Ray, Jr., Kenneth v. Rollins, Inc.

2021 TN WC 206
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedJuly 22, 2021
Docket2020-04-0228
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 TN WC 206 (Ray, Jr., Kenneth v. Rollins, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray, Jr., Kenneth v. Rollins, Inc., 2021 TN WC 206 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2021).

Opinion

FILED Jul 22, 2021 07:15 AM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT COOKEVILLE

KENNETH RAY, JR., ) Docket No 2020-04-0228 Employee, ) v. ) ROLLINS, INC., ) State File No. 90714-2018 Employer, ) And ) NEW HAMPSHIRE INS. CO., ) Judge Robert Durham Carrier, ) And ) ABIGAIL HUDGENS, Director, and ) The Subsequent Injury and ) Vocational ) Recovery Fund.

COMPENSATION HEARING ORDER GRANTING BENEFITS

The Court held a Compensation Hearing on June 21, 2021, to determine Mr. Ray’s vocational disability following his work-related injury, and, if he is totally disabled, whether the Subsequent Injury and Vocational Recovery Fund (SIF) retains any liability. The Court holds that Mr. Ray is permanently and totally disabled, and Rollins is solely responsible for paying disability benefits.

History of Claim

The parties agreed that Mr. Ray, as an employee of Rollins, sustained a compensable L4-5 disc herniation while treating a house for termites on November 26, 2018. 1 He received authorized treatment from neurosurgeon Dr. Jacob Schwarz, who

1 The parties also agreed to the following: Mr. Ray’s anatomic impairment rating is twelve percent to the body as a whole; his compensation rate is $602.89; he reached maximum medical improvement on October 31, 2019; Rollins paid $58,717.54 as an advance against permanent disability benefits; and, Mr. Ray was unable to return to his previous employment with Rollins, which entitles him to benefits beyond his initial compensation period. 1 ultimately performed an L4-5 discectomy and fusion.

Dr. Schwarz testified that after Mr. Ray reached maximum medical improvement, he still suffered from substantial limitations due to his work injury. Thus, he assigned permanent restrictions based on a functional capacity evaluation.

The functional capacity evaluation stated that Mr. Ray could work at the “Light to Light-Medium” physical demand level and assigned the following physical limitations: (1) maximum occasional lifting/carrying of twenty-five to thirty-five pounds; (2) maximum occasional lifting from floor of thirty pounds; (3) maximum occasional pull activities of sixty-five pounds; (4) occasional bending to approximately fifty-five degrees of lumbar flexion; (5) no stooping more than thirty seconds at a time or for more than ten percent of the work day; (6) no crawling on a repetitive/frequent basis or for more than ten percent of the workday; and (7) alternate “sit/static stand/walk positions” every thirty minutes if needed.

Dr. Schwarz also testified about Mr. Ray’s earlier discectomy at L4-5 to repair a herniation that resulted from a previous work injury at Rollins. He understood that Mr. Ray fully recovered from that surgery without symptoms or restrictions and had returned to full duty with Rollins. Dr. Schwarz stated that Mr. Ray’s need for the more recent fusion was due to his 2018 injury and not to any instability created by the previous surgery. Further, the earlier injury was not a factor when he assigned Mr. Ray’s anatomic impairment and physical restrictions.

Finally, Dr. Schwarz agreed that, based on the job description, Mr. Ray could not return to his previous employment with Rollins due to his physical restrictions. 2

Lay Testimony

Mr. Ray also testified as to his education and job history. He is currently forty- one years old. He quit school after completing the tenth grade but obtained his GED shortly afterward. He has no other formal education other than some training in pest control required by his job at Rollins.

Mr. Ray’s first jobs after leaving high school consisted of factory work and working as a dry-wall installer and a plumber’s helper. He then spent two years as a press operator before working as a carpenter and interior finisher for a builder for six years. He testified that all these jobs involved moderate to heavy manual labor and required a great deal of physical activity as well as extensive standing and walking. 2 Dr. Schwarz provided this opinion in response to a question regarding Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-242(a)(2)(B), which requires the treating doctor to certify on a form that the employee is unable to return to pre-injury employment. Later, he signed the form, but the form did not identify Mr. Ray. Given the circumstances, the Court overruled Rollins’s objection to the form’s admissibility. 2 In 2012, Mr. Ray began working for Rollins. As a termite technician, he spent much of his workday crawling through narrow spaces and working in cramped conditions. He had to haul trash from these crawl spaces to his truck and used a heavy drill to drill holes into concrete and wood to inject pesticides into infected spaces. He also worked for hours stooped over to spray chemicals into cracks and crevices.

Mr. Ray testified that he could no longer do any of his former jobs, including his job with Rollins, due to the physical limitations from his back injury. He said he lacks any computer skills and does not own a computer. He has not applied for a job since reaching maximum medical improvement because he does not believe there are any jobs that he can perform on a consistent basis given his limitations.

Although he suffered previous work injuries to his shoulder and low back while at Rollins, he made full recoveries from them. He had no symptoms or physical restrictions from either injury before the 2018 incident.

Regarding his current condition, Mr. Ray testified the fusion provided some relief, but he still suffers from significant low-back and right-knee pain. 3 He is currently under a pain management regimen that is treating him without narcotics. He can do some light housekeeping, such as vacuuming, dishwashing and laundry, so long as he takes frequent breaks during each task. He must lie down several times a day to “stretch out” his back and right leg. He cannot mow his lawn or go boating because of the vibrations. He can only sit for an hour or so while driving before he needs a substantial break to walk and stretch his back. He cannot sit in bleachers to watch his daughter cheerlead or play ball with his young son. Mr. Ray further testified that his pain only allows him to sleep three to four hours a night.

Mr. Ray’s wife of twenty-years, Christina Ray, confirmed her husband’s testimony about his limitations. She also testified that his physical condition has caused significant stress in their marriage.

Expert Vocational Testimony

Mr. Ray and Rollins both brought experts to testify as to the extent of his vocational disability. Mr. Ray proffered Michael Galloway, a certified rehabilitation counselor who has operated a vocational consulting service since 1998. Rollins called Robert Kennon Ph.D., a licensed psychologist and board-certified forensic examiner, who has performed vocational evaluations since 1997.

3 Mr. Ray has complained of debilitating right-knee pain since the injury, but testing has not revealed any abnormalities, and Dr. Schwarz declined to comment on the source of the knee pain. 3 Mr. Galloway’s and Dr. Kennon’s findings were quite similar in many ways. Both found Mr. Ray to be very candid and credible with legitimate expressions of pain. They also obtained similar results when testing Mr. Ray’s intellectual capacity, finding that he was at “low-average to average” levels in reading and math skills, which were consistent with his age, education, and training. Dr. Kennon additionally gave Mr. Ray an intelligence test, which also placed him in the “low-average” range. They agreed that Mr. Ray’s work experience was mostly in jobs in the medium to heavy labor categories. Where they differed was to what extent Mr.

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2021 TN WC 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-jr-kenneth-v-rollins-inc-tennworkcompcl-2021.