O'Hara v. J. Christy Const. Co., Inc.

272 S.W.3d 842, 101 Ark. App. 212, 2008 Ark. App. LEXIS 308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 16, 2008
DocketCA 07-631
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 272 S.W.3d 842 (O'Hara v. J. Christy Const. Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Hara v. J. Christy Const. Co., Inc., 272 S.W.3d 842, 101 Ark. App. 212, 2008 Ark. App. LEXIS 308 (Ark. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinions

Karen R. Baker, Judge.

In this case we are asked to address when the accrual of permanent total disability benefits should commence after the modification of a previous award of wage loss based upon permanent partial disability benefits. A majority of the Workers’ Compensation Commission found that the date for beginning the award of permanent total disability benefits was May 10, 2006, the date of the Commission’s opinion and order after remand finding that appellant had proved under the odd-lot doctrine that he was permanently and totally disabled. Appellant asserts two points of error: (1) The Workers’ Compensation Commission erred by fixing the commencement of appellant’s permanent total disability benefits as the date of its order finding appellant totally and permanently disabled as opposed to an earlier date such as the filing of the claim or the date of the last hearing; (2) The Workers’ Compensation Commission erred by not awarding appellant a 20% penalty for late payment, plus interest and attorney’s fees on the permanent and total disability payments that accrued before the Full Commission’s opinion of May 10, 2006. For the reasons discussed herein, we affirm as modified.

This is not the first appeal of this matter. In our most recent disposition of an appeal of this case, we remanded the matter for the Commission to determine whether appellant fell within the odd-lot doctrine. Section 24 of Act 796 of 1993, now codified at Ark. Code Ann. § ll-9-522(e) (Repl. 1999) abolished the odd-lot doctrine for permanent disability claims based on injuries that occurred after July 1, 1993; however, the doctrine was applicable to appellant’s claim stemming from his March 1993 injury.On remand, the Full Commission found that appellant was permanently and totally disabled pursuant to the odd-lot doctrine; however, the order failed to identify the starting date for the benefits of total permanent disability. Upon petition by appellant for the identification of the date from which appellant was deemed to be permanently and totally disabled, the Fuh Commission issued an opinion filed May 2, 2007, wherein the Full Commission adopted the May 10, 2006, opinion date as the date from which benefits for total permanent disability would begin. Appellees argue that there was no language in the May 10, 2006, opinion stating the award dated back to a date prior to May 10, 2006, and there was nothing in the opinion directing appellees to pay accrued benefits in lump sum. Appellant argues that the evidence was complete at the initial hearing.

A history of appellant’s injury and the continued degeneration of his condition may assist in understanding the parties’ arguments. Appellant John O’Hara suffered from a compensable work-related hernia on March 13, 1993, which was accepted by his employer, appellee J. Christy Construction Company. This case is controlled by the statutes and case law in effect prior to the workers’ compensation law enacted in 1993. After appellant underwent surgery and convalescence, he suffered a compensable complication, that being neuropathy due to femoral nerve impingement. The impingement caused his right leg to have a burning, prickling sensation. Another surgery was performed to release the nerve, which improved his condition but did not eradicate the symptoms. His healing period ended in July 1994, whereupon he was given a twenty-percent permanent partial impairment rating to the body. All related benefits were accepted and paid by the employer up to this point. In 1996, appellant filed a claim for additional benefits in wage loss or permanent total disability, at which point the appellee controverted the claim.

The testimony taken at the hearing in March 1997 included appellant explaining his high school education and noting his disability in reading, his work history in the Air Force and then in construction, and his present physical condition. Appellant was forty-nine years old at that time. He testified that he could not work because his nerve injury prevented him from walking, standing, or exerting himself for any extended period of time. Nevertheless, appellant continued to work his cattle and farm acreage as best he could with constant pain and side effects from his medications. Video surveillance of appellant during that time showed that appellant smoked cigarettes, drove a truck, and walked with a limp. Appellee put on evidence of possible jobs that appellant could do, outside his ability and training. Appellant admitted that he had not sought any other employment because he did not think he was capable of a full day’s work. After reviewing the medical records and the other testimony and evidence, the administrative law judge issued an opinion in July 1997 that appellant was entitled to thirty-percent wage loss. Appellee appealed, and the Commission concluded that appellant was poorly motivated to return to work and somewhat exaggerating his symptoms, but also that he suffered a significant complication from his work injury that affected his earning capacity. It noted his inability to return to heavy manual labor, his age, limited education, and work experience. The Commission concluded in an opinion issued in February 1998 that appellant was entitled to twenty-percent wage loss over his twenty-percent impairment rating, a forty-percent total rating. On appeal, our court affirmed the Commission’s decision in an unpublished opinion. O’Ham v. J. Christy Constr., CA98-599, 1999 WL 116280 (Mar. 3, 1999).

Appellant filed another claim for additional wage loss or disability, which was the subject of a hearing in April 2003, six years after the last hearing. Appellant testified that his leg pain is worse than it was back in 1997, that he now wears a brace on his right leg because he suffered from a club foot, that he could not raise or lower his big toe, that he had continued falling spells, and that this was a progression of his nerve neuropathy. These worsened complications necessitated that he now use a TENS unit to ease the pain down his leg into his foot, and that he take more medication for pain and sleep. Appellant stated that he is less able to walk, that he is tired and weak all the time, and that he had sold cattle and timber because he could not do the family farm work as he had before. He rated his pain in 1997 as a six, whereas it was now between a seven and eight. At the time of this hearing, appellant was fifty-five years old. In an opinion filed on August 15, 2003, the administrative law judge found appellant to be entitled to an additional thirty-percent wage loss. Appellee appealed, and the Commission reversed in a January 13, 2005 opinion, which this court reversed and remanded on appeal. See O’Hara v. J. Christy Constr. Co., 94 Ark. App. 143, 227 S.W.3d 443 (2006).

Our court held that the Commission erred when it stated that appellant’s claim for increased permanent disability benefits in 2003 was barred by res judicata, because his claim was based upon changes in his condition post-1991. O’Hara, 94 Ark. App. at 145, 227 S.W.3d at 445. This court also held that the Commission erred by inaccurately analyzing the issue of wage-loss disability. We remanded for the Commission to reconsider whether appellant demonstrated a change in physical condition that would support his claim for additional wage-loss disability, and to consider, if appellant did not qualify for additional wage-loss disability under the proper analysis, whether appellant fell within the odd-lot doctrine.

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Related

O'Hara v. J. Christy Const. Co., Inc.
272 S.W.3d 842 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2008)

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.W.3d 842, 101 Ark. App. 212, 2008 Ark. App. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohara-v-j-christy-const-co-inc-arkctapp-2008.