Spirit v. ICAO

CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 2024
Docket23CA2200
StatusUnknown

This text of Spirit v. ICAO (Spirit v. ICAO) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spirit v. ICAO, (Colo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

23CA2200 Spirit v ICAO 10-03-2024

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS

Court of Appeals No. 23CA2200 Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State of Colorado WC No. 5-131-365

Spirit Hospitality II LLC, d/b/a Candlewood LLC and Truck Insurance Exchange,

Petitioners,

v.

Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State of Colorado and Juliana Luis,

Respondents.

ORDER AFFIRMED

Division V Opinion by JUDGE LUM Brown and Berger*, JJ., concur

NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced October 3, 2024

Law Offices of Collin T. Welch, Joe M. Espinosa, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Petitioners

No Appearance for Respondent Industrial Claim Appeals Office

Cerda Legal, Adan Cerda, Gregory Cairns, Denver, Colorado, for Respondent Juliana Luis

*Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art. VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2024. ¶1 Spirit Hospitality II LLC, d/b/a Candlewood LLC and Truck

Insurance Exchange (petitioners) appeal an order of the Industrial

Claim Appeals Office (the Panel) affirming the finding of an

administrative law judge (ALJ) that claimant Juliana Luis had not

reached maximum medical improvement (MMI) for a compensable

injury. We affirm.

I. Background

¶2 Luis sustained an admitted work injury in 2019 related to her

right upper arm. She was placed on modified duty in her job as a

housekeeper for Candlewood Suites. Luis is relatively short in

stature, noted in medical records to stand at four feet, eight inches

tall. On February 15, 2020, Luis was at work, cleaning a hotel

room, when she stood on a chair in order to reach the top of a

microwave oven. While stepping onto the chair with her left foot,

the chair moved from under her, causing her to fall to the ground.

She fell onto her left side, landing on her left hip and knee. The

medical records indicate that she twisted her back during the fall,

and the chair fell on top of her.

¶3 Luis was seen the same day by Sheree Montoya, a nurse

practitioner at Concentra Fort Collins. Luis reported burning pain

1 radiating to the left buttocks, causing decreased mobility in rotating

and bending the spine. Two days later, Luis visited Dr. Jeffrey

Baker at Concentra, reporting pain in the left hip, leg, and lower

back as well as “some radiation of pain to her knee.” Dr. Baker

diagnosed sacroiliac strain and referred Luis to a physical therapist

at Concentra, Nicholas Wright, who saw her the same day. She

visited Dr. Baker again on February 25, reporting both back and

left knee pain. Dr. Baker diagnosed her with a continued sacroiliac

strain as well as a contusion to her left knee.

¶4 Luis continued to work in a modified position through the end

of March 2020, but then she was laid off due to the COVID-19

pandemic. On April 22, 2020, Luis visited Steven Toth, P.A., who

noted that she complained of right leg pain when walking. She

stated that the pain was there originally on the date of injury but

she did not report it.

¶5 She continued treatment for her work injury with Dr. Baker,

DPT Wright, and a chiropractor, Dr. Parker. She had an MRI of her

lumbar spine and pelvis in August 2020.

¶6 Luis was referred to Dr. Gregory Reichhardt on October 5,

2020, as an authorized treating physician (ATP) for evaluation of

2 her injury. Dr. Reichhardt noted that Luis reported pain in the low

back, radiating pain down to the foot, weakness in the left leg, and

left knee pain. Dr. Reichhardt also documented in his records that

Luis complained of bilateral lower extremity pain and weakness.

¶7 Dr. Reichhardt’s examination confirmed right arm pain and

left leg pain. He documented that her August MRI reflected disc

bulges and degeneration as well as foraminal stenosis. He

specifically attributed her back and knee pain to the February 15,

2020, work injury, and her right arm pain to the August 25, 2019,

work injury. He reported that Luis complained of right ankle pain

related to the injury that wasn’t included in her workers’

compensation claim. Luis informed him that her employer didn’t

list the ankle pain initially and providers indicated they couldn’t

treat the pain because it wasn’t listed. He recommended an MRI of

her left knee and an electrodiagnostic evaluation (EMG) for her left

lower extremity.

¶8 Luis followed up with Dr. Baker, who documented that she

had continued back pain and left knee tenderness and pain. He

ordered an MRI on her left knee, which was done in December

2020.

3 ¶9 On December 11, 2020, Luis returned to see Dr. Reichhardt,

who noted that she was having weakness in the right leg, which she

thought was related to dry needling. Luis had complained that a

nerve was hit, and one day after her second dry needling treatment,

she had difficulty coordinating her right leg, which then got worse

after her last chiropractic treatment.

¶ 10 Dr. Reichhardt saw Luis again in January and February of

2021. Luis reported pain and weakness in both legs and inability to

walk without a cane. At some point, Dr. Reichhardt was

erroneously informed by P.A. Toth that Luis had not reported her

knee injury until ten days after the injury. Dr. Reichhardt’s notes

from the February 2021 visit state that, after talking with P.A. Toth,

“it appeared that her knee pain was probably not related to her

injury.” His notes indicated he discussed this with Luis, who said

she did not have any problems with her knee prior to her injury,

and she felt it was related to her injury.

¶ 11 At petitioners’ request, Dr. Douglas Scott performed an

Independent Medical Exam (IME) on February 23, 2021. Dr. Scott

opined that the mechanism of injury occurred without significant

force due to Luis’s short height, and that Luis reached MMI on June

4 3, 2020. Luis continued treatment with Dr. Reichhardt, who

performed an EMG and recommended injections and massage

therapy. At a visit on July 20, 2021, Dr. Reichhardt put Luis at

MMI. His impressions indicated that Luis had pain and weakness

in the low back and left lower extremity, both of which he related to

the February 15, 2020, injury. Dr. Reichhardt assigned impairment

ratings both for the back and left knee.

¶ 12 Petitioners then requested a division independent medical

examination (DIME). On August 10, 2022, the DIME physician, Dr.

Sander Orent, concluded that Luis was not at MMI. After

examining Luis, he documented that she had constant low back

pain that radiated down both legs. She also had trouble raising her

left leg, had pain with swelling in both knees, and had swelling and

restricted range of motion in the right ankle. He diagnosed her with

lumbar strain and bilateral knee contusions, with the left knee

injury occurring at the time of her work injury. He also diagnosed

her with a right ankle sprain, noting that the “mechanism of injury

is certainly consistent, there have been no intervening events[,] and

I do believe this patient’s history.” Dr. Orent also opined that an

injury to Luis’s right knee was caused by chiropractic manipulation

5 she underwent as a result of her other injuries. He found Luis was

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Spirit v. ICAO, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spirit-v-icao-coloctapp-2024.