S. Schock v. WCAB (Brown's Super Stores)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 21, 2017
DocketS. Schock v. WCAB (Brown's Super Stores) - 1352 and 1366 C.D. 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of S. Schock v. WCAB (Brown's Super Stores) (S. Schock v. WCAB (Brown's Super Stores)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. Schock v. WCAB (Brown's Super Stores), (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Sarah Schock, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1352 C.D. 2016 : Workers’ Compensation : Appeal Board (Brown’s Super Stores), : Respondent : : : Brown’s Super Stores, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1366 C.D. 2016 : Submitted: April 21, 2017 Workers’ Compensation : Appeal Board (Schock), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT FILED: August 21, 2017

Sarah Schock (Claimant) petitions for review of two adjudications of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) dated June 16, 2015, and July 28, 2016, respectively. Claimant’s employer, Brown’s Super Stores (Employer), cross-petitions for review of the Board’s July 28, 2016, adjudication. The June 16, 2015, adjudication, in pertinent part, affirmed the Workers’ Compensation Judge’s (WCJ) grant of Employer’s petition to terminate benefits. The July 28, 2016, adjudication affirmed, in part, the WCJ’s decision to grant Claimant reimbursement of litigation costs. These matters have been consolidated for our disposition. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and vacate and remand in part.

Background

Claimant worked for Employer as a deli clerk. On April 30, 2012, she fell on a slippery floor while cleaning a slicer and injured her lower back. On August 7, 2012, Employer issued a medical-only Notice of Compensation Payable (NCP) describing the injury as a lumbar strain. Reproduced Record at 1 (R.R. __). Claimant subsequently filed a claim petition under the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act)1 seeking partial disability benefits from April 30, 2012, to July 16, 2012, and total disability benefits thereafter. She also filed a penalty petition alleging that Employer failed to recognize compensable injuries in its NCP and failed to pay compensation when due. Employer denied these allegations. On June 12, 2013, Employer filed a petition to terminate compensation benefits effective June 6, 2013, the date on which an independent medical examination (IME) reported that Claimant had fully recovered from her lumbar strain. Claimant filed an answer denying the allegations. All three petitions were assigned to the WCJ for disposition. Claimant testified in person and by deposition. Claimant stated that she started working for Employer in August 2011 and had no problems with her back before that date.2 Her job duties as a deli clerk included slicing deli meat and cheeses and

1 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§1-1041.4, 2501-2708. 2 Claimant acknowledged sustaining a back injury in 1999, from which she fully recovered.

2 preparing deli products. She lifted up to 50 pounds and stood six to eight hours a day. Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 12/10/2012, at 8; R.R. 28. She earned $8.00 per hour, or $300 per week before taxes. Claimant testified that the April 30, 2012, work incident caused pain in her lower back that “[s]hoots down into [her] left leg, into [her] left foot and then [she] also ha[s] pain down the right, in the back until about [her] ankle.” N.T., 12/10/2012, at 10; R.R. 30. Claimant did light-duty work for Employer from April 30, 2012, until July 16, 2012. Thereafter, she worked as a greeter for four hours a day, from August 20, 2012, through August 27, 2012; from October 10, 2012, until October 18, 2012; and from November 27, 2012, until December 3, 2012. As a greeter, Claimant sat at the front door and handed out circulars. Claimant has not returned to work since December 3, 2012, because the pain in her back and leg “became unbearable.” N.T., 12/10/2012, at 11; R.R. 31. Claimant testified that she was first treated at Concentra and then transferred to Rothman Institute, which administered an epidural injection that only worsened her pain. Rothman Institute referred Claimant to Dr. Kenneth Izzo, who did a functional capacity evaluation, followed by an electromyogram (EMG) on November 26, 2012. In the meantime, on November 16, 2012, Employer issued a Notice of Ability to Return to Work to Claimant, based on an IME done by Dr. Evan Kovalsky. On June 11, 2013, Claimant underwent a back surgery performed by Dr. Andrew Freese; until then, she testified, her pain has “progressively gotten worse.” N.T., 10/22/2013, at 5; R.R. 286. In support of her claim petition, Claimant submitted the deposition testimony of Dr. Izzo, who is board certified, inter alia, in medicine and

3 rehabilitation. Dr. Izzo testified that his October 2012 functional capacity evaluation of Claimant showed that she could work in a sedentary job. Dr. Izzo testified that he reviewed two magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies dated May 30, 2012, and August 6, 2012. Both MRIs indicated desiccation, bulging and annular tearing of Claimant’s discs at L4-5 and L5-S1. Dr. Izzo testified that he examined Claimant again on October 23, 2012, at which time he noted that she had been working four hours a day since October 12, 2012, and that each day she experienced increasing pain in her back and legs. He put Claimant on disability through December 3, 2012. Dr. Izzo testified that Claimant’s EMG revealed bilateral lumbar radiculopathy, which he opined was caused by the work injury. Dr. Izzo explained that lumbar radiculopathy “was subacute for the most part,” which “usually is between a three month and six to eight month period.” N.T., 1/14/2013, at 19-20; R.R. 98-99. Dr. Izzo diagnosed Claimant as follows:

One, chronic, severe, incapacitating low back pain secondary to lumbar spine discogenic injuries at L4-L5 and L5-S1 with evidence of disc desiccation, disc bulges and suspected small annular tears, fissures or tears at these two levels. Two was mild foraminal stenosis bilaterally at L4-L5 attributed to mild hypertrophy of the facet joints. Three was aggravation of pre- existing and essentially asymptomatic lumbar foraminal stenosis at L4-5 with mild hypertrophy of the facet joints. Four was ongoing bilateral lumbar radiculopathy possibly greater on the right side.

N.T., 1/14/2013, at 14; R.R. 93 (emphasis added). Dr. Izzo opined that Claimant was totally disabled from working with the exception of the four periods when she had returned to light-duty work. N.T., 1/14/2013, at 24; R.R. 103.

4 On cross-examination, Dr. Izzo agreed that in May 2012, Concentra diagnosed Claimant with a contusion of the lumbar spine with negative neurologic deficit. Dr. Izzo also acknowledged that he did not review records from Concentra, and he agreed that the two 2012 MRIs did not show evidence of disc herniation. Dr. Izzo further agreed that an August 13, 2012, examination by Dr. Jeremy Simon at Rothman Institute revealed no antalgic gait and no lumbar spine tenderness, which would be expected in a disc abnormality. Claimant also presented the deposition testimony of Dr. Andrew Freese, a board-certified neurosurgeon, who examined Claimant on April 5, 2013. Claimant’s medical history showed a back problem in 2000 from which she had been “pain-free for well over a decade” until April 30, 2012, the date of her work injury. N.T., 6/28/2013, at 7; R.R. 202. Claimant told Dr. Freese that her symptoms had progressed since the work injury. She complained of “severe axial discogenic pain which extended more into the left leg than the right and in a posterior lateral distribution all the way into her foot associated with numbness and tingling.” N.T., 6/28/2013, at 8; R.R. 203. She indicated that “the axial or midline back pain constituted 80 percent of her pain syndrome, whereas her leg symptoms accounted for about 20 percent.” Id. Dr. Freese’s April 5, 2013, examination revealed reduced range of motion with extension, tenderness to deep palpation, and some mild weakness in Claimant’s ankle, all of which, Dr.

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