Sosa de Rosario v. Chenega Lodging

297 P.3d 139, 2013 WL 1165497, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 34
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 2013
Docket6763 S-14661
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 297 P.3d 139 (Sosa de Rosario v. Chenega Lodging) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sosa de Rosario v. Chenega Lodging, 297 P.3d 139, 2013 WL 1165497, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 34 (Ala. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A hotel worker fell and injured her back while cleaning a room. Her employer initially paid benefits, but it filed a controversion of benefits after its doctor doubted the accident's occurrence and said any work injury was not the substantial cause of the worker's continuing need for medical care. The Alaska Workers' Compensation Board decided that the fall was the substantial cause of the worker's disability, finding the worker's testimony about the injury credible and the employer's doctor's testimony not credible. Based on the testimony of the worker and her treating physician, as well as an MRI showing a herniated disc, the Board decided that the injury was compensable. The Alaska Workers' Compensation Appeals Commission reversed the Board's decision because, in the Commission's view, substantial evidence did not support the decision. Because the Commission incorrectly decided the substantial evidence question, we reverse the Commission's decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Ana Sosa de Rosario is a native of the Dominican Republic who came to Alaska in 1999. Beginning in February 2000, Sosa de Rosario worked as a housekeeper for Chene-ga Lodging. On June 28, 2007, she fell while making a bed and subsequently had low back pain. Sosa de Rosario told her supervisor she was in pain, and the supervisor advised her to take over-the-counter medication; when that did not control the pain, Sosa de Rosario went to the emergency room.

The emergency room record indicates Sosa de Rosario complained of "r[ight] hip pain, no injury" and was "in pain." She received a morphine injection and a prescription for pain medication; her diagnosis was low back pain and possible sciatica. The emergency room doctor noted that Sosa de Rosario could return to work on July 2 if she was "feeling better."

Sosa de Rosario received treatment at Providence Family Practice Center several times that summer. On July 6 she consulted with Dr. John Schwartz, who had treated her in the past, and Dr. Bret Thompson, a resident, for leg pain; they excused her from work for a week. When Sosa de Rosario returned to the clinic on July 12 Dr. Thompson said she could resume modified work on July 28 but restricted her to lifting 15 pounds. On August 8 Sosa de Rosario again saw Dr. Thompson; he authorized her return to modified work that day, with restrictions that she not lift more than 15 pounds and that she not bend or twist more than six times an hour. Sosa de Rosario then began working in the hotel's laundry. Chenega Lodging paid Sosa de Rosario three weeks of temporary total disability (TTD); the compensation report filed on July 381 said Sosa de Rosario had been released to regular work.

*142 On August 21, Sosa de Rosario underwent an MRI showing she had a herniated disc at L5b-S 1, and a physician at Providence Family Practice Center referred her to an orthopedic surgeon. Sosa de Rosario asked to be referred to physical therapy first. She attended physical therapy for about two months, noting some improvement but telling her doctor that she still had pain. On November 11, Dr. Schwartz released Sosa de Rosario for sedentary work, with restrictions on walking, sitting, and standing. According to Dr. Schwartz's chart notes from November 28, Sosa de Rosario was "afraid that if she return[ed] to full duty her symptoms [would] regress back to the more severe state of a few months ago."

Dr. Schwartz next referred Sosa de Rosario to Dr. James Eule for treatment. Sosa de Rosario saw Jane Sonnenburg, a physician's assistant in Dr. Eule's office. Based on Son-nenburg's examination and the MRI, Dr. Eule scheduled Sosa de Rosario for an epidural injection on December 18. According to Sonnenburg, Sosa de Rosario "had some improvement with the epidural." Sonnen-burg increased Sosa de Rosario's lifting limit to 20-25 pounds frequently, said that Sosa de Rosario had "met her maximal medical benefit," and noted that she would have "some element of chronicity."

Chenega Lodging arranged for an employer's independent medical evaluation (EIME) in December 2007 with Dr. Charles Brooks, an orthopedist. Dr. Brooks was skeptical of Sosa de Rosario's account of the injury and concluded that her dise problems were due to age-related degenerative changes. Dr. Brooks focused on inconsistencies between medical records and Sosa de Rosario's account of the accident, noting: "Given the inconsistency between her recent histories and that reported in the emergency room (ER) at Providence on June 28, 2007, I would not conclude, on a more-probable-than-not basis or reasonable degree of medical probability, there was an occupational back injury on that date." Dr. Brooks's opinion with respect to causation was that Sosa de Rosar-i0's "low back pain and right sciatica ... may have been precipitated or worsened by her occupational duties, avocational activities, or an unreported injury," but because he did not "believe there was an occupational back injury on June 28, 2007," he could not "conclude the claimant's work was the substantial cause of her current low back pain and right sciatica."

In late December, Chenega Lodging sent Dr. Eule and Sonnenburg a copy of the EIME, asking if they agreed with it Dr. Eule did not agree with the report, although he could "not make an accurate determination as to work injury" because he had not yet seen Sosa de Rosario. Sonnenburg concurred with the report. Sonnenburg's chart notes indicated she "tend[ed] to agree with the medical examiner's report" and that Sosa de Rosario "tend[ed] to have some inconsistency to her complaints." On January 9, 2008, Sosa de Rosario saw Dr. Schwartz again; he "recommended that she continue with light duty work indefinitely."

Chenega Lodging controverted all benefits on January 31, based on Dr. Brooks's report and on Sonnenburg's having released Sosa de Rosario to full-time work with a 20-25 pound lifting limit, Chenega Lodging terminated Sosa de Rosario's employment on March 7. On April 22 Dr. Schwartz saw Sosa de Rosario and wrote Chenega Lodging a letter stating Sosa de Rosario was "not able to work at this time and ... would best be served by surgery." Dr. Schwartz related the onset of her "severe pain" to a June 28, 2007 "fall she suffered at work."

In July 2008 an attorney entered an appearance and filed a workers' compensation claim on Sosa de Rosario's behalf seeking: TTD from April 22, 2008, and continuing; temporary partial disability (TPD) from the injury date to April 21, 2008; permanent total disability (PTD) from April 22, 2008, and continuing; medical costs; interest; and attorney's fees and costs. Chenega Lodging denied all claims.

The parties stipulated to a second independent medical evaluation (SIME) by an orthopedist. The Board arranged an SIME with Dr. John Lipon, who evaluated Sosa de Rosario on July 18, 2009. Also present at the evaluation were a translator and Sosa de Rosario's daughter-in-law, Suhail Echavarria. Dr. Lipon examined Sosa de Rosario and *143 reviewed her medical records.

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Bluebook (online)
297 P.3d 139, 2013 WL 1165497, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sosa-de-rosario-v-chenega-lodging-alaska-2013.