Samuels v. Bartlett Nuclear, Inc.

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedSeptember 10, 2001
DocketI.C. NO. 852710
StatusPublished

This text of Samuels v. Bartlett Nuclear, Inc. (Samuels v. Bartlett Nuclear, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samuels v. Bartlett Nuclear, Inc., (N.C. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

Upon review of the competent evidence of record, the Full Commission, upon reconsideration of the evidence, REVERSES the Opinion and Award of the Deputy Commissioner.

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Based on the pre-trial agreement executed by the parties and filed in the record of evidence at the deputy commissioner's hearing, the Full Commission accepts the following:

STIPULATIONS
a. Leslie Samuels is the employee;

b. Bartlett Nuclear is the employer;

c. The employer is self-insured and the servicing agent is AIG Claim Services, Inc.;

d. An employer-employee relationship existed between the employer and the employee;

e. The average weekly wage is to be determined on the I.C. Form 22, included in Plaintiff's Exhibit A;

f. The alleged date of accident is August 13, 1997;

g. The issues to be heard are:

(1) Whether or not the North Carolina Industrial Commission has jurisdiction in this matter; and if so

(2) Whether or not the plaintiff suffered a compensable accident and injury arising out of her employment; and,

(3) What benefits is the plaintiff entitled if she is found to have a compensable accident and injury.

h. Stipulated Documents and Exhibits included Plaintiff's Exhibit A, consisting of Industrial Commission Forms, Plaintiff's Exhibit B, consisting of medical records of the plaintiff, and Plaintiff and Defendant's written discovery responses.

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Based on the competent evidence of record, the Full Commission makes the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. Plaintiff is a resident of Lincolnton, North Carolina, and has worked for defendant since 1995. Plaintiff's husband has been an employee of defendant since 1993. Defendant initially mailed plaintiff an application for employment to her residence in Lincolnton, North Carolina. Plaintiff completed the application and mailed it from North Carolina to Massachusetts.

2. Defendant is a Massachusetts corporation with its principal place of business in Massachusetts. Defendant does business in North Carolina by recruiting employees from North Carolina and also by placing employees in North Carolina to work at nuclear power plants. Defendant is in the business of supplying labor to assist nuclear power plants with refueling and other special projects. The nature of this work is sporadic and the employees would generally be hired to work for the duration of a particular contract or project. Depending upon the project and the contract with the nuclear facility, defendant's employees would be covered by workers' compensation insurance provided by defendant or under the policy for the nuclear plant.

3. Plaintiff's first position with defendant was to work at a nuclear power plant in North Carolina. This assignment was received when plaintiff, while in North Carolina, received a telephone call from Eric Bartlett with defendant, asking her whether she wanted to work at the Shearon-Harris Nuclear Power Plant near Raleigh, North Carolina. Plaintiff worked at this plant for about 2 months until the project was finished.

4. Plaintiff worked for defendant at other locations in North Carolina, Virginia, New Jersey, and Massachusetts.

5. Plaintiff was injured on August 13, 1997, while in the employ of defendant while working in Massachusetts. The injury occurred when plaintiff fell while descending stairs and struck her back on the stairs. Plaintiff immediately reported the incident and her employer took her, on the date of injury, to North Adams Regional Hospital in North Adams, Massachusetts.

6. Plaintiff received the job offer by receipt of a telephone call from Eric Bartlett with defendant advising her of the available position in Massachusetts and asking whether she would accept the position. Plaintiff received the telephone call while she was in Lincolnton, North Carolina. The defendant told the plaintiff the hourly rate of pay, and plaintiff accepted the position on the telephone. Defendant indicated that plaintiff had been hired, and plaintiff then traveled to Massachusetts.

7. North Adams Regional Hospital records state that plaintiff was seen on August 13, 1997, with complaints of low back pain sustained during a fall in which plaintiff slipped on stairs, landed on her buttocks, and hit her back against the stairs. Plain film x-rays were taken which showed a tilt of the lumbar spine to the right but were otherwise unremarkable. The diagnosis was back contusion and back pain. Plaintiff was given medication and advised to place ice on her back and to decrease activity depending on what she could tolerate.

8. Lucian Pravati with defendant testified that defendant had no information on which to deny the fall. Rather, defendant's information was that the fall had occurred.

9. Defendant placed plaintiff on light duty until the job in Massachusetts was over.

10. Plaintiff next accepted a position with defendant in Hope Creek, New Jersey. Plaintiff had medications for her back from the doctor in the emergency room in Massachusetts. Plaintiff saw a doctor in the emergency room at Salem Hospital in New Jersey.

11. Medical records in evidence indicate that plaintiff went to the emergency room at Lincoln Medical Center, Lincolnton, North Carolina, on September 1, 1997, and was examined by Kevin Reese, M.D., for problems with her left knee. She was diagnosed with left knee arthritis and was prescribed vicodin for inflammation.

12. Plaintiff reported that she saw Susane Habashi-Ahigian, M.D., in November-December 1997 when she returned to North Carolina.

13. In January 1998, plaintiff saw Gregory Hardigree, M.D., for complaints with her left knee. Dr. Hardigree recommended arthroscopic surgery for suspected lateral meniscal tear, but the surgery was postponed until plaintiff's anticipated return from a position with the defendant in Virginia.

14. Dr. Hardigree performed arthroscopic surgery on plaintiff's left knee on May 5, 1998, in Gastonia, North Carolina. Scoping of the left knee failed to reveal the suspected meniscal tear; rather, the physician reported softening of the cartilage and formation of plica. Dr. Hardigree debrided the articular surface of the patella and excised the pathological lateral gutter plica.

15. Plaintiff was not out of work due to her injuries prior to her knee surgery because defendant had placed her on light duty. Plaintiff did not work after the knee surgery on May 5, 1998.

16. The knee surgery did not correct plaintiff's complaints, which were related to plaintiff's back.

17. Plaintiff treated with Karen M. Rivas, M.D., an orthopaedist. Medical records indicate that plaintiff saw Robert Reid, M.D, for numerous medical conditions and that Dr. Reid referred plaintiff to Dr. Rivas.

18. Dr. Rivas' records reflect that plaintiff was complaining of left leg pain and saw Dr. Hardigree, who performed the knee surgery. Plaintiff then continued to complain of pain over her left hip and down the left leg, and Dr. Reid sent her back to Dr. Hardigree, who opined that the pain was secondary to a tight muscle. Dr. Reid then asked Dr. Rivas for a second opinion.

19. Dr. Rivas' records reflect tightness of the muscles of both right and left lower extremities, left greater than right, with numbness over the L5-S1 nerve distribution on the left, and degenerative joint disease of both sacroiliac joints. On June 5, 1998, Dr. Rivas placed plaintiff in physical therapy two times a week for three weeks and requested an MRI, which was performed.

20. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
Samuels v. Bartlett Nuclear, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuels-v-bartlett-nuclear-inc-ncworkcompcom-2001.