Noel, Darlene v. Ean Holdings, LLC

2016 TN WC 281
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedNovember 29, 2016
Docket2016-08-0069
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 TN WC 281 (Noel, Darlene v. Ean Holdings, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noel, Darlene v. Ean Holdings, LLC, 2016 TN WC 281 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

FILED

November 29, 2016

I COURT OF WORKERS' COMPE SATIO CL.ill1S

Time: 8:24AM

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT MEMPHIS

DARLENE NOEL, ) Docket No. 2016-08-0069 Employee, ) v. ) EAN HOLDINGS, LLC, ) State File No. 9570-2015 Employer, ) And ) FARMINGTON INS. CO., ) Judge Allen Phillips Insurance Carrier. )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER FOR MEDICAL BENEFITS

This matter came before the undersigned Workers' Compensation Judge on November 7, 2016, upon the Request for Expedited Hearing filed by Darlene Noel pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-239 (2015). Ms. Noel requested medical and temporary disability benefits for an alleged head injury on January 23, 2015. EAN Holdings disputed her entitlement to the requested benefits on grounds that she failed to produce adequate proof of medical causation. Accordingly, the central legal issue is whether Ms. Noel came forward with sufficient evidence to show entitlement to any of the requested benefits. For the following reasons, the Court holds Ms. Noel came forward with sufficient evidence to show she is likely to prevail at a hearing on the merits regarding entitlement to certain medical benefits but that she has not come forward with sufficient evidence to show entitlement to temporary disability benefits. 1

History of Claim

At all relevant times, Ms. Noel worked for EAN at its Alamo Rental Car location at Memphis International Airport. On January 23, 2015, Ms. Noel was

1 The Court provides a complete listing of the Technical Record and Exhibits admitted at the Expedited Hearing in an Appendix attached to this Order.

1 walking toward a set of automatic sliding glass doors in the common area of the rental car service desks. Whether by her inadvertence, malfunction of the doors, or a combination thereof, Ms. Noel walked into a less than fully opened door and struck her head against the glass.

Initially, Ms. Noel attributed the event to her own clumsiness and embarrassingly "laughed it off." However, as time passed, she felt dizzy and as if her head were "spinning." Ms. Noel was transported to Methodist Hospital by ambulance. No records of that visit are in evidence, but Ms. Noel testified emergency room providers told her to follow up with her personal physician.

Gloria Denby works for Hertz Rental Car. Her workstation was located next to Ms. Noel's workstation at Alamo. On January 23, 2015, she saw Ms. Noel strike her head against the glass door. When describing the injury, Ms. Denby described a "hard blow" to the head that left Ms. Noel "dazed" and "out of it." She recalled Ms. Noel requiring assistance after she struck her head.

Following the event, EAN completed a First Report of Injury. (Ex. 1.) The report indicates January 23, 2015, was the date EAN became aware of the injury. Id. Ms. Noel testified that "Ms. Laura [sic] Smith" told her to "'use [her] medical benefits under my medical insurance." 2 Ms. Noel's testimony was unclear as to whether the conversation with Ms. Smith pertained to an incident of January 16, 2015, when she injured her neck at EAN or whether it pertained to the instant incident. The Court heard a claim for the January 16, 2015 neck injury contemporaneous with this claim.

Regarding the alleged head injury of January 23, Ms. Noel testified to out- of-pocket expenses and unpaid deductibles but presented no evidence of those amounts. She took one month of "FMLA" time off from work between February 2015 and March 2015, a period when she also suffered effects from the January 16, 2015 incident. Otherwise, Ms. Noel did not miss work and remains employed full-time at EAN. She continues to experience headaches and to receive medical treatment from personal physicians.

The only medical record placed into evidence was a note from Debora Dowda, FNP from February 6, 2015. 3 In that note, Ms. Dowda recorded Ms. Noel

2 Ms. Noel did not identify Ms. Smith in her testimony. However, the Court notes Ms. Lori Smith completed a First Report of Injury regarding the neck injury incident of January 16, 2015. See Ex. 1. On that report, Ms. Smith identifies herself as a "Supervisor II" at "The Frank Gates Service Co." 3 EAN objected to admission of this record on grounds that the record did not bear "an electronic signature." The Court overruled the objection because the record bore the typed name of Debora Dowda, FNP with the notation "Electronically signed by: Debra Dowda." (Ex. 3 at 6.) EAN also objected to admission of the record on grounds that it was drafted by a nurse practitioner rather than a physician. As such, the record could not support a finding of causation. The Court overruled the objection because

2 presented in, "follow-up of her work related injury. She has been unable to work due to HA and skeletal pain." (Ex. 3 at 1.) Ms. Dowda assessed chest wall pain, hypertension, diabetes, arthralgia of the shoulder region, headache syndromes, and cervicalgia. I d. at 5. The plan was for Ms. Noel to return in one month "for release for work if appropriate," to "await FMLA papers," and to refer to "neuro and podiatry." Id. at 6. The "projected date to return to work" was March 2, 2015. Id.

Ms. Noel testified she had seen a neurologist who informed her that she had suffered a series of"mini-strokes." The timing of these events was unclear, but she did not attribute them to the event of January 23, 2015. However, Ms. Noel wants EAN to pay her medical bills and provide ongoing treatment for any head injury that may have resulted from striking the glass door.

For its part, EAN argued that a "mere notation in a medical record [of an] on-the-job injury is insufficient to prove work-relatedness" in the absence of an expert medical opinion causally linking the incident to the injury. (T.R. 5 at 6.) Because there was "no identified injury and no medical reference of any kind to establish any injury or its cause," the Court must deny Ms. Noel's claim. Id. at 7.

EAN also argued the area where the accident occurred was a ''public area," and, as such, removed Ms. Noel's injury from being incident to her employment. EAN argued this fact prevents any award of benefits to Ms. Noel.

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

Standard applied

An injured worker has the burden of proof on every essential element of her claim. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(c)(6) (2015); see also Buchanan v. Car/ex Glass Co., No. 2015-01-0012, 2015 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 39, at *5 (Tenn. Workers' Comp. App. Bd. Sept. 29, 2015). These elements include Ms. Noel showing that her alleged injury arose primarily out of and in the course and scope of her employment at EAN. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-102(14) (2015). She must also show her injury was caused by an incident, or specific set of incidents, identifiable by time and place of occurrence Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-102(14)(A)

Tennessee Compilation Rule & Regulation 0800-02-21-16(6)(b) (2015) provides that medical records signed by a physician shall be admissible. See also Morgan v. Macy's, No. 2016-08-0270, 2016 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 39, at *13 (Tenn. Workers' Comp. App. Bd. Aug. 31, 2016)(Medical records submitted as evidence must bear an indicia of reliability.). Here, Ms. Dowda's name appeared not only in the electronic signature form but also on a record in the signature line of Dr. Douglas O'Dea, identified by Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
2016 TN WC 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noel-darlene-v-ean-holdings-llc-tennworkcompcl-2016.