State Office of Risk Management v. Erika M. Cole, as Sole Beneficiary of the Estate of Carolyn P. Cole

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 16, 2011
Docket03-10-00034-CV
StatusPublished

This text of State Office of Risk Management v. Erika M. Cole, as Sole Beneficiary of the Estate of Carolyn P. Cole (State Office of Risk Management v. Erika M. Cole, as Sole Beneficiary of the Estate of Carolyn P. Cole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Office of Risk Management v. Erika M. Cole, as Sole Beneficiary of the Estate of Carolyn P. Cole, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-10-00034-CV

State Office of Risk Management, Appellant



v.



Erika M. Cole, as Sole Beneficiary of the Estate of Carolyn P. Cole, Deceased, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY, 274TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. C2005-1076C, HONORABLE DIB WALDRIP, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



The State Office of Risk Management ("SORM") appeals a no-evidence summary judgment entered in favor of Erika M. Cole, sole beneficiary of the estate of Carolyn P. Cole. (1) See Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(i). SORM sought judicial review of several determinations made by the Appeals Panel of the Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, now known as the Department of Insurance--Division of Workers' Compensation ("DWC"). (2) See Tex. Lab. Code Ann. § 410.252(a) (West Supp. 2010). SORM argued that the medical evidence did not support the determinations. Erika moved for no-evidence summary judgment on the ground that SORM had no evidence contradicting the medical evidence on which DWC based the determinations. We conclude that SORM produced sufficient evidence to preclude summary judgment, so we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Carolyn worked for the State of Texas. On January 29, 1999, she injured her cervical spine while using an industrial-grade hole puncher at work. Carolyn applied to SORM for certain workers' compensation benefits. (3) SORM hired Wayne Gordon, M.D., to examine Carolyn. Gordon is on the list of "designated doctors" approved by DWC to examine workers' compensation claimants. (4) In this case, however, Gordon did not serve in the "designated doctor" capacity because he was hired by SORM rather than DWC.

Gordon examined Carolyn on August 27, 1999, and wrote a report summarizing his findings. The report stated that Carolyn had reached maximum medical improvement on the date of the examination (5) and had an overall impairment rating of six percent. (6) The report noted that Carolyn had "[p]re-existing cervical degenerative disc disease and fusion," including "a fusion at C5-6, herniated discs and osteophytes," that were "not caused by the accident that occurred on 1/28/99." According to the report, Gordon found it "medically improbable that using the hole punch would cause the degenerative changes in the cervical spine or cause [Carolyn's] cervical degenerative condition." Gordon ultimately concluded that Carolyn's "clinical diagnosis related to her injury is cervical strain."

Based on Gordon's report, SORM denied Carolyn certain income-related benefits for her hole-punching injury. Carolyn asked DWC to review SORM's decision. See id. § 410.151(a) (West 2006). While that review was occurring, Gordon reexamined Carolyn. On September 29, 2003, he wrote a second report that stated:



[Carolyn's] cervical complaints in my opinion are solely related to a preexisting cervical arthritic condition with spondylosis and congenital fusion at C5,6. She sustained a cervical strain injury only in the hole[-]punching incident occurring in January 1999, which should not be causing continued complaints in September 2003 . . . . In my opinion the effects of the compensable injury, which was a cervical strain, has [sic] resolved and she has continued to have pain in the cervical spine from the preexisting cervical degenerative condition and a separate low back condition.



On July 6, 2004, DWC issued a decision concerning the extent of the injuries caused by Carolyn's hole-punching accident. The decision found that Carolyn's accident did not cause a cervical strain as Gordon believed, but rather caused a herniation. SORM did not appeal that decision.

The parties continued to dispute Carolyn's impairment rating and date of maximum medical improvement, so DWC ordered Carolyn to have another physical examination, this time by an officially chosen "designated doctor." See id. § 408.0041(a) (West Supp. 2010). Dr. Pablo Guajardo, M.D., performed the examination on December 4, 2004. He assigned Carolyn an impairment rating of twenty-five percent and a maximum medical improvement date of February 5, 2001. (7)

SORM asked Casey Cochran, D.O., to conduct a peer review of Guajardo's report. See 28 Tex. Admin. Code § 180.22(g) (West 2011) ("A peer reviewer is a health care provider who performs an administrative review at the insurance carrier's request without a physical examination of the injured employee."). Like Gordon and Guajardo, Cochran is on DWC's list of "designated doctors," though he did not serve in that capacity in this dispute. Cochran issued a report on January 17, 2005 that criticized Guajardo's methodology and concluded that Guajardo's impairment rating of twenty-five percent "cannot be considered accurate." Cochran's report stated that an impairment rating of six percent (matching Gordon's rating) "would be acceptable."

The DWC officer overseeing the parties' dispute rejected Gordon's and Cochran's reports and adopted Guajardo's impairment rating and date of maximum medical improvement. The officer rejected Gordon's report because the report concluded that the hole-punching incident caused only a cervical strain, not a cervical herniation. (8) The officer acknowledged that Guajardo's methodology was problematic but adopted Guajardo's findings anyway because of the "special, presumptive status" afforded designated doctors' findings. See Tex. Lab. Code Ann. § 408.0041(e) (West Supp. 2010) (report of designated doctor has presumptive weight unless evidence preponderates to the contrary). (9)

Based on Guajardo's findings, the officer also determined that Carolyn was disabled from August 27, 1999 to February 5, 2001 as a result of her hole-punching accident. See id. § 401.011(16) (West Supp. 2010) (defining "disability" to mean "the inability because of a compensable injury to obtain and retain employment at wages equivalent to the preinjury wage"). In a separate hearing, another DWC officer determined that because Carolyn was unable to work after her date of maximum medical improvement, she was entitled to supplemental income benefits for the twelve quarters spanning July 16, 2002 to March 29, 2005. See id. § 408.142 (West 2006). (10)

Carolyn died on June 17, 2005, and her daughter, Erika, sole beneficiary of her estate, assumed her role in the contested case hearings. SORM administratively appealed the determinations concerning impairment rating, date of maximum medical improvement, eligibility for supplemental income benefits, and disability status between August 27, 1999 and February 5, 2001. See id.

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State Office of Risk Management v. Erika M. Cole, as Sole Beneficiary of the Estate of Carolyn P. Cole, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-office-of-risk-management-v-erika-m-cole-as--texapp-2011.