Sowers v. Leaseway Transportation Service

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedOctober 25, 2001
DocketI.C. NO. 213698
StatusPublished

This text of Sowers v. Leaseway Transportation Service (Sowers v. Leaseway Transportation Service) 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
Sowers v. Leaseway Transportation Service, (N.C. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

Having reviewed the competent evidence of record and having received the positions of the parties, the Full Commission modifies and affirms the Opinion and Award of the deputy commissioner.

The Full Commission finds as facts and concludes as matters of law the following, which were entered into by the parties in the pre-trial agreement as

STIPULATIONS
1. The parties are subject to and bound by the North Carolina Workers' Compensation Act, and the employer-employee relationship existed between Leaseway Transportation and the deceased employee, Donald Sowers.

2. This case concerns an admittedly compensable injury by accident sustained by the employee Donald Sowers on January 30, 1972.

3. Defendant/employer's carrier on the risk at the time of Donald Sowers' accident on January 30, 1972, was CNA Insurance Company.

4. On March 29, 1972 the North Carolina Industrial Commission approved the parties' Form 21 Agreement for Compensation.

5. Defendants have paid compensation to Donald Sowers for total disability at the rate of $56.00 per week for the period beginning January 31, 1972, and continuing through on or about January 19, 2000, the date of Mr. Sowers' death.

6. "Commission Proceedings Leading to March 20, 2000 Hearing," consisting of 57 pages, was received into evidence as Stipulated Exhibit 1.

7. The medical records for Donald Sowers, consisting of 145 pages, were received into evidence as Stipulated Exhibit 2.

8. The transcript for the deposition of Dr. Travis Jackson taken on November 12, 1998, was received as evidence.

9. The issues for resolution in this hearing are as follows:

(a) Is Plaintiff entitled to an increase of $2.80 or $3.92 in the weekly disability compensation benefits paid to Donald Sowers, retroactive to 1 July 1977 pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 97-29.1?

(b) Is Plaintiff entitled to a late payment penalty of 10 percent plus interest for Defendants' failure to comply with the provisions of N.C.G.S. § 97-29.1?

(c) Is Plaintiff entitled to be awarded attendant care services to be paid by Defendants under N.C.G.S. § 97-25 or § 97-29, and if so,

(i) For what period, for how many hours each day, and at what hourly rate is Plaintiff entitled to receive attendant care services paid for by Defendants?

(ii) Is Jean Sowers, entitled to be paid for providing attendant care services to Donald Sowers at the fair market value of those services, and,

(iii)Is Jean Sowers entitled to be paid by Defendants at time and one-half for all attendant care services provided to Donald Sowers in excess of 40 hours in any workweek?

(d) Are Defendants required to reimburse Plaintiff $300 for the replacement cost of Donald Sowers' eyeglasses which he broke during a grand mal seizure?

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Based upon the greater weight of the competent evidence of record, the Full Commission makes the following additional

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. Donald Sowers was born in High Point, N.C., in August 1935. He had a high school education. In 1953, Donald Sowers married Nancy Jean Grimes, who remained his wife on the date of his death. In 1954 and 1955, Donald Sowers served in the United States Marine Corps. The Sowers had two children, who are now adults.

2. Donald Sowers began working as a long distance truck driver for the Defendant-employer in 1970. Donald Sowers had no mental or physical impairments prior to January 30, 1972.

3. On 30 January 1972, Donald Sowers suffered serious injuries, including a brain injury, when the truck he was operating for his employer ran off the road and struck a tree. He remained hospitalized from the date of the accident until sometime in April 1972.

4. Upon his hospital admission, Donald Sowers was unconscious, his pupils were pinpoint, and he was bleeding from his left ear. Tests showed he sustained a fracture at the base of his skull. An EEG showed injuries to the frontal lobes on both sides of his brain. He developed respiratory insufficiency, which necessitated a tracheotomy. Mr. Sowers remained unresponsive to voice until February 13, 1972, when his level of consciousness improved. Due to the brain injuries, Donald Sowers developed seizures, for which he was placed on Dilantin.

5. On February 26, 1972, Donald Sowers came under the care of High Point Memorial Hospital and Dr. Hussey, a neurosurgeon. At that time Mr. Sowers was lethargic, disoriented and appeared demented. His gait was very unsteady, and he was unable to walk without assistance.

6. As a result of the January 30, 1972 accident, Donald Sowers suffered a severe post-traumatic brain injury, a major skull fracture with cerebrospinal fluid leak, and a seizure disorder. The injury to Mr. Sowers' brain affected his personality, reasoning power, short-term memory, emotional relationships, executive function, and speech.

7. Around April 1972, Donald Sowers was released from High Point Hospital and allowed to go home under the constant care and support of his wife, Jean Sowers, who also had the care of the Sowers' children, then ages 16 and 13.

8. Prior to January 1972, Mrs. Sowers was employed outside the home as a clerk at a local hotel. In early January 1972, prior to the accident, she had reduced her work hours to part-time so she could spend more time with her husband on days when he was not driving a truck. Following his accident, Mrs. Sowers quit her part-time job to care for her husband.

9. After his release from the hospital around April 1972, Donald Sowers continued to be unable to care for himself, and needed constant supervision. His wife attended to him and helped him regain his abilities to walk and talk. During much of the period from April 1972 until about September 1973, Mrs. Sowers devoted almost all of her time 24 hours a day to caring for her husband.

10. In January 1973, Donald Sowers underwent psychological testing which revealed he suffered from traumatic brain syndrome characterized by severe impairments in memory, reasoning and special areas, complicated by impaired judgment and post-traumatic seizures. By February 1973, Donald Sowers reached the end of his healing period. Due to the injuries he sustained, Mr. Sowers was unable to return to any gainful employment and remained totally permanently disabled until the date of his death.

11. As of September 26, 1973, as assessed by Dr. Hussey, Donald Sowers no longer needed constant care for his personal needs and did not require outside nursing services.

12. In the period 1975 through 1977, Mrs. Sowers went to school on a part-time basis at Guilford Tech, where she earned an associate degree in business. She returned to school to improve her opportunities for employment so she could support her family.

13. From 1977 through 1994, Mrs. Sowers worked during the daytime hours for various employers in and around Kernersville, N.C., where she and her husband lived. She kept in contact with her husband periodically throughout the day via the telephone. Mrs. Sowers' mother and trusted neighbors also watched and checked on her husband while she was at work. Mrs. Sowers usually made out a daily "to do list" for Donald Sowers to attempt to keep him busy while she was at work. The list included household tasks such as taking out trash, making the beds, and folding laundry.

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Related

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Sowers v. Leaseway Transportation Service, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sowers-v-leaseway-transportation-service-ncworkcompcom-2001.