Rawls v. Coleman-Frizzell, Inc.

2002 SD 130, 653 N.W.2d 247, 2002 S.D. LEXIS 151
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 2002
DocketNone
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2002 SD 130 (Rawls v. Coleman-Frizzell, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rawls v. Coleman-Frizzell, Inc., 2002 SD 130, 653 N.W.2d 247, 2002 S.D. LEXIS 151 (S.D. 2002).

Opinion

KONENKAMP, Justice.

[¶ 1.] In this workers’ compensation case, the claimant argues (1) that several ailments, including fibromyalgia and chronic myofascial pain, arose out of injuries she suffered several years before when she fell through a trap door while working for her employer, and (2) that she should be awarded temporary total and partial disability benefits. The Department of Labor ruled that the claimant failed to show causation and denied both *248 claims. The circuit court affirmed, and we also affirm.

Background

[¶ 2.] On December 12, 1990, Ann Rawls, while at work at her job with Coleman-Frizzell, Inc. (C-F), a manufacturer of jewelry in Rapid City, South Dakota, fell part way through a hallway trap door that had been left open for maintenance purposes. 1 Rawls was injured and taken to the emergency room in Rapid City Regional Hospital, where she was examined and then treated for a dislocated finger. Four months later, the examining physician modified his report, at Rawls’s request, to include a statement that she had also complained of back and shoulder pain when she was admitted. 2 On January 9, 1991, an orthopedist examined Rawls’s shoulder, cervical spine, and lumbar spine. He diagnosed a “mild contusion with some pulling of muscles and ligaments” and gave a prognosis of slow improvement over time.

[¶ 3.] After the accident at C-F, Rawls did not work a full forty-hour week there, but altogether she missed fewer than seven days. She returned to work on a part-time basis three or four days after the accident, taking pain pills for a few weeks until she was no longer able to secure further refills. Still complaining of pain, she was advised to undertake warm-water therapy. On April 8, 1991, her regular physician (Dr. Stephen Goff, a physiatrist) concluded that Rawls did not require further physical therapy, but, in view of her continued complaints of pain, recommended “work-hardening,” i.e., that her work hours per week be reduced to a comfortable level and that one hour be added each week until she was again working a full eight-hour day. Under the work-hardening program, Rawls was initially set to work four to five hours per day, but her physician later reduced her regimen to two hours per day.

[¶ 4.] C-F agreed to the work hardening program, provided her with work within her medical restrictions, and hired an attendant (Jeff Bailie) to assist Rawls in her return-to-work efforts. In the midst of this program, Rawls took a two-week vacation that had been approved by C-F before she had begun the program and resulted, to her supervisor’s displeasure, in her having to begin the program back at the two-hours-per-day level. Upon her return, she and the supervisor exchanged angry words over the effect of her vacation on her program; Rawls then told a coworker that all she needed now was “to get fired.” 3

[¶ 5.] Occurring in parallel with Rawls’s medical problems was her continuing difficulty in getting along with her supervisors at C-F. Testimony indicated that Rawls was initially hired because she and one of C-F’s owners attended the same church. In the three years she worked at C-F, she had a variety of jobs, beginning in the main office, then moving, at her request, to the factory where she could be more creative, then working in the retail store, and finally moving to the design department, where she worked as a “floater,” i.e., one with no specific task. Her relationship with the owner made it difficult for her various supervisors to hold *249 Rawls to normal work rules. At this last post, her supervisor was instructed just to give her something to do. Finally, on July 15, 1991, she was fired for poor performance and insubordination.

[¶ 6.] After Rawls’s severance from CF, the company’s insurer continued to provide her with the assistance of Bailie, but the prospect of her returning to work was dimmed by the continuance of the work hardening program ordered by Goff. At some point during 1991, Bailie was replaced by Shari McDonald. Thereafter, Rawls requested that she be sent to a university to earn a master’s degree so that she could be a teacher. The insurer denied that request on the ground that other possible positions would require less expensive retraining. Finally, McDonald “closed the file” on Rawls because Rawls would not cooperate in the return-to-work effort.

[¶ 7.] In November 1991, Goff released Rawls to work an eight-hour day with the restrictions that she should alternate sitting, standing, and walking. Goff reported that Rawls was “capable of performing several repetitions per hour of bend/stoop, squat and reach above shoulder level.” He assigned Rawls an eight-percent impairment rating of her whole body.

[¶ 8.] Rawls worked sporadically as a substitute teacher and as a teacher’s aide in the Rapid City School District from September 1991 through May 1995. Throughout that period and beyond, she suffered from persistent, debilitating headaches. In April of 1992, Rawls began two seasons of employment at Mount Rushmore as a park ranger and interpretive guide. In her application for work there, she affirmed that she had no difficulty “in using arms, hands, or fingers for reaching in any direction, grasping, handling or fingering” and no “disease or disability which would make [her] employment in light-duty work a hazard to [herself] or others.” She also affirmed that she would be able to perform all the duties that the job required of her. Her position at Mount Rushmore required her to work forty hours per week, walking as well as sitting and standing for long periods. During her time at Mount Rushmore, she hiked, without incident, to the top of the mountain and back down, negotiating steep stairs and rough terrain.

[¶ 9.] In July 1992, an MRI of Rawls’s left shoulder showed a “tear of rotator cuff tendon on the left with an element of impingement at the shoulder outlet.” Surgery was prescribed, but postponed until January 4, 1993, so that she could complete the season’s work at Mount Rushmore. On June 7, 1993, her surgeon found the shoulder to be at maximum medical improvement (with a five-percent impairment to the left upper extremity). He declared Rawls capable of returning to her regular and customary work. 4 She then completed the season’s work at Mount Rushmore. She did not, however, apply to work there for the 1994 season: she reported to a coworker that she would not be able to get along with the supervisor to whom she had reported during the previous two seasons.

[¶ 10.] In the fall of 1993, Rawls worked for two weeks at Mostly Chocolates; her tasks included rolling and dipping truffles. During that brief period, she reported pain in her right wrist. Three physicians examined her and agreed that she suffered from “mild right carpal tunnel syndrome.” By April 1994, howev *250 er, another physician, a neurologist, found that the problem was “much improved to resolved.” (Rawls is not making a claim for this ailment.)

[¶ 11.] In early 1994, Dr. Goff diagnosed Rawls as having “chronic myofascial pain,” and Dr. Steven K.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 SD 130, 653 N.W.2d 247, 2002 S.D. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawls-v-coleman-frizzell-inc-sd-2002.