Ogden, Shawn v. McMInnville Tool and Die, Inc.

2018 TN WC App. 19
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedMay 7, 2018
Docket2016-05-1093
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 TN WC App. 19 (Ogden, Shawn v. McMInnville Tool and Die, Inc.) 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
Ogden, Shawn v. McMInnville Tool and Die, Inc., 2018 TN WC App. 19 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2018).

Opinion

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD (HEARD APRIL 26, 2018 AT KNOXVILLE)

Shawn Ogden ) Docket No. 2016-05-1093

) v. ) State File No. 11323-2015 ) McMinnville Tool and Die, Inc., et al. ) ) )

Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Compensation Claims ) Dale A. Tipps, Judge )

Affirmed and Certified as Final—Filed May 7, 2018

The employee, a machinist, suffered injuries to his arm when he fell at work. He

subsequently developed complex regional pain syndrome for which the employer provided workers’ compensation benefits. After a spinal cord stimulator was surgically implanted into the employee’s neck to address his symptoms, he developed leg weakness and pain and weakness in his neck. While recovering from the surgery, the employee fell twice at home and was rendered a paraplegic. The employer denied that the falls and resulting paralysis were causally related to the injury to the employee’s arm. The trial court found that the employee’s falls and ensuing paralysis were a direct and natural

consequence of his compensable work injury and that he was permanently and totally disabled. The employer 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.

D. Brett Burrow, Nashville, Tennessee, for the employer-appellant, McMinnville Tool & Die, Inc.

John D. Drake, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the employee-appellee, Shawn Ogden

Factual and Procedural Background

Shawn Ogden (“Employee”), a forty-six-year-old resident of Warren County, Tennessee, was employed as a machinist by McMinnville Tool & Die, Inc. (“Employer”).

On February 12, 2015, Employee was walking around a machine at work when he tripped and fell, landing on his right arm. There is no dispute regarding Employee’s arm injury, and Employer provided authorized medical care for that injury.

Employee developed complex regional pain syndrome (“CRPS”) in his right arm,

which caused him to experience severe pain and other symptoms. Medication provided minimal relief, and his authorized pain management physician, Dr. Jeffrey Hazlewood, recommended the use of a spinal cord stimulator. Dr. Hung Yu, a neurosurgeon, implanted the device into Employee’s neck on August 31, 2016.

After the surgery, Employee experienced pain in his neck and had difficulty holding his head up properly. Dr. Yu explained that, because implantation of such a

device requires the surgeon to cut through the muscles of the neck and shave off portions of the vertebrae, neck pain is an expected side effect of the surgery. Employee also experienced weakness in his right leg, which Dr. Yu stated was also a common side effect. Employee requested a cane as a result of his leg weakness, but he had not received it at the time of his falls.

After the spinal cord stimulator was implanted, Employee was able to do some

chores around the house, such as loading the dishwasher, doing laundry, and cleaning the floors, consistent with Dr. Yu’s instructions that he should be as active as possible.1 However, despite being able to engage in some activities of daily living, Employee had significant impairment with his right arm and hand, which stayed in a drawn-up position to the point that his fingernails were digging into his palm.

On September 30, 2016, approximately four weeks after his surgery, Employee was home alone when he began experiencing severe neck pain and was unable to hold his head up. Believing that he was experiencing a medical emergency and that he needed to get to a hospital, Employee attempted to navigate three stairs from his house into an attached garage to reach his cell phone to call his girlfriend for help.2 Given the condition of his right arm, Employee was unable to use the handrail beside the steps. Employee testified he took the steps one at a time, placing his right foot on a step, then

bringing his left foot down to the same step before proceeding. When he reached the bottom step, his right knee buckled and he fell, landing on the step on his buttocks and

1 According to Dr. Yu, “we definitely encourage mobility [following surgery], . . . it’s good to walk around. Otherwise, it’s going to be harder to walk around and your balance is going to be off, your function is going to be lower.”

2 Employee had a landline telephone in his home. However, he testified that his girlfriend’s phone number was stored in his cell phone and that he did not have it memorized. Further, Employee’s girlfriend testified that when she attempted to call 911 from the home phone, she “couldn’t get that thing to work. We had just gotten it with the cable and it was not working correctly.” Ultimately, she called 911 from Employee’s cell phone. 2

hitting his head on the wall next to the steps. He denied experiencing any previous difficulties going down the stairs into the garage, which he did on a frequent basis.3

After Employee fell, he crawled to retrieve his cell phone and then crawled back into the house where he called his girlfriend. He tried to stand up again but, having lost

feeling and control of his legs, he fell back down, landing again on his buttocks. He was able to pull himself into a chair to wait for his girlfriend.

Upon her arrival home, Employee’s girlfriend found him sitting in a chair unable to hold his head up or move his legs. She called 911 and Employee was taken by ambulance to Unity Medical Center (“Unity”). The hospital’s records reflect “ct [of the] head wasn’t done because [Employee] had no [loss of consciousness].” Employee’s

paralysis prompted Unity to have him airlifted to Vanderbilt University Medical Center (“Vanderbilt”) where he underwent another surgery, this time to remove the spinal cord stimulator.

The records of Air Evac, the company that transported Employee to Vanderbilt, reflect that he suffered two episodes of syncope. Upon arrival at Vanderbilt, the attending medical provider noted that “as per EMS, the patient had two episodes of

syncope.”4 Employee testified, however, that he never reported experiencing syncope but that his right leg gave way when he was on the bottom step going into the garage, causing him to fall and hit his head. Employee’s girlfriend testified that she never told any medical care provider that Employee passed out. She further testified that she was present during Employee’s conversations with EMS, Unity, and Air Evac personnel and that he never indicated he had passed out.

Employee’s surgeon, Dr. Yu, stated in an affidavit that a “frequent complication of the implantation of spinal cord stimulators . . . is weakness and instability in the lower extremities during the recovery period.” She believed that “such weakness is likely the cause of [Employee] falling in his home and receiving injuries to his spine from which he now suffers.” Dr. Yu opined that Employee’s “falls of October 1, 2016, resulted from the transient expected post-operative weakness associated with the spinal cord stimulator

surgery on or about August 31, 2016.”5 According to Dr. Yu, it was “more likely than not his current condition is related to his initial injury to his right upper extremity which arose during the course and scope of his employment with [Employer.]”

3 At the time of the fall, Employee’s phone was charging in his garage where he often spent time watching television and smoking cigarettes.

4 We assume the reference to EMS is a reference to Air Evac. The EMS records from the ambulance service that transported Employee from his home to Unity do not reflect any report of loss of consciousness.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 TN WC App. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-shawn-v-mcminnville-tool-and-die-inc-tennworkcompapp-2018.