Peed v. Essential Staffing, Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 27, 2026
DocketS25A-06-001 RHR
StatusPublished

This text of Peed v. Essential Staffing, Inc. (Peed v. Essential Staffing, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peed v. Essential Staffing, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

) CRAIG PEED, ) ) C.A. No.: S25A-06-001 RHR Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) ESSENTIAL STAFFING, INC., ) ) Appellee. )

Submitted: October 27, 2025 Decided: January 27, 2026

MEMORANDUM OPINION

On Appeal from the Industrial Accident Board, AFFIRMED.

Michael G. Owen, Esq., Ashley C. Curran, Esq., MORRIS JAMES, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Appellant Craig Peed.

Andrew J. Carmine, Esq., ELZUFON AUSTIN & MONDELL, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Appellee Essential Staffing, Inc.

Robinson, J. Craig Peed appeals from the Industrial Accident Board’s 2025 denial of his

Petition to Determine Additional Compensation Due. Peed was injured in a 2012

accident while he was working for Essential Staffing, Inc. (“Essential”). The Board

found that Peed had not met his burden of proof to show a causal connection between

the accident and recent dental treatment for his lower teeth. The Board, therefore,

denied compensation. This court affirms.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On February 27, 2012, Peed sustained serious, multiple injuries while

performing tree trimming services through Essential. A tree limb fell and hit him in

the head, causing two skull fractures, fractures to both orbital bones, fractures to

both mastoid bones, fractures to bones around the mouth, and injuries to other areas

of the body. Peed also suffered a traumatic injury to the maxillary region, which

includes the upper front teeth. After Essential acknowledged the accident and Peed

received total disability and was compensated for all medical expenses and

permanent impairment.

Part of Peed’s compensation was for injuries to his upper teeth numbered five

through eight. After a few years, the stress from the accident caused Peed’s upper

teeth numbered nine through eleven to also fracture at the gum line. Peed filed a

Petition to Determine Additional Compensation Due before the Board on May 8,

2017, seeking payment from Essential for the additional dental work. After hearing

2 the matter on January 25, 2018, the Board determined in a February 5 decision that

the fractures to the teeth were causally related to the work accident. As a result,

Peed’s regular dentist, Dr. Arvind Jain, performed root canals on the affected teeth

and placed a bridge, or connected crowns, from teeth numbered three through

thirteen. Dr. Jain completed this work in October of 2018.

In the 2018 decision, the Board found Dr. Jain’s expert testimony more

persuasive than Essential’s expert because it was more consistent with the facts and

Peed’s overall condition. The Board accepted Dr. Jain’s determination that the

problems with teeth nine through eleven were a result of the extra stress caused by

the accident. The Board credited Dr. Jain’s conclusion that Peed’s lack of dental care

while intubated in a coma lead to the desiccation, or dehydration, of his teeth, which

can cause problems years later. The Board found that Peed’s dental hygiene was

poor since the accident due to memory loss and concentration issues. The Board

accepted, however, that Peed’s dental condition before the accident, including

fillings and extractions, would not have caused his top front teeth to fracture at the

gum line. The Board accepted Dr. Jain’s opinion that Peed’s lower teeth did not

experience trauma, did not have nerve exposure, and did not have fractures like the

upper teeth.

During a routine checkup with Dr. Jain on May 16, 2023, Dr. Jain discovered

that Peed’s lower teeth appeared to be so worn out that they were practically stumps

3 and were close to having nerve exposure. Dr. Jain believed the wear on the lower

teeth was caused by the bridge on Peed’s upper teeth since it was made from a

different material than enamel and created extra friction. Dr. Jain performed root

canals on Peed’s lower teeth numbered twenty through twenty-eight between June

27, 2023, and September 17, 2024. Dr. Jain recommended crowns or a bridge to

restore Peed’s ability to chew.

Peed filed a Petition to Determine Additional Compensation Due before the

Board on December 6, 2024, seeking payment from Essential for the root canal work

done on the lower teeth and for the remaining work Dr. Jain recommended. The

Board heard the Petition on May 14, 2025, and by decision dated May 27 determined

that Peed failed to meet his burden of proving that his treatment for the lower teeth

at issue was causally related to the accident. In reaching this conclusion, the Board

relied on Essential’s expert, Dr. Barry Berman.

In its findings, the Board concluded that Dr. Jain’s testimony was not

persuasive. The Board found Dr. Jain’s testimony to be inconsistent since he

suggested that the deterioration of the lower teeth occurred gradually but also

rapidly. Furthermore, the Board emphasized that Dr. Jain relied on a photograph

taken by Dr. Berman in 2024 to show that the lower teeth had been worn down to

the gumline, but the photograph was taken after Dr. Jain had performed the root

canals, which required him to grind the teeth down to perform the treatment.

4 The Board accepted Dr. Berman’s testimony finding that the problems with

the lower teeth were not a result of the accident. Dr. Berman based his conclusions

on his own examination and x-ray done of Peed on January 23, 2024. Dr. Berman

also reviewed all medical documents provided to him by Peed including the two

prior defense medical examination reports and Dr. Jain’s treating records.1

The Board highlighted how Dr. Berman found nothing in Dr. Jain’s records

that explained the need for Peed’s root canals to the lower teeth. Dr. Berman

observed that the lower teeth at issue had dental decay according to a photograph

from 2012 but were restored and filled as seen in a 2017 photograph. The Board

noted that some of Peed’s lower teeth that were not at issue were removed before

the accident due to dental decay. Based on the photographs he viewed, Dr. Berman

stated that the lower teeth did not have such severe decay to cause a need for root

canals. The Board referenced Dr. Berman’s explanation that being in a coma and

intubated would not lead to the bottom teeth becoming decayed or more susceptible

to being ground down. Dr. Berman reasoned that while a patient’s teeth can have no

pain or sensitivity at one visit but then show problems months later, this problem

would not happen to nine teeth in a row.

1 D.I. 12, Appellant’s Opening Br., Ex. G at 28:14-18 and 36:18-37:13 (Dr. Berman was not provided with the Christiana Hospital records, Dr. Jain’s x-rays, or any photos from the time between the upper bridge’s installation and when Dr. Jain discovered the lower teeth needed work). 5 Dr. Berman disagreed that the upper bridge caused wear on the lower teeth.

The Board agreed with Dr. Berman’s statement that Dr. Jain would have seen this

deterioration begin and would have recommended a night guard to prevent it. Dr.

Berman reasoned that upper bridges do not cause damage to lower teeth unless the

patient had bruxism or jaw muscle spasms, which Peed did not have, or if the cement

seal breaks causing oral fluids to leak. If the upper bridge caused damage, it would

take years to cause wear on the opposite side. Dr. Berman noted he had never seen

a bridge wear down teeth as described by Dr. Jain in his fifty-five years of

experience.

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