Stanley v. Gore Bros.

347 S.E.2d 49, 82 N.C. App. 511, 1986 N.C. App. LEXIS 2511
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 19, 1986
DocketNo. 8520IC1296
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 347 S.E.2d 49 (Stanley v. Gore Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley v. Gore Bros., 347 S.E.2d 49, 82 N.C. App. 511, 1986 N.C. App. LEXIS 2511 (N.C. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

BECTON, Judge.

From an opinion and award of the North Carolina Industrial Commission (Commission) in this workers’ compensation case, both parties appeal. Neither party has shown error, and we affirm.

I

On 10 April 1978, Edgar Stanley suffered a severe head injury when a portion of a tire rim exploded and struck him in his face. Because the injury arose out of and in the course of employment, defendant employer, Gore Brothers, paid Mr. Stanley temporary total disability benefits during the initial healing periods. The extent of Mr. Stanley’s disabilities was not immediately known however. Therefore, three separate hearings were held between 29 June 1981 and 2 August 1984 to determine what compensation he was entitled to receive in addition to the temporary total disability benefits already paid.

As a result of the first hearing in 1981, Mr. Stanley was awarded $8,000 for facial disfigurement and additional compensation for a 23.5% loss of vision in the right eye.

On 13 July 1982, a second hearing was conducted, and additional medical reports were stipulated in evidence. Mr. Stanley was awarded compensation benefits for an additional 18% permanent partial disability of the right eye. Dr. Lyndon Anthony had been subpoenaed for the second hearing, but he failed to appear. Therefore, the Deputy Commissioner ordered that the “case be reset ... for hearing regarding the issues . . . which could not be determined due to Dr. Anthony’s failure to appear to testify.”

At the 1 December 1982 rescheduled hearing, Mr. Stanley chose not to offer testimony from Dr. Anthony but rather stipulated that the Deputy Commissioner could use Dr. Anthony’s medical records as evidence. In a 14 January 1983 Opinion and Award, Deputy Commissioner Scott denied Mr. Stanley’s claim on the basis of two findings of fact:

1. Plaintiff returned to Dr. Anthony’s office on June 22, 1982 after not having been seen by him since February 1981. Plaintiff complained of having had a convulsion as well as some headaches and dizzy spells. Dr. Anthony treated him for these problems at least to September 1982.
[514]*5142. No causal relationship was shown between the problems for which plaintiff was being treated by Dr. Anthony beginning in June 1982 and his injury by accident on 10 April, 1978, nor was any disability shown.

Mr. Stanley never appealed the 14 January 1983 ruling. Rather, on 18 January 1984, through his new attorney, Mr. Stanley requested a hearing on “change in condition and for other such workers’ compensation benefits that plaintiff may be entitled to under law.” At the hearing, Mr. Stanley introduced testimony by deposition of Dr. Barrie Hurwitz, a neurologist at Duke University Medical Center, as well as his own testimony and that of his wife.

Following the requested hearing, the Deputy Commissioner entered another Opinion and Award on 2 August 1984 finding that Mr. Stanley was entitled to compensation of (a) $8,000 for blurred and double vision; (b) $5,000 for loss of sense of smell and taste (an important part of the body); and (c) $2,000 for permanent damage to the nerve and muscles in the right side of the face which caused slurred speech. The Deputy Commissioner, however, denied Mr. Stanley’s claim for compensation based on seizures, headaches and dizzy spells, concluding that Mr. Stanley was bound by the 14 January 1983 ruling and the doctrine of res judicata.

On 3 July 1985 the Commission affirmed the Deputy Commissioner’s decision, and both parties appeal to this Court.

Plaintiffs Appeal

Mr. Stanley first assigns error to the Commission’s findings and conclusions that he is not entitled to any award for convulsions, headaches and seizures. Mr. Stanley concedes that these medical problems were the subject of an earlier Opinion and Award in 1983, but in an effort to avoid the bar of the doctrine of res judicata, Mr. Stanley argues that the “convulsions, headaches and seizures” for which he is now seeking compensation are not the same “convulsions, headaches and seizures” for which he previously sought compensation. We disagree.

Although Mr. Stanley’s history of headaches, dizziness and seizures dated back to his 10 April 1978 injury by accident, the [515]*515record contains no evidence of two different kinds of headaches or dizziness, or of earlier or later seizures. Indeed, all of Mr. Stanley’s seizures, grand mal and partial, occurred before 1983 or in 1983, the year in which Deputy Commissioner Scott first denied his claim. Moreover, neither Mr. Stanley’s complaints of symptoms nor his treatment and medication based on his complaints changed between 1978 and the date Deputy Commissioner Scott first denied his claim.

In her 14 January 1983 opinion and award, Deputy Commissioner Scott concluded:

In that plaintiff did not prove a causal relationship between the convulsions, headaches, and dizzy spells for which he was treated by Dr. Anthony and his injury by accident on April 10, 1978, he is not entitled to recover for the medical expenses incurred or any disability he might have sustained as a result thereof.

Significantly, Mr. Stanley squandered at least two opportunities before Deputy Commissioner Scott’s 14 January 1983 ruling to show the requisite causal connection. First, he chose to submit Dr. Anthony’s “two pages of office notes” in lieu of calling Dr. Anthony as a witness. Second, instead of requesting another hearing to prove a causal connection, Mr. Stanley requested that his case be removed from the inactive docket and that a decision be rendered even though all parties had been specifically informed that Dr. Anthony’s “reports did not give any information upon which an Opinion and Award could be based.” Equally important, Mr. Stanley failed to appeal the 14 January 1983 ruling.

It is true that in January 1984, Dr. Hurwitz stated that Mr. Stanley’s seizures, headaches and dizzy spells were caused by the accident and subsequent surgery which produced a loss of brain tissue in Mr. Stanley’s right frontal lobe. This evidence, however, came a year too late, as Deputy Commissioner Scott’s finding of fact in her 2 August 1984 opinion and award indicates: “Although plaintiff has now produced evidence of a causal relationship between his seizures, headaches, and dizzy spells in [sic] this accident by reason of brain damage he has sustained, a finding as to this issue has previously been made.” In short, Mr. Stanley’s claim of disability based on seizures, headaches, and dizzy spells was denied for lack of proof. Our law does not allow him to [516]*516relitigate that claim ad infinitum. The doctrine of res judicata was correctly applied by Deputy Commissioner Scott and the Commission.

III

Based on our analysis in Part II, supra, we summarily reject Mr. Stanley’s argument that the Commission erred in its finding of fact regarding the anti-seizure medication used by him. If Mr. Stanley is not entitled to recover compensation for his seizures, then, a fortiori, the Commission properly refused to order the employer, Gore Brothers, to provide anti-seizure medication to Mr. Stanley.

IV

Based on our analysis in Part II, supra, we also reject Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
347 S.E.2d 49, 82 N.C. App. 511, 1986 N.C. App. LEXIS 2511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-gore-bros-ncctapp-1986.