Smith v. Masonite Corp.

48 So. 3d 565, 2010 Miss. App. LEXIS 168, 2010 WL 1310964
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedApril 6, 2010
Docket2009-WC-00549-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 48 So. 3d 565 (Smith v. Masonite Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Masonite Corp., 48 So. 3d 565, 2010 Miss. App. LEXIS 168, 2010 WL 1310964 (Mich. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

ROBERTS, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Norman Ray Smith filed a claim for worker’s compensation benefits based on alleged bilateral knee injuries sustained during his employment as an instrument technician for Masonite Corporation in Laurel, Mississippi. The administrative law judge (ALJ) found that Smith sustained a 15% loss of use to each of his knees. The full Commission affirmed the ALJ’s decision. Smith appealed to the Jones County Circuit Court, but the circuit court affirmed the Commission’s decision. Aggrieved, Smith appeals to this Court. According to Smith, the ALJ erred when she did not find that he was temporarily disabled between the date he reported his injury and the date of his maximum medical improvement. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. As of September 2004, Smith had been working for Masonite for twenty-two years. Smith worked as an instrument technician. Smith’s work often required that he climb ladders. However, on September 11, 2004, Smith told one of his coworkers that he could not climb ladders because his knees hurt. Smith’s co-worker told his supervisor, Austin Clement, that he needed to work with someone who could climb ladders. According to Smith, “that’s when it all started.”

¶ 3. Smith told Clement that he “can’t handle this heavy climbing anymore; my knees can’t stand it.” However, Smith did not tell Clement or anyone else at Masonite that he thought he had sustained a work-related injury. Clement took Smith to see Lynn Mahaffey, an occupational health nurse who was employed by Masonite. The record indicates that Masonite’s on-call physician examined Smith and stated that he could not make any recommen *568 dations until Smith saw a specialist. Ma-haffey scheduled an appointment for Smith with Dr. Steven Nowieki, an orthopedic surgeon with the Laurel Bone and Joint Clinic in Laurel, Mississippi. 1 Dr. Nowieki examined Smith on September 13, 2004.

¶ 4. According to Dr. Nowieki, Smith was experiencing “patello-femoral syndrome.” Dr. Nowieki recommended that Smith perform exercises to strengthen his hamstrings and quadriceps. Dr. Nowieki also recommended that Smith wear patello knee sleeves to support his knees. Otherwise, Dr. Nowieki recommended that Smith avoid climbing ladders on a repeated basis. Dr. Nowieki released Smith to return to work the next day.

¶ 5. However, the same day Smith visited Dr. Nowieki, Smith went back to Masonite and met with Mahaffey. The record indicates that Mahaffey gave Smith an application for short-term disability benefits. Smith filled out the application that very day. Under the section titled “date of accident or sickness,” Smith wrote “started few years ago and getting worse.”

¶ 6. What Smith later described as “a day or so” after his appointment with Dr. Nowieki, Mahaffey called Smith and told him that “we’ve got to file a workman’s comp on this for an accident.” Smith later testified that he responded, “what accident? I didn’t have an accident.” Smith then called Dr. Nowieki and told him, “[l]ook, this is not an accident; I don’t think its work-related.”

¶ 7. According to Smith, Mahaffey told him to go home and wait for someone to contact him. Smith testified that he called Mahaffey three weeks later, and Mahaffey told him that there had been no changes at that time. Smith testified that he next heard from Masonite approximately twenty-six weeks later, informing him that his short-term disability benefits would soon expire.

¶ 8. At some unspecified time between September 2004 and the expiration of his short-term disability benefits, Smith consulted with an attorney. According to Smith, he “thought Masonite had done something wrong at one time.” Smith added that:

it just didn’t seem right. I mean, I got a knee problem; I did not know what caused that knee problem. Nobody would really tell me what caused that knee problem. And, I mean, I’m sitting at the house going broke. Nobody is telling me nothing [sic]. And I felt that Masonite had done something wrong, so I went to see [an] attorney. I thought [Masonite] had violated the American Disabilities Act laws is what I thought, and I went and talked to [an] attorney in Jackson.

That attorney obtained Dr. Nowicki’s initial report, in which Dr. Nowieki opined that Smith’s condition was related to his employment at Masonite. However, Smith did not do anything at that time. He opted to continue receiving short-term disability benefits.

¶ 9. Smith estimated that it was during the following March or April that he went to Masonite to “try to work out whatever was going to happen with the temporary disability.” Smith testified that Masonite met with him regarding converting his short-term disability benefits to long-term disability benefits. During that meeting, Smith gave Masonite a copy of Dr. Now-icki’s report indicating that Smith’s knee pain was work related. To reiterate, Dr. *569 Nowicki drafted that report before Smith contacted him and informed him that his condition was not due to a work-related accident. In any event, Mahaffey asked Smith how he wanted to proceed. Smith responded that he did not know. Mahaf-fey put Smith in contact with Bryan Huck-abay, Masonite’s health and safety manager.

¶ 10. Huckabay called Smith approximately one to two weeks later. Huckabay asked Smith whether he was going to change his position that his injury was not related to his employment. Smith told Huckabay that he was going to change his position. Huckabay then informed Smith that he could come back to work because they were going to accommodate his restrictions. According to Smith’s deposition testimony, Smith told Huckabay, “[w]ell, if you had work for me, you’d have had it seven months ago.” Smith also told Huckabay, “coming back down there was not an option.” Smith explained his response. According to Smith, “[t]he reason I said that’s not an option, I was there for twenty-two years and my knees are damaged because of working down there. Why would I want to go down there and get back into the same situation and make my knees worse?”

¶ 11. On May 2, 2005, Smith filed a petition to controvert. Within his petition, Smith stated that he had sustained a com-pensable injury on September 11, 2004. He described his compensable injury as a bilateral injury due to “cumulative impact caused by vertical climbing.”

¶ 12. Dr. Kendall Blake, an orthopedic surgeon, examined Smith during November 2005. Smith told Dr. Blake that his knees began to hurt approximately two to three years before September 2004. Smith also told Dr. Blake that he had worked for Swift Transport as a truck driver for approximately five weeks beginning sometime in October until the end of November 2004. Smith stopped working for Swift for reasons unrelated to knee pain. Additionally, Smith told Dr. Blake that he had worked for Federal Express as a truck driver and delivery person for approximately six months. As with Swift, Smith stopped working for Federal Express for reasons unrelated to knee pain.

¶ 13. Dr. Blake concluded that Smith had mild early degenerative joint disease in both knees. Dr. Blake did not think Smith would ever require surgical knee replacement due to that condition. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
48 So. 3d 565, 2010 Miss. App. LEXIS 168, 2010 WL 1310964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-masonite-corp-missctapp-2010.