Mitchell, Michael v. Bunge North America

2019 TN WC App. 17
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedApril 16, 2019
Docket2016-08-1131
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 TN WC App. 17 (Mitchell, Michael v. Bunge North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell, Michael v. Bunge North America, 2019 TN WC App. 17 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Mattie Mitchell, as Representative for the ) Docket No. 2016-08-1131 Estate of Michael Mitchell ) ) State File No. 92588-2015 v. ) ) Bunge North America, et al. ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Compensation Claims ) Deana C. Seymour, Judge )

Affirmed and Certified as Final - Filed April 16, 2019

This is the third appeal of this case. The employee, a supervisor at a grain processing facility, suffered a heart attack and died while at work. The employee’s surviving spouse brought a claim for death benefits, asserting the employee’s heart attack was due to work- related physical exertion, environmental exposures, and mental stress. The employer filed a motion for summary judgment, which the trial court denied. We vacated the trial court’s decision and remanded the case for additional findings consistent with Rule 56.04 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. The trial court subsequently issued an amended order denying summary judgment and identifying specific factual disputes concerning each of the surviving spouse’s three theories of recovery. That decision was affirmed on appeal. Following a trial, the court ruled the employee’s surviving spouse failed to prove the heart attack arose primarily out of the employment and denied her claim for death benefits. The surviving spouse has appealed. We affirm the trial court’s decision and certify the court’s order as final.

Presiding Judge Marshall L. Davidson, III, delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board in which Judge David F. Hensley and Judge Timothy W. Conner joined.

Julian T. Bolton, Memphis, Tennessee, for the employee-appellant, Mattie Mitchell as Representative for the Estate of Michael Mitchell

S. Newton Anderson and Cameron M. Watson, Memphis, Tennessee, for the employer- appellee, Bunge North America

1 Factual and Procedural Background

Michael Mitchell (“Employee”) worked as a grain elevator laborer and superintendent for Bunge North America (“Employer”) from 1984 to November 1, 2015 when he died from a heart attack while at work. He spent approximately ten years prior to his death working as a superintendent for Employer. Employer maintained that Employee did not engage in any strenuous activity on the day of the heart attack and declined to pay workers’ compensation benefits. 1

Employee’s surviving spouse (“Claimant”) asserted the heart attack was a compensable injury because it was caused by physical exertion, grain dust inhalation, and mental stress. She claimed that Employee was the only superintendent on site that day and had been “all over the place.” She further alleged that Employee was “stressed out” about being required to use a computer system he was having difficulty learning.

Employer filed a motion for summary judgment on September 13, 2017. The trial court found there were disputed issues of material fact but failed to identify them. We remanded the case to the trial court to make additional findings consistent with Rule 56.04 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. See Mitchell v. Bunge North America, No. 2016-08-1131, 2018 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 3 (Tenn. Workers’ Comp. App. Bd. Feb. 7, 2018). The trial court subsequently issued an order with the requisite findings, which we affirmed on appeal, concluding Claimant had presented sufficient evidence of disputed facts to survive summary judgment. See Mitchell v. Bunge North America, No. 2016-08-1131, 2018 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 40 (Tenn. Workers’ Comp. App. Bd. Aug. 7, 2018). Upon remand, the case was tried.

Lay Testimony

At trial, Claimant argued that physical exertion, environmental exposures, and/or mental stress caused Employee’s heart attack and death. She described her husband’s exhaustion at the end of each workday and the pain he endured from a prior work-related knee injury. She also discussed his headaches and sinus problems, which she attributed to grain dust inhalation at work. Employee’s daughters testified about helping their father with computer work due to his lack of computer skills and about the dusty environment in which he worked.

Claimant also presented the testimony of Roy Payne and Darnell Mitchell, Jr., as well as the deposition testimony of Gregory Thomas. Mr. Payne and Mr. Thomas worked with Employee and were with him when he suffered the heart attack. Neither recalled Mr. Mitchell performing strenuous work that day. However, while

1 There is no dispute Employee’s heart attack occurred in the course of his employment. The question in this appeal is whether it arose primarily out of the employment. 2 acknowledging that Employee had not performed any strenuous activities at work on the day of his death, Mr. Payne remembered Employee engaging in strenuous labor in the days prior to the heart attack. Through an affidavit made an exhibit to his deposition, Mr. Payne explained that Employee had made a repair in the “Texas House” a day or two before he died and that the work caused him to sweat, cough, and have difficulty breathing. Mr. Payne testified that, despite Employee’s supervisory position, he worked hard, sometimes ten to twelve hours per day, seven days a week during harvest season. Mr. Payne also testified about the dustiness of the work environment and the problems Employee had walking up stairs. He further testified that he heard Employee’s supervisor chastise him for his inability to learn a new computer system.

At the time of Employee’s death, Employee, Mr. Thomas, and Mr. Payne were “just small-talking” in the scale office. Although Mr. Thomas and Mr. Payne gave varying estimates of how long they had been speaking, ranging from five to twenty minutes, it is clear from their testimony that, in the period of time immediately preceding Employee’s death, he had not been engaged in any physical labor. In fact, Mr. Payne indicated it had been an “easy laid back day” and that Employee had stayed in his office.

Darnell Mitchell, Jr., Employee’s brother, also worked for Employer. He estimated they worked fourteen-hour days, seven days a week during harvest season, and he discussed the dusty environment in which they worked. He indicated, however, Employee’s office was not dusty and stated the facility had an elevator so employees did not have to climb stairs. Employee’s brother worked in an isolated area of the facility and only saw him briefly on the day of his death.

Employer called Employee’s supervisor, John Cordel, as well as a former safety manager, David Bagley, as witnesses. Mr. Cordel testified that the day Employee died had been a slow work day. He admitted that, as superintendent, Employee would make repairs if something broke, but stated that otherwise his duties did not involve heavy work. Instead, his job mainly consisted of sampling grain for quality, operating the scales, and overseeing the operations.

Employer’s witnesses acknowledged Employer had implemented a new computer system about a year before Employee’s death and, shortly after implementation, directed superintendents to learn and use the new system. They testified that Employer made training available, and Mr. Bagley testified that he offered Employee additional training, which he refused. Mr. Cordel indicated another superintendent helped Employee with extra training. Mr. Cordel denied ever threatening Employee’s job or complaining to upper management about his lack of computer skills, though he acknowledged the two of them had discussed Employee’s lack of proficiency and the importance of learning the new system.

3 Mr. Bagley and Mr. Cordel further testified that Employer had a dust removal system to comply with governmental requirements. Mr. Bagley testified that he knew of no complaints about air quality at the facility and commented that he never wore a mask at the facility. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 TN WC App. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-michael-v-bunge-north-america-tennworkcompapp-2019.