SP TERRY COMPANY, INC. v. Rubinos

567 S.E.2d 584, 38 Va. App. 624, 2002 Va. App. LEXIS 490
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 13, 2002
Docket2470012
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 567 S.E.2d 584 (SP TERRY COMPANY, INC. v. Rubinos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SP TERRY COMPANY, INC. v. Rubinos, 567 S.E.2d 584, 38 Va. App. 624, 2002 Va. App. LEXIS 490 (Va. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

"CLEMENTS, Judge.

S.P. Terry Company, Inc. and Montgomery Peerless Insurance Company (collectively, employer) appeal an award by the Workers’ Compensation Commission (commission) of temporary total disability benefits, temporary partial disability benefits, and medical benefits to Jorge Rubinos (claimant). Employer contends the commission erred in ruling that the aggravation of claimant’s compensable injury to his hand was compensable because employer gave claimant work that required him to exceed his work restrictions, even though claimant willfully violated his work restrictions by performing that work. Finding no error by the commission, we affirm the award.

*627 I. BACKGROUND

In reviewing the commission’s decision, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to claimant, the party prevailing before the commission. See Allen & Rocks, Inc. v. Briggs, 28 Va.App. 662, 672, 508 S.E.2d 385, 340 (1998). So viewed, the evidence established that claimant, who worked for employer as a painter, suffered a compensable injury to his left thumb on June 9, 2000, while lifting a piece of scaffolding. He went to Patient First on June 12, where he was examined by Dr. G. Clifford Walton. Dr. Walton diagnosed a finger sprain. He limited claimant to light-duty work with no lifting with the left hand. When claimant returned for a follow-up examination on June 19, 2000, Dr. Walton took him out of work and referred him to Dr. Keith A. Glowacki, a hand specialist.

Dr. Glowacki examined claimant on June 20, 2000. He diagnosed a left thumb radial collateral ligament tear and placed claimant’s left hand in a cast. Dr. Glowacki noted in his report that claimant would “have no use of that hand at work” for three to four weeks. He further estimated in a patient work status report dated June 20, 2000, that claimant would not have full use of his left hand for six weeks and indicated in the “work limitations” portion of that report that claimant was to have “no use of injured hand.” Dr. Glowacki emphasized in the “comments” section of that report that claimant was to have “[absolutely no use whatsoever of [left] hand!”

Following the examination and treatment by Dr. Glowacki, claimant returned to employer’s office and gave employer’s secretary a note from Dr. Glowacki regarding claimant’s work restrictions. The secretary read the note and informed claimant she would speak to Steven Terry, employer’s president and co-owner. Claimant went home to await employer’s call regarding light-duty work.

More than a week later, claimant received a call from employer notifying him to return to work. He reported to employer’s office on Friday, telling Terry the doctor had said *628 he could work using only his right hand. Terry informed him there was no work for him that day and told him to return on Monday. On Monday, Terry sent claimant to an airport work site, where claimant was given the job of painting baseboards on the outside of a building.

Acknowledging he had received notification from Dr. Glowacki of claimant’s work restrictions, Terry testified he told claimant’s supervisor to let claimant do only low work that would not require him to climb ladders. Claimant testified his first day at the airport site was the only day employer gave him work that was within Dr. Glowacki’s work restrictions. Even then, claimant added, the nature of the airport job required him to repeatedly lift a gallon of paint with his left hand. Claimant’s assignment at the airport job lasted two days.

Terry then sent claimant to a work site at an apartment complex. Terry testified he again told claimant’s supervisor to let claimant do only low work. Initially, claimant was given the job of painting several seven-foot-tall windows. When the windows were completed, claimant’s supervisor had him paint a deck, which required him to lift and climb a sixteen-foot ladder. Claimant testified he was unable to lift and climb the ladder and paint the deck without using his left hand. Claimant further stated that, when he climbed the ladder, he had to temporarily remove a brace that had been prescribed by Dr. Glowacki for his left hand, because he was afraid he would fall off the ladder if he did not. Claimant also testified his supervisor saw him lift and climb the ladder using his left hand and remove his brace, but the supervisor did not tell claimant not to use his left hand. According to claimant, his supervisor told him he had to lift the ladder. Claimant did not ask anyone to help him. He complained to a co-worker that the work he was being given violated the work restrictions imposed by his doctor.

On July 7, 2000, claimant returned to Dr. Walton for a follow-up examination. He told the doctor he had been re *629 turned to regular duty at work. Dr. Walton referred him to Dr. Glowacki.

Claimant saw Dr. Glowacki on July 14, 2000. In his report of that visit, Dr. Glowacki wrote:

[Claimant] is here just over 3 weeks out from his left thumb radial collateral ligament injury at the MP joint. He’s stating that his employer, although I gave him a note that said absolutely no use of his hand, is still making him lift ladders and do things that obviously require two hands. I told him there is only so much I can do and wrote a note that says that at this point [claimant] would be endangering himself and others further if he continued to use both hands. I filled out another note that says he has no use of that left hand until further notice and I think his result will be compromised if he uses that hand.

When claimant returned for a follow-up visit on August 18, 2000, Dr. Glowacki reported as follows:

Despite conservative treatment, [claimant] is failing with continued use of his hand at work given the option of only two-handed type of work. It is impossible without use of your thumb to do heavy lifting of a ladder.... Presently he is a danger to himself and his coworkers if he continues to lift ladders, climb ladders and do heavier type activity. Unfortunately I believe all this is moot as he is failing conservative treatment and likely is made worse by using his hand. I told him that we’ll have to get an MRI to evaluate this area and probably have to perform surgery at this point____We will see him back after the MRI regarding the surgical treatment.

Dr. Glowacki further noted in a patient work status report dated August 18, 2000, that claimant’s injury was work related and that he did not know when claimant might return to work with full use of both hands. Dr. Glowacki also indicated in the “work limitations” portion of that report that claimant was to have “no use of injured hand” and added in the “comments” section that surgery would probably be necessary “due to [claimant’s] constant using of hand.”

*630 Claimant testified he never had the MRI prescribed by Dr. Glowacki because employer did not authorize payment for it. He further testified that, each time he returned to work after seeing Dr. Glowacki, he gave the paperwork he had received from Dr. Glowacki regarding his work restrictions to employer’s secretary.

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567 S.E.2d 584, 38 Va. App. 624, 2002 Va. App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sp-terry-company-inc-v-rubinos-vactapp-2002.