Reymundo Felipe v. Department Of Labor And Industries Of The State Of Wa

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 12, 2016
Docket75232-4
StatusPublished

This text of Reymundo Felipe v. Department Of Labor And Industries Of The State Of Wa (Reymundo Felipe v. Department Of Labor And Industries Of The State Of Wa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reymundo Felipe v. Department Of Labor And Industries Of The State Of Wa, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

REYMUNDO FELIPE, NO. 75232-4-

Appellant, DIVISION ONE

v.

PUBLISHED OPINION DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES OF THE STATE OF 'S>< WASHINGTON, CO ( Appellant. FILED: September 12, 2016 ^ r\3

Leach, J. — Reymundo Felipe appeals an adverse trial court judgmfgt 3 that denied his request to reopen a worker's compensation claim for additional

medical treatment. Felipe challenges a trial court jury instruction requiring him to

support his aggravation claim with evidence of objective medical findings.

Because the nature of Felipe's injury excuses any requirement for objective

findings and the court's instruction prevented Felipe from arguing his theory of

the case, we reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

As neither party has yet prevailed, we deny Felipe's request for an award of

attorney fees under RCW 51.52.130(1) as premature.

FACTS

Felipe suffered a closed head injury when he fell off a ladder in April 2011

while working. He does not know what caused the fall. He first remembers NO. 75232-4-1 / 2

waking up in a hospital with head pain. His doctors read two CAT (computed

axial tomography) scans, performed on April 19 and April 25, as normal. He

developed headaches that his neurologist thought were consistent with

postconcussive syndrome. He experienced depression in May 2011. Felipe

applied to the Department of Labor and Industries (Department) for industrial

insurance benefits. The Department allowed the claim and provided benefits to

Felipe.

Felipe treated with several providers. He began seeing Dr. Jon

Sukachevin in November 2011. Felipe's headaches had improved but then

became worse two months before this visit. Sukachevin diagnosed Felipe with

several conditions, including major depression, headache, and concussion.

Felipe's headaches improved at the end of 2011 with the help of medication.

The Department closed his claim on May 9, 2012. As of that date, he

experienced some headaches that resolved with pain medication.

Sukachevin continued to see Felipe for his ongoing conditions, including

other industrial injuries. Sukachevin referred Felipe to a psychologist for his

depression, who, in turn, referred Felipe to a brain injury specialist because he

thought Felipe suffered from a traumatic brain injury. Industrial insurance

covered only one visit to the psychologist. The Department denied the referral to

a brain injury specialist.

-2- NO. 75232-4-1 / 3

On October 24, 2012, Sukachevin saw Felipe for newly developed

headaches. At the visit, Felipe reported that these headaches began a month

earlier and described them as similar to the headaches he experienced after his

April 2011 fall. He had at least four headaches per day with a pain level of nine

out of ten, up from four out of ten. Felipe also experienced associated vertigo

and light-headedness. Sukachevin diagnosed Felipe with "[tjraumatic brain injury

[secondary to his April 2011 injury], new problem, uncontrolled; and major

depression, uncontrolled." Sukachevin later described Felipe's diagnosis more

specifically as a "closed head injury."

After seeing Felipe in October 2012 for headaches, Dr. Sukachevin

assisted Felipe in applying to the Department to reopen his claim based on his

worsening condition. On the November 6, 2012, application, Sukachevin listed

Felipe's symptoms: headaches, dizziness, memory problems, fatigue, and

depression. He described Felipe's headaches as "worse." He proposed a

treatment plan: "refer him to the neurologist and—and a traumatic brain injury

specialist, refer for MRI [magnetic resonance imaging] of the brain and to follow

up with the psychologist." Felipe had an MRI on November 17. The radiologist's

report stated that the MRI revealed "'punctate blooming artifacts, subcortical

white matter, white frontal lobe, suspicious for an area of remote small

hemorrhage.'" NO. 75232-4-1/4

In January 2013, neurologist Dr. William Stump examined Felipe at the

Department's request. Stump performed a general physical examination and a

neurological exam. He also reviewed Felipe's medical records and MRI report.

Felipe reported to Dr. Stump painful headaches, dizziness, depression, anxiety,

and sleeping difficulties. Stump diagnosed Felipe with a closed head injury due

to his April 2011 fall, concluding that he most likely suffered from a concussive

syndrome as a result but that it had resolved. The State agrees that Dr. Stump

based his closed head injury diagnosis on subjective findings alone.1

The Department denied Felipe's application to reopen his claim. On

reconsideration, the Department affirmed its earlier order. Felipe appealed to the

Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (Board).

The Board received each party's medical testimony through deposition.

Sukachevin opined that Felipe experienced an aggravation of his April 2011

injury. He based this opinion on the fact that Felipe had passed out in March

2013 and that he reported that the intensity of his headaches had worsened. He

also opined that the MRI report "showed evidence that patient may have had a

hemorrhage in the brain" and that this was related to his accident because of a

lack of any other episodes of head trauma since Felipe's fall. On cross-

examination, Sukachevin testified that the November 17 MRI findings were the

1 The State acknowledged this at oral argument. -4- NO. 75232-4-1 / 5

only objective medical evidence of Felipe's worsening condition. He testified that

he doesn't read MRI films, so he based his interpretation on the radiologist's

report. He also testified about the possibility that the CAT scan missed this

abnormality in April 2011.

Stump testified that Felipe's condition had not objectively worsened after

May 9, 2012. He disagreed that the MRI report showed that Felipe suffered from

a hemorrhage. He concluded that Felipe "had persistent pain in the top of his

head" but concluded that this was not a result of the April 2011 injury because

the changes that would have developed at the time of Felipe's injury would have

healed within three to six months—before the time the new headaches began.

The Board affirmed the Department's order. Felipe appealed to the

superior court.

At the superior court trial, counsel read to the jury the testimony given to

the Board. The trial court instructed the jury that proof of Felipe's claimed

aggravation must be supported by medical testimony based in part on one or

more objective findings.

Aggravation of Reymundo Felipe's industrially related condition and the extent of Reymundo Felipe's increased disability on the date of claimed aggravation must be supported by medical testimony based at least in part upon one or more objective findings. Statements of complaints by the worker made to a physician are called subjective complaints. Findings of disability that can be

-5- NO. 75232-4-1 / 6

seen, felt, or measured by an examining physician are called objective findings.

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