Northwest Construction Inc. v. Jason P. Smart

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 24, 2018
Docket76774-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Northwest Construction Inc. v. Jason P. Smart (Northwest Construction Inc. v. Jason P. Smart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwest Construction Inc. v. Jason P. Smart, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

rLED tOURT OF APPEA1.5 DIY I STATE OF WASHINCiTON

2018 SEP 2ti MI 8:35

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

NORTHWEST CONSTRUCTION, INC.,) No. 76774-7-1 ) Appellant, ) DIVISION ONE ) v. ) ) JASON P. SMART, and STATE OF ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT OF ) LABOR & INDUSTRIES, ) ) Respondents. ) FILED: September 24, 2018

SCHINDLER, J. — Under the Industrial Insurance Act, Title 51 RCW,the party

challenging the decision of the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (Board) must

prove the decision is incorrect by a preponderance of the evidence. The Board found

that Jason P. Smart sustained a workplace injury that aggravated his pre-existing

degenerative disk disease and awarded benefits. Northwest Construction Inc.

(Northwest) appealed the decision to superior court. A jury determined the Board's

finding was correct. Because substantial evidence supports the Board's finding and

Northwest fails to demonstrate prejudicial instructional error, we affirm the jury verdict.

FACTS

Twenty-seven-year-old Jason P. Smart worked for Northwest Construction Inc.

(Northwest) as a manual laborer for approximately nine years. In November 2012, No. 76774-7-1/2

registered nurse practitioner Margaret Larson examined Smart. Smart complained of a

"burning, throbbing" pain on the right side of his back. Smart did not identify any

specific injury but said he woke up one day with the pain. Larson diagnosed

"inflammation of the muscles" and prescribed physical therapy and medication.

When Smart saw Larson again in December 2013, he described "multiple years"

of "constant lower back pain" but said the pain had increased in the past year. Smart

said that when he bent over in the shower on the previous day, he felt "radiating

numbness and pain" in his buttocks. Larson diagnosed Smart with "[a]cute and chronic

low back pain with new strain versus disk herniation. Paresthesia on hands and feet

with radiculopathy." Larson administered an anti-inflammatory injection and referred

Smart to neurosurgeon Dr. Michael Schlitt.

After reviewing the results of a December 2013 MRI,1 Dr. Schlitt diagnosed

Smart with "mild to moderate degenerative disk disease at T12[2]to L1;[3]in other words,

at the top of the low back spine, and L5-S1 ,(4] at the bottom of the low back spine where

it joins the pelvis." Dr. Schlitt noted that disk degeneration "sort of presupposes some

degree of disk protrusion most of the time." Over the course of the following months,

Smart received cortisone and steroid injections and took oxycodone for the pain.

Smart saw Dr. Schlitt several times from March to June 2014. Smart reported he

was continuing to experience essentially the same significant pain along the lumbar

spine and the back of both thighs. Dr. Schlitt acknowledged that given the types of

1 Magnetic resonance imaging. 2 Twelfth thoracic vertebra.

3 First lumbar vertebra.

4 Fifth lumbar vertebra to first sacrum vertebra.

2 No. 76774-7-1/3

manual labor that Smart performed, he was likely to experience regular "flare-ups" of his

condition. Before August 11, Smart had not missed more than a half-day of work for

medical appointments.

On Monday, August 11, 2014, Smart went to work at the excavation site for a

high-rise building. Smart felt a "pop" in his back and pain down his leg and fell.

I was working along with the excavator. I was shoveling dirt away from the wall and off the wall so he could get it. I had noticed that there was some dirt and some Shotcrete that was attached to the wall still up on top, and I twisted and reached up — knocked the dirt off. I had a pop in my back, had pain go down my left leg, and I fell to the ground.

Smart was unable to get up. He described the pain and pressure on his back as "much

greater" than he had ever experienced before. Smart was "unable to move [his] leg,

and that had ... never happened before."

Coworker Terry Weigelt saw Smart on the ground and rushed over. Smart was

"sweating profusely" and "having a hard time breathing." Paramedics transported Smart

to the Overlake Medical Center emergency room.

Northwest informed risk management consultant Luis Cadavid that Smart was

being transported to Overlake. Cadavid entered the emergency room and listened as

Smart provided the attending doctor with his medical history.

[Smart] reported that he has been dealing with. .. similar back issues for several years, and has a neurologist who has been treating him for his back condition. When asked how frequently this type of thing happens, [Smart] responded that it happened randomly, and he had, in fact, just had this happen to him on Saturday night for no apparent reason. He further mentioned that his neurologist has previously recommended surgical treatment, but he has not done it because he could not take the time off work. He did acknowledge that this was not related to work.

Dr. Marcus Trione treated Smart in the emergency room. Smart said he felt a

"'pop in his back'"after returning home from work the previous Saturday. While at

3 No. 76774-7-1/4

work on Monday, August 11, Smart made "a lifting, twisting motion involving a shovel

and felt immediate back pain and pain radiating into the left leg, which caused him to

drop to the ground."

Dr. Trione was aware that Smart had a history of chronic low back pain and that

Smart's neurosurgeon had recommended surgery as an ultimate solution. Based on a

physical examination and review of his medical history, Dr. Trione initially assessed

Smart with "an exacerbation of chronic low back pain with radicular pain,. . . as well as

potentially new weakness in .. . his left leg, with dorsiflexion and plantar flexion of his

left foot." Dr. Trione ordered an MRI. The MRI showed "disk bulge at L5-S1, with no

evidence of compression of any neural structures, and then there was also a right-sided

bulge at T12-L1, with no evidence of compression of any neural structures."

Although the MRI showed "no ongoing evidence of nerve root compression,"

according to Dr. Trione, the MRI "is a static image" that "doesn't necessarily give you a

clear picture back in time of exactly what happened at the time of the injury." Under the

circumstances, Dr. Trione was unable to determine with certainty the precise cause of

Smart's pain. Smart remained hospitalized for nearly a week.

On September 18, neurologist Dr. Lewis Almaraz conducted an independent

medical examination of Smart for the Department of Labor and Industries (Department).

The review of Smart's medical records was limited to the period of hospitalization in

August.

Dr. Almaraz conducted a physical examination. At the time of the examination,

Smart reported "constant" pain in his low back, including "stabbing, burning, and

aching." Dr. Almaraz concluded there were "no objective orthopedic or neurological

4 No. 76774-7-1/5

findings." Dr. Almaraz also concluded the reported "mechanism of injury" did not

appear "to be sufficient enough to result in any sort of injury to his back." Dr. Almaraz

did not believe the August 11 incident"'aggravated or exacerbated the preexisting back

issues, either temporarily or permanently.'"

Neurosurgeon Dr. Richard Wohns began seeing Smart in March 2015. A

physician assistant performed a physical examination of Smart. Dr. Wohns reviewed a

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