Parodi v. Florida Contracting Co., Inc.

16 So. 3d 958, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 12743, 2009 WL 2602295
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 21, 2009
Docket1D08-4196
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 16 So. 3d 958 (Parodi v. Florida Contracting Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parodi v. Florida Contracting Co., Inc., 16 So. 3d 958, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 12743, 2009 WL 2602295 (Fla. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

KAHN, J.

Claimant raises three issues on appeal. In the first issue, Claimant seeks reversal of the decision of the Judge of Compensation Claims (JCC) to reserve jurisdiction over issues that were ripe, but not mediated, at the time of the merit hearing. Because Claimant’s counsel brought the unmediated claims to the attention of the JCC, and the JCC properly reserved jurisdiction over those claims, we affirm. In the second issue, Claimant challenges the JCC’s refusal to consider the opinions of two doctors who provided treatment to Claimant during a period when the employer/carrier (E/C) wrongfully withheld benefits and medical care. Because Claimant met his evidentiary and legal burden in proving the medical necessity and compensability of such care, we reverse. As a result of our disposition of the second issue, we need not address Claimant’s third issue, in which he argues the JCC erred in denying permanent total disability (PTD) benefits.

/. BACKGROUND

Claimant injured his right (dominant) shoulder in a compensable accident on November 2, 2003. The Employer sent Claimant to an orthopedist who performed shoulder surgery. After surgery, Claimant developed additional symptoms in his right upper extremity, and was ultimately diagnosed with complex regional pain syndrome/reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD). The RSD spread to Claimant’s lower extremities and he experienced great difficulty using his right arm and leg. Claimant also developed a major depressive disorder caused in major part by the workplace injuries. The E/C authorized treatment through a pain management doctor (for RSD) and a psychiatrist (for depression).

*960 After discovering records from prior accidents, the E/C suspended all benefits and de-authorized all medical care, based on major contributing cause (MCC) and fraud. Claimant then filed specific requests for authorized treatment with a neurologist and an RSD specialist, which the E/C denied. Claimant subsequently-obtained treatment on his own with Dr. Kirkpatrick (anesthesiologist/RSD specialist) and Dr. Benezette (neurologist). Claimant filed petitions for benefits (PFBs) for temporary disability benefits, PTD benefits, and payment of the bills from Dr. Kirkpatrick and Dr. Benezette.

In the order on appeal, the JCC rejected the E/C’s defenses, awarded temporary disability benefits up to the expiration of the statutory maximum for such benefits, and found the E/C “forced” Claimant to obtain treatment on his own. The JCC found the treatment Claimant obtained from Dr. Benezette and Dr. Kirkpatrick reasonable, medically necessary, and com-pensable. Accordingly, the JCC ordered the E/C to pay the doctors’ outstanding bills along with Claimant’s corresponding out-of-pocket expenses.

Nevertheless, the JCC excluded Dr. Be-nezette’s medical opinions because he was not an independent medical examiner (IME), expert medical advisor (EMA), or authorized provider. The JCC also refused to consider the medical opinions expressed by Dr. Kirkpatrick in his second deposition because he administered injections to Claimant after his initial deposition and was therefore no longer acting as an IME. * Finally, the JCC denied PTD primarily because Claimant had not reached maximum medical improvement (MMI) from the RSD condition and because Claimant failed to prove that he was PTD from those conditions for which Claimant had reached MMI (presumably the psychiatric condition). In reaching this finding, the JCC expressly stated that he disregarded the medical opinion of Dr. Benezette and the opinion testimony expressed by Dr. Kirkpatrick in his second deposition.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Presewation of Unmediated PFBs

At hearing, Claimant’s counsel alerted the JCC to the fact that several PFBs had been filed that had not yet been mediated. The E/C would not agree to try the unmediated issues and, as a result, the JCC reserved jurisdiction on these unmediated PFBs for a subsequent hearing. Four months after the JCC entered the order in the instant case, this court issued its opinion in M.D. Transport v. Paschen, 996 So.2d 902 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008). In Paschen, we held that a claimant’s attendance at a final merit hearing requires him to apprise the JCC of ripe PFBs that have not yet been mediated, and failure to preserve or present these claims by some action will bar him from subsequently litigating the claims, based on res judicata. Id. at 904. Claimant has evidently interpreted Paschen to stand for the proposition that all ripe PFBs must be heard at the time of merit hearing or otherwise they are waived or subject to res judicata. Accordingly, in an apparent abundance of caution, Claimant asks for remand of the *961 JCC’s reservation of jurisdiction on the unmediated PFBs, for fear that the claims will be waived pursuant to this court’s then-unforeseen holding in Paschen. Claimant’s concerns are unwarranted because he took those actions necessary to apprise the JCC of the ripe, but unmediated PFBs, and the JCC properly reserved jurisdiction on the unmediated PFBs.

We reiterate that, in Paschen, the claimant’s counsel was aware of the claimant’s referral to psychiatric care in 2002, had filed a PFB for psychiatric care in 2004, and proceeded to a merit hearing in 2005 regarding issues other than the request for psychiatric care. Id. at 903. Even though the PFB for psychiatric care was filed (but unmediated) at the time of the 2005 merit hearing, the claimant’s counsel neither presented nor mentioned the claim for psychiatric care. Id. at 903-04. Accordingly, in Paschen, we stated: “When a claim is ripe, absent some action on Claimant’s part to bring this to the attention of the JCC, res judicata will bar a subsequent claim.” Id. at 904 (emphasis added; citations omitted).

In contrast, in this case, Claimant apprised the JCC of the outstanding, but unmediated, PFBs. The JCC, by reserving jurisdiction on the claims, did all that was required to preserve the issues for a subsequent hearing.

B. Testimony of an “Unauthorized” Provider

At first blush, the workers’ compensation statute is relatively clear as to the medical opinions admissible in a proceeding before a JCC:

No medical opinion other than the opinion of a medical advisor appointed by the [JCC], ... an [IME], or an authorized treating provider is admissible in proceedings before the [JCC].

§ 440.13(5)(e), Fla. Stat. (2003). This court has held a JCC errs in admitting opinion testimony of a physician who is not in one of these categories. See, e.g., Seminole County Sch. Bd. v. Tweedie, 922 So.2d 1011 (Fla. 1st DCA 2006). We have also held, however, when the E/C wrongfully denies medical care and the claimant is required to utilize the self-help provisions of section 440.13(2)(c), the JCC is not obliged to exclude the opinions of the doctors from whom Claimant was forced to obtain medical treatment. See Fla. Distillers v. Rudd, 751 So.2d 754, 757 (Fla.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 So. 3d 958, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 12743, 2009 WL 2602295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parodi-v-florida-contracting-co-inc-fladistctapp-2009.