Reynolds Consumer Products v. William Bell, III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 22, 2020
Docket2020 CA 000855
StatusUnknown

This text of Reynolds Consumer Products v. William Bell, III (Reynolds Consumer Products v. William Bell, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds Consumer Products v. William Bell, III, (Ky. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

RENDERED: OCTOBER 23, 2020; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2020-CA-0855-WC

REYNOLDS CONSUMER PRODUCTS APPELLANT

PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION v. OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD ACTION NO. WC-19-80527

WILLIAM BELL III; HONORABLE JOHN MCCRACKEN, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE; and WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD APPELLEES

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; KRAMER AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

KRAMER, JUDGE: William Bell III sought workers’ compensation benefits from

his employer, Reynolds Consumer Products, claiming he had sustained a

compensable injury to his right eye after suffering a fall on his employer’s

premises on April 6, 2019. The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) dismissed Bell’s claim after determining Bell had failed to prove his fall qualified as a work-related

injurious event under Kentucky workers’ compensation law or that his fall had

been the proximate cause of his eye injury. Bell then appealed to the Workers’

Compensation Board (Board). Upon review, the Board reversed and remanded,

explaining Bell’s eye injury was indeed work-related because Bell’s fall was

“unexplained” and because the evidence overwhelmingly demonstrated Bell’s fall

had caused his injury. Reynolds now appeals. We affirm.

The evidence adduced in this case is as follows. Bell testified that he

passed out while at work for Reynolds on April 6, 2019. He had never passed out

before and had felt “normal” when he arrived at work that day. At the time of his

fall, he was standing near a transfer cart. Bell testified he has no idea what he hit

when he fell. He blacked out and the next thing he remembers is Jermaine

Campbell standing over him. Bell stated he did not have loss of vision in his right

eye until after the fall. When he awoke, he did not initially realize he could not see

out of his right eye. Just prior to passing out, he did not feel well and was

sweating. He suddenly became disoriented and fell. At the time of his fall, the

transfer cart was near him and he held a wireless crane remote in his hand. The

crane remote was approximately ten to eleven inches long and five inches wide and

was beside him when he awoke.

-2- Jermaine Campbell testified by deposition on November 19, 2019. He

was working approximately twenty to twenty-five feet away from Bell

immediately prior to the fall. Campbell testified he had spoken with Bell earlier in

the shift; they had been “talking on and off” during their shift and Bell seemed

“okay.” About two hours into their shift, though, Campbell glanced in Bell’s

direction and noticed he was standing and “just staring.” Campbell yelled to Bell,

who did not respond. Campbell walked toward Bell, who started walking toward

him. Bell was wearing a hard hat, safety shield, and safety glasses. He was also

carrying a remote control for a crane. Campbell saw Bell fall and stated Bell’s

body rolled while he was falling. Campbell was not sure if Bell struck anything as

he fell. Bell’s hardhat, face shield, and safety glasses came off when he hit the

floor. When Campbell reached Bell, Bell was approximately twelve inches from

the transfer cart, a permanent immovable structure. Bell was face down with his

hardhat and safety glasses a few feet away. The face shield was still attached to

the hardhat, but it was bent. Campbell helped Bell to a seated position and

observed blood coming out of his right eye.

Campbell, with the assistance of another Reynolds employee (William

Cole Duley), escorted Bell to the supervisor’s office. Regarding that time frame,

Campbell further testified:

-3- Q: As he walked to the office, did [Bell] complain of any particular complaints, particularly with regard to his right eye?

CAMPBELL: No.

Q: Did he tell you whether or not he could or could not see out of the right eye?

CAMPBELL: Well, he didn’t – at the time he didn’t. I noticed it, but he didn’t tell me that he couldn’t see until I guess he came to the guard office and they checked him out and he came back to get his stuff because he was going home. At that time I noticed that his eye was swollen shut. I asked him about his eye and he told me he could not see out of his eye.

Q: Do you remember what the timeframe was between the point that he was at the guard shack waiting to be picked up, I believe, by his girlfriend? Do you know what time that would have been?

CAMPBELL: I’d say somewhere between forty-five minutes and maybe an hour.

William Cole Duley testified at the hearing. Duley works in security

and loss prevention. He did not witness the accident but provided first aid

afterward. When Duley first saw Bell, he was in a seated position with a paper

towel over his right eye. Duley observed redness in the white part of the eye but

stated nothing was coming out of the eye. He gave Bell some wet rags “because it

was hot back there” but provided no other care. He noted Bell was taken from the

premises by his fiancée.

-4- Bell’s fiancée, Kristin Lucas, testified at the hearing. She took Bell

directly to the Baptist East emergency room. Lucas testified as follows concerning

Bell’s condition when she arrived at Reynolds:

Q: And when you picked up Mr. Bell can you tell us what you saw as in relation to his eye?

A: Well, when he came out he had like a wet paper towel on his eye and it was like a rust color I’m assuming from where he was wiping or oozing something that was coming out of his eye. And I asked him to open up his eye because it was like closed, like stuck closed, and he kind of pulled it open and it was just like – it was very gruesome. It was almost like smooshed.

Q: What was smooshed, the white part?

A: His eye – his entire eyeball, like the whole thing.

Q: So was it one side smooshed more than the other side or just –

A: It looked – honestly, just the whole thing was just like a big glob.

Q: Did it look bloody as well?

A: Yes. It was very red and had oozing stuff coming out of it.

Records from Baptist Health Louisville on April 6, 2019, the day of

the accident, reflect Bell sustained a ruptured globe of the right eye. Bell had a

dilated, non-reactive right pupil with blood in the anterior chamber, and “[l]arge

amounts of tearing and drainage” were observed. A CT of the head was read as

-5- showing an abnormal appearance of the right globe, likely related to a prior corneal

transplant. Bell was transferred to the University of Louisville for surgery.

Bell filed the October 18, 2019 report of Dr. Richard A. Eiferman. He

opined as follows:

In my opinion, Mr. Bell’s eye injury was a result of direct trauma to the right eye. Given the severity of his injury (traumatic wound dehiscence with a prolapse of the intraocular contents and ultimate loss of vision) and the unaffected left eye (which also had a pre-existing corneal transplant) it is highly unlikely that it was caused by a blunt force trauma to the skull. In addition, Mr. Bell’s injury could not have been caused by any other non- traumatic event such as hypertension.

The opinions above are based on over 40 years of clinical experience and are expressed within a reasonable degree of medical probability.

Bell’s claim was bifurcated on the issue of work-relatedness of the

eye injury. The ALJ’s findings relevant to this appeal were as follows:

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