Phillip McAdoo v. Metropolitan Atlanta Regional Transit Authority (Marta)

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 11, 2014
DocketA13A2006
StatusPublished

This text of Phillip McAdoo v. Metropolitan Atlanta Regional Transit Authority (Marta) (Phillip McAdoo v. Metropolitan Atlanta Regional Transit Authority (Marta)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillip McAdoo v. Metropolitan Atlanta Regional Transit Authority (Marta), (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., MCFADDEN and BOGGS, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

March 11, 2014

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A2006. McADOO v. METROPOLITAN ATLANTA DO-101 REGIONAL TRANSIT AUTHORITY.

A13A2007. METROPOLITAN ATLANTA REGIONAL TRANSIT DO-102 AUTHORITY v. McADOO.

DOYLE , Presiding Judge.

Phillip R. McAdoo, a bus driver for Metropolitan Atlanta Regional Transit

Authority (“MARTA”), filed a worker’s compensation claim seeking income and

medical benefits for an alleged work-related, gradual-onset back injury. The State

Board of Worker’s Compensation (“the Board”) awarded McAdoo benefits, but the

superior court reversed the award, concluding that although the record supported the

Board’s factual findings with regard to causation, McAdoo failed to give proper

notice of his claim to MARTA. In Case No. A13A2006, McAdoo appeals the superior court’s order, arguing that the court erred by reversing the Board’s award on the basis

that he failed to give MARTA sufficient notice of his injury pursuant to OCGA § 34-

9-80. We agree and reverse. In Case No. A13A2007, MARTA appeals, arguing that

the trial court erred by affirming the Board’s award as to causation and by not

correcting the date of McAdoo’s injury. We affirm in Case No. A13A2007.

On appeal, we construe the evidence in the light most favorable to [McAdoo] as the party that prevailed before the Board, and every presumption in favor of the Board’s award is indulged. If any evidence supports the Board’s findings, those findings are binding and conclusive, and we may not substitute ourselves as a fact finding body in lieu of the Board.1

The record shows that McAdoo drove a MARTA bus for more than 22 years.

McAdoo suffered from diabetes, which caused him to miss work multiple times each

year, and he had standing Family Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”) approval for sick

leave associated with his diabetes complications. In May 2010, McAdoo began to

suffer low back pain and pain in his right hip, buttock, and thigh, which pain

worsened as he continued to work. He treated it with over-the-counter pain

1 (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Putzel Elec. Contractors v. Jones, 282 Ga. App. 539, 539-540 (639 SE2d 540) (2006).

2 medications and began to drive by shifting his weight and using his left foot to

operate the brakes. His supervisor told McAdoo that it was unsafe to be “switching

feet,” he needed to “get [himself] taken care of,” and he could not drive like that.

McAdoo sought treatment from his primary care physician, who had been

treating him for diabetes. The physician referred him to a neurologist for his low back

pain. On October 17, 2010, McAdoo stopped working because of the pain, submitting

FMLA forms for his absences.

On December 6, 2010, McAdoo’s primary physician signed a disability form

indicating that McAdoo was disabled due to back or leg pain, although the doctor

indicated on the form that the disability was not work-related. In October 2010,

McAdoo began treating with Dr. Andrei Serbanescu, a neurologist. In his initial

notes, Dr. Serbanescu diagnosed lumbar radiculopathy, but indicated that the

symptoms might be “most likely symmetric due to diabetes [versus] radiculopathy

and neuropathy. . . . [McAdoo] is unsafe to drive for now.” Dr. Serbanescu also

signed a disability form, diagnosing a combination of peripheral neuropathy and

lumbar radiculopathy with a retroactive disability date of October 17, 2010, and

3 indicating that the disability was not work-related.2 On December 6, 2010, McAdoo

completed a short-term disability claim form for MARTA, listing the cause of his

disability as “di[a]betes mellitus; lumbar radiculopathy; peripheral neuropathy; sciatic

nerve weakness[;] pain [and] numbness.” McAdoo indicated on the form that his

disability was related to his employment.

Several months later, on April 18, 2011, a third physician, Dr. Timothy Young,

treated McAdoo for his lower back condition and issued a letter indicating that in his

medical opinion McAdoo’s low back and right leg pain was likely caused by

“repetitive and redundant vibrations and injury due to his [job as bus driver].”

According to McAdoo, this was the first documentation he received from any of his

physicians indicating a direct causal relationship between his job duties and his

disability. McAdoo retained counsel, and he filed a worker’s compensation claim on

April 19, 2011, the day following Dr. Young’s letter.

On February 21, 2012, the parties attended a hearing before the administrative

law judge (“ALJ”). The parties stipulated at the hearing that McAdoo’s last day of

2 Dr. Serbanescu’s later records from March 22, 2011, stated that McAdoo’s condition “may be the result of his work, [workers’] comp evaluation pending. . . .” There is no evidence, however, that McAdoo was aware of this impression at the time.

4 work was October 17, 2010, but Dr. Young’s April 18, 2011 letter would serve as the

fictional date of injury, acknowledging that the injury was gradual in onset; McAdoo,

however, sought benefits retroactively to October 18, 2010.3

Following a hearing, the ALJ awarded McAdoo income and medical benefits.

The ALJ found that McAdoo suffered a gradual onset spine injury due to his driving,

and the Board’s appellate division agreed. The Board’s award, however, primarily

addressed the notice issue. The appellate division found that McAdoo’s notice to

MARTA satisfied the requirements of OCGA § 34-9-80 because MARTA had

admonished him for improper operation of the brakes and instructed him to resolve

his physical impairment. Alternatively, the appellate division found that even if

MARTA had not received sufficient notice in October 2010, McAdoo was reasonably

excused from giving notice, and MARTA was not prejudiced thereby.

MARTA appealed to the superior court, which accepted the Board’s finding

that McAdoo’s injury arose out of his employment. But the court also concluded that

McAdoo left work because of his diabetes, and neither MARTA nor McAdoo could

3 At the hearing, counsel for MARTA explained that the technical limitations of the Board’s online electronic filing system precluded McAdoo’s counsel from indicating therein that he sought benefits beginning in October 2010 because the fictional date of injury was April 18, 2011. It is undisputed, however, that McAdoo sought benefits retroactively to October 2010, when he stopped working.

5 have presumed any other possible causation. Accordingly, the court found “that . . .

McAdoo’s notice to MARTA that he was leaving for diabetes-related reasons was

insufficient to satisfy OCGA § 34-9-80. Nothing in this notice would trigger any

investigation by MARTA, particularly since . . . McAdoo had taken diabetes-related

leaves in the past.” For that reason, the superior court reversed the ruling of the

appellate division.

McAdoo filed an application for discretionary appeal, which this Court granted,

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