Satterfield, Kimberly v. Smoky Mountain Home Health and Hospice, Inc.

2023 TN WC App. 50
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedNovember 6, 2023
Docket2019-03-1440
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 TN WC App. 50 (Satterfield, Kimberly v. Smoky Mountain Home Health and Hospice, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Satterfield, Kimberly v. Smoky Mountain Home Health and Hospice, Inc., 2023 TN WC App. 50 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2023).

Opinion

FILED Nov 06, 2023 12:18 PM(CT) TENNESSEE WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Kimberly Satterfield ) Docket No. 2019-03-1440 ) v. ) State File No. 7635-2019 ) Smoky Mountain Home Health and ) Hospice, Inc., et al. ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Heard October 5, 2023 Compensation Claims ) at Knoxville Lisa A. Lowe, Judge )

Affirmed and Certified as Final

This is an appeal of the trial court’s compensation order awarding extraordinary relief under Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-242. The employee was working as a home health nurse when she slipped on ice and injured her right shoulder, middle finger, hip, and knee. After an initial compensation hearing, the employee was awarded permanent partial disability benefits consistent with her impairment rating and future reasonable and necessary medical benefits. At the end of her initial benefit period, she filed a new petition for benefits seeking permanent total disability benefits or, in the alternative, extraordinary relief. After a hearing at which the employee and two vocational experts testified, the court awarded two hundred seventy-five weeks of permanent disability benefits pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-242(a)(2). The employer has appealed. Upon careful consideration of the record and the arguments of counsel, we affirm the court’s decision and certify it as final.

Judge Meredith B. Weaver delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board in which Presiding Judge Timothy W. Conner and Judge Pele I. Godkin joined.

Tiffany B. Sherrill, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the employer-appellant, Smoky Mountain Home Health and Hospice, Inc.

Timothy A. Roberto, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the employee-appellee, Kimberly Satterfield

1 Factual and Procedural Background

Kimberly Satterfield (“Employee”) is a registered nurse who slipped and fell on ice while working for Smoky Mountain Home Health and Hospice, Inc. (“Employer”) on January 29, 2019. She landed on her right knee with her arm outstretched, resulting in injuries to her right shoulder, middle finger, hip, and knee. Employer accepted the claim as compensable and provided authorized treatment with Dr. Paul Brady for her shoulder, Dr. Conrad Ivie for her knee and hip, and Dr. Timothy Renfree for her middle finger. Dr. Brady treated her for a rotator cuff tear in the shoulder, which he stated was more than fifty percent caused by the work injury and resulted in an eleven percent impairment. Dr. Ivie determined Employee’s knee and hip injuries, which included a meniscal tear in the knee, were more than fifty percent related to the work injury and assigned a three percent impairment. Dr. Renfree found Employee’s middle finger injury was caused by the work fall and assessed a two percent impairment. Finally, Employee was evaluated by Dr. William Kennedy, who provided a combined impairment of twelve percent and opined that the impairment for all her injuries was primarily caused by the work accident.

At the initial compensation hearing in June 2022, Employer argued Employee’s fall was idiopathic in nature and/or caused by her multiple sclerosis (“MS”). In support of its position, Employer presented records from prior physicians indicating Employee had suffered past falls and weakness on the right side due to her MS. In response, Employee asserted that most of the episodes as reflected in past medical records did not occur or were depicted incorrectly in the medical records. Following the compensation hearing, the trial court awarded permanent partial disability benefits equating to a 12% vocational disability and future reasonable and necessary medical benefits. The order contained language acknowledging that the initial benefit period had not expired pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-207(3)(A), and thus, the court was unable to determine whether Employee was entitled to increased benefits or extraordinary relief at that time. That order was not appealed.

On October 7, 2022, Employee filed a new petition for benefit determination, stating that the initial benefit period had expired and that she was seeking “increased, additional, and permanent total disability [benefits].” A dispute certification notice (“DCN”) was filed on December 7, 2022, identifying jurisdiction and compensability as the disputed issues. Following the entry of a scheduling order, Employer filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing Employee was precluded from being awarded permanent total disability benefits as her initial petition filed in November 2020 did not allege that she was permanently and totally disabled and she did not present proof at the June 2022 compensation hearing that she was permanently and totally disabled. Therefore, Employer argued, Employee had waived any claim to permanent total disability benefits. It further argued that the specific language of Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-207(4)(B) prohibits an award of permanent total disability when an employee files for increased benefits after an award of permanent partial disability. In support of this position, Employer pointed to the language

2 stating that permanent total disability benefits can only be sought “[w]hen an injury not otherwise specifically provided for in this chapter totally incapacitates the employee from working at an occupation that brings the employee an income.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6- 207(4)(B) (emphasis added). Hence, Employer argues that because Employee received permanent partial disability benefits at a compensation hearing, her injury did not qualify as one “not otherwise specifically provided for in this chapter,” and she could not qualify for an award of permanent total disability benefits.

In response to the dispositive motion, Employee submitted an affidavit from vocational expert Michael Galloway asserting Employee was, in his opinion, one hundred percent vocationally disabled as evidence that she had sufficient proof to establish she was permanently and totally disabled. Furthermore, Employee argued she could not have known she was permanently and totally disabled at the time she filed her initial petition for benefits because she had not yet reached maximum medical improvement. Finally, Employee argued the language upon which Employer relied from section 50-6-207(4) was a “relic” from the pre-reform law and was intended only to refer to scheduled member injuries, which are no longer included in the Workers’ Compensation Law.

The court heard the motion for summary judgment in April 2023. However, because the DCN only certified jurisdiction and compensability as disputed issues, the court issued an order holding the motion in abeyance, noting it could only adjudicate matters certified as disputed issues by the mediator on a DCN pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-239(b)(1). The court referred the case back to mediation and requested the mediator to certify permanent disability benefits as a disputed issue if the matter did not resolve at post-discovery mediation, which had previously been set by the court in the scheduling order. Employer did not appeal the trial court’s order holding the motion for summary judgment in abeyance and ordering the mediator to identify permanent disability benefits as a disputed issue in the event the case was not settled.

The claim did not settle at mediation, and the mediator issued a DCN identifying permanent disability benefits as a disputed issue, to which Employer objected. A compensation hearing was held on June 27, 2023. Employee, Mr. Galloway, and Michelle McBroom Weiss, the vocational expert retained by Employer, all testified live, and Drs. Brady and Kennedy testified by deposition.

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Bluebook (online)
2023 TN WC App. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/satterfield-kimberly-v-smoky-mountain-home-health-and-hospice-inc-tennworkcompapp-2023.