Roberts v. Dixie News, Inc.

658 S.E.2d 684, 189 N.C. App. 495, 2008 N.C. App. LEXIS 654
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 1, 2008
DocketCOA07-687
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 658 S.E.2d 684 (Roberts v. Dixie News, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Dixie News, Inc., 658 S.E.2d 684, 189 N.C. App. 495, 2008 N.C. App. LEXIS 654 (N.C. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

HUNTER, Judge.

Dixie News, Inc., and Harleysville (“defendants”) appeal from an opinion and award by the Full Industrial Commission entered on 12 March 2007. Carol Roberts (“plaintiff’) cross-appeals from an order by the Chairman of the Industrial Commission entered on 2 February 2006. After careful review, we affirm as to both.

*497 I.

In 2003, plaintiff was employed by defendant Dixie News as a magazine route distributor, warehouse manager, and inventory specialist and controller. These positions required her to lift up to 100 pounds on a daily basis, usually bins or racks of magazines. On 7 May 2003, plaintiff sustained an admittedly compensable injury while moving a large magazine rack in the course of her employment. Defendants began paying periodic compensation to plaintiff for total disability starting on 8 May 2003.

Plaintiff was treated by a neurosurgeon and, later, a rehabilitation therapist for her injuries, completing a rehabilitation program on 11 May 2004. According to her doctor, she retained a ten percent (10%) permanent partial disability and was assigned permanent work restrictions of lifting no more than twenty-five pounds.

Plaintiff was not assigned a vocational rehabilitation specialist and so began to seek work on her own. From 31 August 2004 through 3 November 2004, plaintiff worked for a catering company in what was touted as an office job but in fact required her to lift up to ninety pounds on a regular basis. She was terminated from this position on 3 November 2004 because she could not perform the job’s required physical tasks. Defendants did not reinstate her disability compensation after she lost this position on 3 November 2004.

On 3 January 2005, plaintiff began work for Kerhules News in Union County, South Carolina, apparently performing tasks very similar to her work for defendant Dixie News. Plaintiff testified that Kerhules News was aware of the restrictions on how much she could lift, but she was required to lift bins weighing twenty-eight to seventy-one pounds. On 14 January 2005, while lifting a bin of magazines, plaintiff re-injured her back and subsequently lost her job at Kerhules. After this incident, defendants refused to authorize doctors’ visits, claiming that plaintiff had sustained a new injury and, since it was sustained in the course of her employment for Kerhules News, any workers’ compensation claim she might have was against that company.

On 15 June 2005, plaintiff made a motion to Deputy Commissioner Adrian Phillips to compel defendants to reinstate plaintiff’s total disability compensation. Plaintiff argued that her physician had completed a Form 28U (Employee’s Request that Compensation be Reinstated After Unsuccessful Trial Return to Work), pursuant to *498 which defendants were required by the Industrial Commission’s rules to resume payment of compensation. The motion further stated that defendants, through counsel, had informed plaintiff that they would not honor the form, though there is no explanation as to why. Plaintiff noted that defendants may contest the reinstatement but, per the rules, must first reinstate it.

On 16 June 2005, Deputy Commissioner Phillips ordered that defendants reinstate plaintiff’s compensation before a hearing scheduled for 28 June 2005. Defendants did so. On 17 November 2005, Deputy Commissioner Phillips issued his ruling from that hearing, holding that the second injury constituted a new injury and cut off defendants’ liability from 14 January 2005 forward. Plaintiff immediately appealed the ruling to the Full Commission. From the time of this ruling on 17 November 2005 until the Full Commission’s ruling on 12 March 2007, defendants made no payments to plaintiff.

Between the two rulings, on 7 December 2005, plaintiff made a motion to the Commission requesting that defendants be required to continue payments until the appeal was resolved. On 2 February 2006, an order by Deputy Commissioner Buck Lattimore was entered (“the February order”) “hold[ing] plaintiff’s motion to immediately reinstate disability compensation in abeyance until consideration by the Full Commission at the hearing of this matter.”

On 12 March 2007, the Fhall Commission issued an opinion and award giving plaintiff temporary total disability from 4 November 2004 through 2 January 2005 and from 25 January 2005 forward. Defendants were also ordered to pay for medical treatment for plaintiff’s injury. Defendants appeal from this order; plaintiff cross-appeals, arguing that defendants stopped payment of her benefits after Deputy Commissioner Phillips’s November 2005 order without authorization and that Commissioner Lattimore’s February order holding the motion in abeyance was error.

II. Defendants’ Appeal

Defendants argue that the following findings made by the Industrial Commission are not supported by competent evidence:

24. Defendants have presented no evidence of an intervening event that interrupts their admissions of compensability and liability with respect to plaintiff’s compensable May 7, 2003 injury. Further, there is no evidence that plaintiff intentionally tried to *499 re-injure herself by performing heavy work activities for a new employer.
32. Plaintiffs increase in pain following the January 14, 2005 incident was a manifestation of plaintiff’s prior compensable injury, and thus, was not an independent, intervening cause. Further, there is no evidence that the incident was attributable to plaintiff’s own intentional conduct.

All of these arguments are without merit.

As defendants note, on appeal, the Industrial Commission’s findings of fact “are conclusive where supported by competent evidence” and may be set aside only “ ‘when there is a complete lack of competent evidence to support them.’ ” Flynn v. EPSG Mgmt. Servs., 171 N.C. App. 353, 356, 614 S.E.2d 460, 462 (2005) (citation omitted). None of the disputed findings is completely lacking in foundation in the record.

As to the first disputed finding of fact, defendants argue that the Commission ignored evidence they presented of an intervening event between plaintiff’s two injuries. This argument blends into their argument as to the second disputed finding of fact, in that the claimed intervening event was plaintiff’s second injury, which they claim she inflicted on herself. Defendants argue the Commission erred in finding that they did not present evidence on these points. This argument is without merit.

The evidence to which defendant points is: Plaintiff’s taking two new jobs after her injury, her apparent lack of need for medical attention before each, her ensuing claims that she was physically unfit for them, and her intentionally lifting a bin that she may or may not have known was too heavy for her. However, as noted, the Commission’s findings must have absolutely no basis in the record for this Court to overturn them.

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Bluebook (online)
658 S.E.2d 684, 189 N.C. App. 495, 2008 N.C. App. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-dixie-news-inc-ncctapp-2008.