reeves & Anderson, Sheila Jones, Markow Walker Reeves Firm, Jackson, for appellants.

Dixon L. Pyles, Sr., Pyles & Tucker, Jackson, for appellee.

Before DAN M. LEE, P.J., and ANDERSON and PITTMAN, JJ.

PITTMAN, Justice, for the Court:

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

This case is an appeal of a Circuit Court decision which affirmed a decision of the Mississippi Worker's Compensation Commission upholding the order of a Commission administrative law judge (ALJ). The order of the ALJ allowed the claim of the Appellee herein, Annie Stovall, to be reopened within the one year period allowed by Miss. Code Ann. Sec. 71-3-53 (1972).

A "9(i)" lump-sum settlement was reached in November of 1982 between Metal Trims Industries, Inc., hereinafter "Metal Trims" and its employee, Annie Stovall. The lump sum settlement agreement provided for a final settlement between Metal Trims, its insurance carrier, Home Insurance Company, and employee-claimant Stovall. The agreement further represented that the amount received by Stovall would be satisfaction and discharge of all responsibility and liability of the employer and carrier, and a full release for the injuries alleged by claimant Stovall, "and all known and unknown effects thereof." (R-5).

Subsequently, in November of 1983, within the one year limitation of Miss. Code Ann. Sec. 71-3-53 (1972), Stovall filed an Application to reopen and review her prior compensation award. The ALJ found that the circumstances surrounding the prior award merited reopening the prior determination. Metal Trims and Home appealed to the Commission. The Commission affirmed the holding of the ALJ, with modification to excuse the non-payment by Metal Trims of benefits within 14 days of the due date. From the Commission, Metal Trims and Home Insurance Co. appealed to the Circuit Court for the First Judicial District of Hinds County.

Metal Trims and Home appealed to this Court, assigning as the issue on appeal:

WHETHER METAL TRIMS INDUSTRIES, INC., AND HOME INSURANCE COMPANY SHALL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY BENEFITS, MEDICAL SERVICES OR DISABILITY ATTRIBUTABLE TO MRS. STOVALL'S ALLEGED CERVICAL SPINE DIFFICULTY WHEN THE MEDICAL EVIDENCE SHOWS IT DID NOT ARISE UNTIL ONE YEAR AFTER HER ORIGINAL DATE OF INJURY AND HER PRIMARY TREATING PHYSICIAN COULD NOT CAUSALLY RELATE THOSE PROBLEMS TO THE INJURY.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

Annie Stovall, the Claimant in this case, was a seventeen year veteran of Metal Trims Industries, Inc., a Jackson firm that formed architectural trim pieces such as hand rails, from metals such as aluminum. On Friday, February 2, 1982, Stovall was stacking "mulls" at the Metal Trims plant. The mulls, evidently aluminum pieces not yet finished into rails, weighed about 30 to 40 pounds each. Stovall was required to bend at the waist, grab a "mull" and place it on top of other mulls.

She testified that she experienced a sudden pain in her back from her neck to her waistline. The pain radiated from her neck into her right shoulder, and from her back into her right hip and leg. Stovall sought medical attention, and was treated conservatively for back strain by Drs. Thomas M. Davis and Lucien Hodges. Stovall was released to return to work in early April 1982.

Subsequently, on April 21, 1982, two and one-half months later, Mrs. Stovall suffered a second injury to her back while lifting some heavy gauge aluminum hand rails. She felt severe pain in her neck and lower back. Again Stovall sought medical treatment. From the facts in the record, it appears that Stovall suffered such pain that she could not return to work.

*1295 Claimant sought the services of Dr. David E. Lipton, an orthopaedic surgeon, who discovered other problems and performed surgery on her for ruptured discs in her back on September 21, 1982. Five weeks later, and still not fully recovered, Stovall felt a painful "catch" in her right hip, and couldn't straighten up. She fell from her front porch down several steps, reinjuring her neck and back in the process.

Claimant again sought the services of Dr. Lipton. She testified that, after a course of treatment, Dr. Lipton told her "there wasn't anything else he could do." Stovall then turned to Dr. Elmer Nix, another local orthopaedist, who hospitalized her. After two weeks in a local hospital, Stovall was referred to Dr. Henry LaRocca, who performed a spinal fusion on Stovall's lower back, and another procedure on her neck.

In petitioning to reopen her Worker's Compensation claim, Stovall alleges that the "catch" or muscle spasm which caused the reinjury of her back and neck was directly caused by her compensable injury received while working at Metal Trims, and that the reinjury to her back and neck has caused her to become totally and permanently disabled, hence the change in circumstances she alleges as grounds for reopening the compensation claim.

During the course of the injury, reinjury, and treatment therefore, Stovall retained the services of an attorney, to prosecute her Worker's Compensation claim for her. In Stovall's Petition to Reopen, she alleges that on November 18, 1982, her attorney, with full knowledge that she had suffered new injury and at the time of settlement was in worse condition than at the time of the inception of her claim, proceeded to settle her Worker's Compensation claim for a lump-sum distribution of $11,250.00 (out of which was deducted the 25% attorney fee allowed by statute). She also alleges that the true facts of her condition were misrepresented to the Commission, and that as a result her claim was wrongfully settled. The total amount of the settlement was $23,693.34.

Annie Stovall petitioned to reopen the matter previously settled by 9(i) agreement and Metal Trims and Home Insurance sought to prove that Stovall had a degenerative spinal condition, and that the continuing problems Stovall was experiencing were due to the condition which pre-existed Stovall's work-related injury. However, Stovall's physician factually tied the course of the degenerative condition into her work related injury. Stovall alleged and proved to the satisfaction of the Worker's Compensation Administrative Law Judge (contrary to what the settlement petition and order of the Commission contained), that she did not reach maximum medical recovery, and indeed was still totally disabled at the time of the 9(i) settlement.

Metal Trims and Home Insurance appealed the administrative law judge's ruling to the full Worker's Compensation Commission. The Commission affirmed the holding of the administrative law judge, finding that the Commission itself had made a mistake in determination of fact.

"The `Petition for Settlement' and the `Order Approving Settlement' were based on a a (sic) determination of fact that claimant was permanently partially disabled as opposed to permanently totally disabled. Contrary to the assessment of permanent partial disability contained in the `Petition for Settlement,' primary treating physician Dr. LaRocca testified claimant's disability has not subsided since the date of injury. Claimant also testified she has not received any relief from her symptoms since the date she reinjured her back on April 21, 1982.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
562 So. 2d 1293, 1990 WL 72292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metal-trims-industries-inc-v-stovall-miss-1990.