Parsons v. the Pantry, Inc.

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedApril 11, 1996
DocketI.C. No. 201490
StatusPublished

This text of Parsons v. the Pantry, Inc. (Parsons v. the Pantry, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parsons v. the Pantry, Inc., (N.C. Super. Ct. 1996).

Opinion

The undersigned have reviewed the prior Opinion and Award based upon the record of the proceedings before Deputy Commissioner Mary Moore Hoag. The appealing party has not shown good ground to reconsider the evidence; receive further evidence; rehear the parties or their representatives; or amend the Opinion and Award.

The Full Commission finds as fact and concludes as matters of law the following, which were entered into by the parties:

STIPULATIONS

Plaintiff and defendant stipulated to the following:

1. Medical records of Dr. Michael H. Bowman (13 pages).

2. The neuropsychological evaluation of Thomas J. Harvin, Ph.D. (6 pages).

3. The prior Opinion and Award by Deputy Commissioner Lorrie Dollar, filed on December 9, 1993.

4. Two additional pages of Dr. Michael H. Bowman's records.

5. Pre-trial Agreement and stipulations filed on February 13, 1995.

6. Two stipulated pages of medical records received May 2, 1995 from Dr. Bowman are hereby made a part of the evidentiary record.

The issues for consideration during the hearing are:

1. Is the plaintiff entitled to have continuing medical care paid by the defendant for her compensable injury suffered on April 30, 1991.

2. Is counsel for plaintiff entitled to attorney's fees and costs pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-88.1.

* * * * * * * * * * *

The Full Commission adopts the findings of fact found by the Deputy Commissioner as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. At the time of the hearing, plaintiff was a twenty-seven year old, high school educated female.

2. In April of 1991, plaintiff was an assistant store manager at The Pantry, working alone at night. Approximately forty-five minutes before closing time, two men entered the store and one of them struck plaintiff in the forehead and shot her four times with a stun gun. Following the assault, plaintiff was treated in the emergency room at Cape Fear Medical Center for a small bruise, abrasion and second degree burn to the forehead. She complained of a mild headache.

3. A hearing was held in this case on February 23, 1993, to determine plaintiff's claim for medical treatment and expenses, temporary total disability, permanent partial disability, and/or permanent total disability benefits.

4. Plaintiff was found to have suffered no permanent disability and no compensation for temporary total disability was awarded.

5. As a result of the Opinion and Award filed on December 9, 1993, by Lorrie M. Dollar, defendant was held responsible for any medical treatment which tended to effect a cure, give relief or lessen the plaintiff's disability as a result of her compensable injury by accident on April 30, 1991.

6. Plaintiff had not seen a physician for almost one and a half years prior to the entry of the Opinion and Award on December 9, 1993. Moreover, plaintiff did not seek medical attention subsequent to the filing of the Opinion and Award until April 12, 1994.

7. Plaintiff worked at Buy For Less from September 1992 through October 1994. Subsequent to October 1994, she has worked for her mother selling Mary Kay Cosmetics.

8. On April 12, 1994, plaintiff went to see Dr. Michael Bowman. She complained of dull, aching discomfort, sometimes sharp, stabbing pain always located in the temporal region of the frontal area of her head. She also claimed memory loss, citing forgetfulness and reported that her boyfriend noticed something similar to convulsions while she slept. Dr. Bowman gave plaintiff a thorough physical exam and diagnosed her problem as symptomatic of chronic muscle contraction headaches. The muscle contraction headaches were not causally linked by Dr. Bowman to the compensable injury sustained by the plaintiff in 1991.

9. Dr. Bowman recommended formal testing to determine if plaintiff had sustained any level of cognitive impairment.

10. Plaintiff was further evaluated after having been referred to Neuropsychologist Thomas J. Harvin, Ph.D. on May 11, 1994. Dr. Harvin could find no evidence of cognitive impairment and suggested that plaintiff's occasional poor scores on tests were due to a combination of her poor school achievement and immaturity. He also noted that the plaintiff was dependent, anxious and impulsive. Dr. Harvin concluded that plaintiff's headaches were caused by sustained muscle tension. He did not relate the headaches, in any way, to plaintiff's compensable injury sustained April 30, 1991.

11. Plaintiff next requested to be treated by Dr. Allen Friedman. The request, which was initially denied by the defendant, was submitted by correspondence dated July 28, 1994, to the Executive Secretary of the Industrial Commission for an Order appointing Dr. Friedman as plaintiff's treating physician. In addition, plaintiff filed a Form 33 on August 11, 1994, requesting a hearing before the Commission citing noncompliance of the defendants with Deputy Commissioner Dollar's Opinion and Award.

12. The purpose of defendant's request for a hearing was to determine whether or not additional medical treatment in accordance with Deputy Commissioner Dollar's Opinion and Award is required by plaintiff. The Order of the Executive Secretary, which addresses plaintiff's condition, is central to the issues under consideration.

13. On August 15, 1994, the Executive Secretary Nick Davis, after commissioning an extensive review of the record by the Commission's medical consultant, opined that no medical evidence supported plaintiff's contention that her recurrent headaches were caused by her admittedly compensable injury, and thus there was no need for continued treatment as requested by plaintiff. Mr. Davis' Order is correct and appropriately made after diligent research and consultation. The Order which has its basis in the Findings of Fact in the Opinion and Award filed by Deputy Commissioner Lorrie Dollar, confronts the issues raised by plaintiff's reliance on multiple treating physicians in an apparent effort to be compensated for a condition unrelated to her compensable injury suffered in 1991. The request to have another medical opinion and a visit to a different physician is part of plaintiff's repetitive pattern in searching for different doctors and apparently different opinions regarding the cause of her headaches.

14. Despite the Executive Secretary's Order, plaintiff returned to Dr. Bowman on October 24, 1994, complaining of headaches and seeking an excuse from work. Dr. Bowman reiterated his diagnosis of her headaches as being of muscle contraction origin and denied a request for a work excuse. Dr. Bowman also suggested that it was inappropriate for him to continuing seeing plaintiff as his location is some distance from plaintiff's residence necessitating considerable commuting costs.

15. Nevertheless, plaintiff returned to see Dr. Bowman, under the false pretenses that she had been ordered by her attorney and the court to seek another evaluation of her migraine headaches. Plaintiff's neurologic examination was normal, as it had been from the outset of Dr. Bowman's treatment. Plaintiff's complaints were not related to her compensable injury of April 30, 1991.

16. Dr. Bowman attempted to discern causes other than muscle tension for plaintiff's migraine headaches by testing plaintiff for liver functions, taking extensive blood tests, performing an EEG and recommending that she see a dentist for bite block problems and extensive carries in her teeth. Results were negative.

17. There is no medical evidence to support plaintiff's contention that she requires additional medical treatment for her compensable injury of April 30, 1991.

18.

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Related

§ 97-25
North Carolina § 97-25
§ 97-88.1
North Carolina § 97-88.1

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Parsons v. the Pantry, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-the-pantry-inc-ncworkcompcom-1996.