St. Joseph Hospital v. Causey

667 So. 2d 464, 1996 Fla. App. LEXIS 542, 1996 WL 34063
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 31, 1996
DocketNo. 93-2784
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 667 So. 2d 464 (St. Joseph Hospital v. Causey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Joseph Hospital v. Causey, 667 So. 2d 464, 1996 Fla. App. LEXIS 542, 1996 WL 34063 (Fla. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinions

ZEHMER, Chief Judge.

The Employer and Carrier, St. Joseph Hospital and Sedgwick James of Florida, Inc., appeal the final order of the judge of compensation claims awarding Claimant, Roy H. Causey, medical care, temporary total disability benefits and permanent total disability benefits relating to an injury sustained in an industrial accident that occurred on June 27,1985. The Employer and Carrier’s principal contention is that, because Claimant’s petition for modification was not timely filed, the judge erred in modifying a 1988 compensation order as a predicate to awarding the present benefits. Because we conclude that, under the peculiar facts of the present case, modification of the 1988 order was unnecessary to establish entitlement to the benefits awarded, and because competent substantial evidence exists to support the judge’s award of benefits, we affirm.

Roy Causey was working for St. Joseph Hospital as a physical therapy aide when he injured his lower back on June 27, 1985, in a work-related accident. He received medical treatment and a period of temporary total disability benefits and continued working for St. Joseph until he resigned in April 1986. Causey then moved to Poulan, Georgia, where he eventually obtained employment with the City of Poulan driving a garbage truck and collecting trash. Because his wages with the city were less than those he had previously earned at St. Joseph, Causey filed a claim for wage-loss benefits in April 1987, seeking benefits for the period of February 1,1987, through August 81,1987.

In an order filed on January 12, 1988, the deputy commissioner approved and adopted the parties’ stipulated facts that Causey had reached maximum medical improvement on September 28, 1985, with a permanent impairment of 10% of the whole body, but denied the claim solely on the basis of his findings that Causey’s “loss of earnings” was not due to any physical limitations related to his industrial accident, that Causey’s permanent impairment was not, “as a practical matter,” disabling, and that, based on the evidence, Causey had in fact limited his income by accepting the job in Poulan. This court affirmed that order on September 29, 1989, and mandate issued November 7, 1989.

After a short period of voluntary unemployment during which he searched for another job, Causey resumed working for the City of Poulan, and continued submitting requests for wage-loss benefits, which were consistently denied by the Carrier. On October 4, 1989, Causey filed a second claim for [466]*466wage-loss benefits for the period December 1, 1987, through the date of the claim and continuing. Following a hearing, the deputy commissioner issued an order on April 18, 1990, denying benefits and finding that, since May 1986 (when he voluntarily resigned his employment with St. Joseph), Causey’s industrial back injury has not been an element in the causal chain of events resulting in his diminished earnings, and that his permanent impairment was not disabling. The deputy commissioner reiterated his earlier finding that Causey’s loss of earnings was due solely to economic conditions or the unavailability of employment in Causey’s chosen place of residence. This court affirmed on February 28,1992.

In the meantime, Causey and the Employer and Carrier initiated settlement negotiations, and by September 11, 1990, had reached a tentative agreement to settle Cau-sey’s past and future disability benefits. However, prior to the final settlement hearing, Causey began receiving medical treatment in January 1991 from Dr. Spain for excruciating pain in his lower back. Although the settlement hearing was ultimately held on January 22, the settlement was never finalized because Causey decided that he might need future surgery and requested a medical evaluation. Pursuant to that request, the carrier authorized an evaluation by Dr. John Baker, a neurologist in Albany, Georgia. In the interim, Dr. Spain took Cau-sey off work. Causey stopped working for the City of Poulan on February 27, 1991.

Dr. Baker first saw Causey on April 2, 1991. According to his reports, Causey’s lower back symptoms began to increase in January 1991. Dr. Baker diagnosed Cau-sey’s condition as a lumbrosacral strain/spine strain; radiculopathy involving the L5 root in the left lower extremity; and a history of a herniated nucleus pulposus at L4-5 on the left.

Dr. Baker took Causey off work on April 2, 1991, due to his back problems. Causey began to receive treatment from Dr. Baker on a regular basis through September 22, 1992, during which time Causey remained off work. Later, by deposition, Dr. Baker testified within a reasonable degree of medical probability that the symptoms and injury for which he had been providing care to Causey were causally related to the industrial accident. Dr. Baker explained that Causey’s type of injury could become progressively disabling due to degenerative disc disease, and surmised that Causey’s condition worsened from the time that he initially was able to perform his job with the city. While he testified that the nature of the work Causey performed for the City of Poulan could have aggravated his back, he nonetheless specifically related Causey’s need for medical treatment and his current disability to the industrial accident.

Dr. Baker opined that Causey reached maximum medical improvement from his current condition on September 2,1992, with an overall permanent impairment rating of 25 percent. He confirmed within a reasonable degree of medical probability that Causey cannot engage in light duty work uninterruptedly because he cannot sit or stand for any significant length of time.

Causey was also seen by Dr. Kaler, a board-certified orthopaedic surgeon on February 26, 1992. A physical examination revealed only about 50% range of motion, and x-rays confirmed degenerative disc disease at the L5-S1 with straightening of the lumbar lordosis. Dr. Kaler’s report indicated that Causey is probably developing spinal stenosis and some lateral recess stenosis, and he attributed this deterioration to a number of causes, including a progressive disease.

The Employer and Carrier requested an independent medical examination by Dr. Fredericks, a neurosurgeon. Dr. Fredericks later testified on deposition that he could not document any objective findings concerning a significant back injury, and could not arrive at a reason explaining Causey’s significant back pain. Dr. Fredericks did not ascribe any significance to a myelogram showing a disc bulge at L4-5, and did not feel that Causey was disabled from his injury. However, Dr. Fredericks did suggest that Causey undergo a differential spinal test to enable him to determine if the pain was caused by the injury. While he opined that Causey had reached maximum medical improvement, he could not render an opinion on the existence [467]*467of a permanent impairment without the benefit of the differential spinal test and a functional capacity evaluation.

Causey filed a third claim for benefits on October 10, 1991, seeking temporary total and temporary partial disability benefits, wage-loss benefits, and permanent total disability benefits for the period beginning on April 4, 1991, and continuing through the present. Following the issuance of this court’s mandate on March 17,1992, affirming the order denying his second claim for wage-loss benefits, Causey also filed on April 14, 1992, a formal petition for modification of the preceding orders.

At the hearing before the judge of compensation claims, Causey testified that no doctor has released him to return to work since he first saw Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
667 So. 2d 464, 1996 Fla. App. LEXIS 542, 1996 WL 34063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-joseph-hospital-v-causey-fladistctapp-1996.