Schnipke v. Safe-Turf Installation Group, L.L.C.

2010 Ohio 4173, 940 N.E.2d 993, 190 Ohio App. 3d 89
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 7, 2010
Docket1-10-07
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2010 Ohio 4173 (Schnipke v. Safe-Turf Installation Group, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schnipke v. Safe-Turf Installation Group, L.L.C., 2010 Ohio 4173, 940 N.E.2d 993, 190 Ohio App. 3d 89 (Ohio Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Willamowski, Presiding Judge.

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Safe-Turf Installation Group, L.L.C. (“Safe-Turf’), appeals the decision of the Allen County Court of Common Pleas entering *93 judgment in favor of plaintiff-appellee, Craig Schnipke, after a jury found that Schnipke was entitled to participate in the workers’ compensation fund as a result of a work-related injury to his right knee. Safe-Turf contends that the trial court erred by failing to exclude unreliable expert testimony, by failing to give proper jury instructions and jury interrogatories, and by failing to grant Safe-Turfs motion for summary judgment prior to trial. For the reasons set forth below, the judgment is affirmed.

{¶ 2} This case arises out of a workers’ compensation claim in which Schnipke claims that he injured his right knee while he was working at Safe-Turf on February 12, 2008. Safe-Turf makes rubberized athletic sports mats for running tracks and fitness centers/gyms. While he was working, Schnipke felt his right knee “pop,” resulting in great pain and precluding him from placing any weight on it. Schnipke was unable to continue working, so he went home and then saw a physician at Orthopaedic Institute of Ohio the following day. After an MRI examination was performed, Dr. Nieman diagnosed Schnipke’s injury as a torn right medial meniscus, which eventually required surgery.

{¶ 3} Safe-Turf maintains that there was nothing about the work process or the work conditions that caused Schnipke’s torn meniscus. Safe-Turf contends that Schnipke was merely walking when he claims he felt the pain in his knee, that he was not carrying any product or loading anything at the time, and, therefore, the injury was not related to or caused by his job. Safe-Turf claims that the injury was the result of Schnipke’s large size and could have happened anywhere. Schnipke was over six feet, eight inches tall 1 and weighed over 400 pounds.

{¶ 4} Schnipke filed a claim for workers’ compensation benefits for his injury. Initially, the bureau denied the claim, and Schnipke appealed the decision to the Industrial Commission. On appeal, a hearing officer allowed the claim, and this decision was upheld by the commission. On August 28, 2008, Safe-Turf appealed to the trial court pursuant to R.C. 4123.512, and thereafter, filed a motion for summary judgment. The trial court denied Safe-Turfs motion for summary judgment, 2 and on November 23, 2009, the ease proceeded to a jury trial.

*94 {¶ 5} At trial, Schnipke testified that he had been working at his job, and as he was “turning, rotating” to take another bag off the machine, his knee “popped,” and he was in instant, severe pain. He described his job duties as follows:

There’s a roll of plastic bags. I pull one off, put it on the machine and let the machine clamp down. It fills it to 55 pounds. I take that off, turn, sit it on a sealer, put it in the sealer, let it seal. By the time I’m grabbing the next bag, putting that on the machine. I got that bag done. I turn around, grab the bag off the sealer, turn around, walk over there, put them on a pallet, pat it down to flatten it out a little bit and then I turn right back around and do the process all over again. And it’s continuous all night long.

Schnipke also testified that the job was usually a two-person job, but he was doing it alone because they were short of help. He further testified that his supervisor had increased the speed of the machine without telling him. He had to move fast because the conveyor belt feeding the pellets ran continuously, and the bag would overflow if he did not keep up. He estimated that he had been working for approximately 20 minutes into his shift and had filled about 25-30 bags before his knee popped.

{¶ 6} Schnipke’s mother, Vicky Schnipke, testified that Schnipke was 20 years old at the time of the injury and lived at home. Mrs. Schnipke, a registered nurse, testified as to the pain and condition of Schnipke’s knee when he returned home that evening and to taking him to see an orthopedic specialist the following day. She confirmed Schnipke’s testimony that he had never had any prior health problems, other than having his tonsils removed when he was five and having to miss a few practices and briefly wearing a brace on his left knee when he played high school football.

{¶ 7} Dr. Nieman, Schnipke’s treating physician, testified via his video deposition as to his initial examination of Schnipke and explained the MRI report finding a “displaced bucket handle tear of the medial meniscus.” 3 Based on Schnipke’s description that the knee popped when he turned or twisted it at work, Dr. Nieman stated that he believed that the injury was caused by his work. Dr. Nieman testified that he did not believe that Schnipke’s massive body weight alone could have caused the injury, stating that he had a “massive injury” and “a *95 big acute, usually a turn kind of torque injury where the knee somewhat subluxes a little bit and you grab that tear, and the tear gets pulled in front of the knee.”

{¶ 8} Richard Horstman, a company owner and vice president, testified that the work Schnipke was doing that evening was repetitive, but not really strenuous. He also testified that it was not normally a two-person job unless someone was being trained.

{¶ 9} Last, Dr. McGowen testified for Safe-Turf via video deposition. Dr. McGowen was a semiretired internal-medicine physician who had never met or personally examined Schnipke. Dr. McGowen deferred to Dr. Nieman’s diagnosis of the torn meniscus. However, Dr. McGowen testified that it was his opinion that the meniscus tear occurred spontaneously as a result of precocious degenerative joint disease, that he didn’t believe that Schnipke’s work activities proximately caused the torn meniscus, and that Schnipke’s morbid obesity could not be ruled out as a cause.

{¶ 10} The jury entered a unanimous verdict in favor of Schnipke. On December 21, 2009, the trial court filed its judgment, finding that Schnipke was entitled to participate in the workers’ compensation fund for the condition of “right medial meniscus tear.” It is from this decision that Safe-Turf now appeals, raising the following four assignments of error for our review.

First Assignment of Error

The trial court committed reversible error by failing to grant Safe-Turf Installation Group, LLC’s motion for summary judgment where Appellee Craig Schnipke sustained an unexplained knee injury and failed to rule out idiopathic causes of the injury.

Second Assignment of Error

The trial court committed reversible error by failing to exclude the expert testimony of James Nieman, M.D., because Dr. Nieman failed to give a reliable opinion under Evid.R. 702(C).

Third Assignment of Error

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 Ohio 4173, 940 N.E.2d 993, 190 Ohio App. 3d 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schnipke-v-safe-turf-installation-group-llc-ohioctapp-2010.