R.C. Landscaping v. Jones

374 S.W.3d 761, 2010 Ark. App. 304, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 292
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 7, 2010
DocketNo. CA 09-664
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 374 S.W.3d 761 (R.C. Landscaping v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.C. Landscaping v. Jones, 374 S.W.3d 761, 2010 Ark. App. 304, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 292 (Ark. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge.

| Appellee William B. Jones sustained a compensable back injury on June 6, 2005, while working for appellant R.C. Landscaping (RCL).1 Jones’s injury occurred when a tractor rolled over him, breaking his back in multiple places. He sought additional benefits and a hearing was held before the Administrative Law Judge on April 23, 2008. The parties stipulated that Jones’s healing period ended on October 25, 2005.2 They also stipulated that Jones suffered an eleven-percent impairment to the body as a whole. The issues litigated at Lthe hearing were the amount of Jones’s permanent physical impairment; wage loss/permanent total disability; second-injury fund liability; and controverted attorney’s fees. The ALJ issued an opinion on July 10, 2008, finding that Jones had suffered a seventeen-percent permanent physical impairment to the body as a whole; that Jones was permanently totally disabled; that the Second Injury Fund was liable for the payment of permanent total disability benefits; and that Jones was entitled to attorney’s fees. The Second Injury Fund appealed the ALJ’s decision to the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission.3 The Commission reversed the ALJ’s decision. In its April 7, 2009 opinion, the Commission found that Jones failed to prove that he was permanently and totally disabled but that he proved wage-loss disability in the amount of forty percent. The Commission also found that the Second Injury Fund had no liability.

Appellants RCL and its insurer, Fir-stComp Ins. Co., appeal the Commission’s decision, raising three points for reversal: 1) that the Commission’s opinion offers no true majority opinion from which this Court may conduct a meaningful review; 2) that the Commission erred in finding that Jones was entitled to forty-percent wage-loss disability; and 3) that the Commission erred in finding that the Second Injury Fund had no liability for wage-loss disability. Jones cross-appeals, contending that the Commission erred in finding 1) that he was not permanently and totally disabled and 2) that he was only entitled to wage-loss disability in the amount of forty percent. We affirm the direct appeal and cross-appeal.

|sIn reviewing decisions from the Workers’ Compensation Commission, we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to the Commission’s findings, and we affirm if the decision is supported by substantial evidence.4 Substantial evidence exists if reasonable minds could reach the Commission’s conclusion.5 It is the Commission’s function to determine witness credibility and the weight to be afforded any testimony.6 The Commission must weigh the medical evidence and, if such evidence is conflicting, its resolution is a question of fact for the Commission.7 The Commission’s resolution of the medical evidence has the force and effect of a jury verdict.8 Jones testified that he was sixty-one years old; that he had a seventh-grade education; that he had “done mostly foundry work”; and that his back was preventing him from going back to work. He acknowledged that he had drawn Social Security before going to work for RCL due to a head injury received in a car accident. According to Jones, RCL was aware that he was drawing disability. Jones stated that since the June 6, 2005 injury, he has difficulty standing longer than fifteen minutes, lifting anything, and kneeling. Jones said that he had not worked since the injury and that he did not know of any type of work he could do. On cross-examination, Jones stated that he injured his head between 1959 and 1960. He said that due |4to his head injury, his “memory is vague.” However, he testified that prior to the 2005 compensable injury he was able to fill out applications and read and write “pretty good.” Jones stated that in November 2004 John Miles was overseeing his money from Social Security. According to Jones, his head injury prevented Social Security from sending the funds directly to him. He stated that he currently lives alone but that his nephew and his nephew’s wife come daily to check on him and make sure he has what he needs. Jones testified that he burns things when he cooks because he forgets about them. He told the ALJ that his back is worse compared to October 2005. Jones further testified that his doctor told him that he could not go back to work; that Randy Carroll told him that he could not return to work; and that he would have returned to work had Carroll allowed him. According to Jones, he injured his head when he was about fourteen or fifteen years old and he was able to do “all kinds of work since then[.]” He stated that he did not have any trouble working until his compensable injury. Jones said that his memory problems started after his compensable injury; however, he testified that his “back is the main problem [he has] in getting around and working.”

Randy Carroll testified that he owned RCL and that he was aware that Jones was getting Social Security when he hired him. He stated that Jones wanted to come back to work but that Jones could not produce a doctor’s note releasing him back to work. According to Carroll, he was never aware that Jones was released by his doctor to return to work without any restrictions. Carroll stated that Jones never came to him after October |s2005. Carroll testified that had Jones presented him with a doctor’s release, Jones would have had a job at the same rate of pay he had in the past.

On cross-examination, Carroll stated that he had known Jones since the 1970s when Jones worked for Carroll’s father. He stated that Jones worked for him in some capacity for three and a half to four years. On re-cross, Carroll stated that Jones was “always physically able to perform the job duties.”

Heather Taylor testified that she was a vocational counselor at Systemedic Corporation. She stated that she was asked to perform a rehabilitation evaluation on Jones. According to Taylor, she reviewed reports from Dr. Kornblum and the deposition testimonies of Jones and Carroll. Taylor opined that Jones was physically capable of working but that his mental defects caused her some concerns:

I read a report from Dr. Kornblum that indicated that by the end of 2005, he did not anticipate any permanent work restrictions. I’ve not seen anything to indicate any restrictions from a doctor that indicate that he is unable to work. The only statement I see about being disabled from Dr. Simard is that it says “the patient is disabled secondary to that injury.” I don’t see anything related to functional abilities. This would have been in October of 2007. As we sit here today, I am not aware of any actual functional restrictions that were placed on Mr. Jones as far as his back injury is concerned_As far'as his back injury, since Dr. Kornblum released him -with no restrictions, he would be able to do these jobs from a physical standpoint. I did have some concerns from a mental standpoint in that he had very significant mental deficits.... Poor memory and significant cognitive components would be the greatest barrier in returning to work.... None of the things ... would be related to his back injury.

Taylor stated that she referred Jones to Dr. A.J. Zolten for neuropsychological testing and that based on the report she received from him, she did not make any vocational recommendations for Jones. Taylor also stated that Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
374 S.W.3d 761, 2010 Ark. App. 304, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rc-landscaping-v-jones-arkctapp-2010.