Stewart v. Amigo's Restaurant

480 N.W.2d 211, 240 Neb. 53, 1992 Neb. LEXIS 41
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1992
DocketS-91-464
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 480 N.W.2d 211 (Stewart v. Amigo's Restaurant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Amigo's Restaurant, 480 N.W.2d 211, 240 Neb. 53, 1992 Neb. LEXIS 41 (Neb. 1992).

Opinion

Shanahan, J.

In her appeal from an award against Amigo’s Restaurant, Lori A. Stewart contends that the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court abused its discretion by not allowing Stewart to obtain a second posthearing deposition of her physician and in permitting Amigo’s to use her doctor’s deposition as evidence for the award.

Before the injury involved in her compensation claim, Stewart had two orthopedic surgical procedures to her right knee. In 1984, Stewart underwent arthroscopic surgery by Dr. Patrick E. Clare to remove “facette chondromalacia” at the site of her right kneecap and surgically achieve bilateral releases on both of her knees. In February 1989, Dr. Matthew C. Reckmeyer performed arthroscopic surgery on Stewart’s right' knee regarding a “medial femoral condylar fracture” (a break in the middle of the rounded projection of the femur, or thigh bone).

On December 5, 1989, Stewart, as an associate manager at Amigo’s Restaurant, was carrying food products at the restaurant when her right foot slipped on a wet floor, causing Stewart to fall and strike her right knee on the floor. Stewart immediately experienced pain and stiffness in her right knee, but continued to work. Stewart’s knee problems persisted intermittently until she became unable to walk, sought medical attention on February 16, 1990, and underwent arthroscopic surgery by Dr. Reckmeyer on February 26. According to Dr. Reckmeyer, Stewart’s knee injury consisted of “chondromalacia of the right lateral tibial plateau” (deterioration and softening of cartilage on the surface of the inner bone of the leg, i.e., shinbone) with “medial and lateral synovial plica” (a fibrous band of tissue affecting the lining of the knee joint). Stewart was unable to work from February 26 to April 11, but resumed some light duties in her employment from April 12 to 19. When Stewart continued to have discomfort with her right knee, Dr. Reckmeyer suspected “peroneal nerve symptoms from irritation, possibly scarring” *55 and believed that surgery was justified for “exploring the peroneal nerve” regarding Stewart’s “tib-fib joint.” Exploratory surgery was performed on April 30. Later, in view of Stewart’s continued knee problem, and after another orthopod examined Stewart, Dr. Reckmeyer, on January 25, 1991, performed surgery on Stewart, namely, a “ ‘proximal fibular resection and reconstruction [of the] lateral/collateral ligament [of the] right knee.’ ”

Rehearing commenced in Stewart’s case on February 5, 1991. At the rehearing Stewart described her accident and disability, and the court received various hospital records and doctors’ notes concerning Stewart’s care and treatment for her knee problem, including records pertaining to Stewart’s knee surgeries before she fell at Amigo’s Restaurant. At the conclusion of the evidence on February 5, Stewart’s lawyer requested time to obtain and file the deposition of Dr. Reckmeyer and estimated that the deposition would be filed on March 7 inasmuch as the doctor’s deposition had already been scheduled at the time of counsel’s request. Also, the lawyer for Amigo’s Restaurant asked for Stewart’s examination by an orthopedist for the defense. Without objection, both requests were granted.

On February 28, 1991, Stewart obtained Dr. Reckmeyer’s deposition. In the course of questioning on direct examination, the following occurred:

Q Dr. Reckmeyer, do you have an opinion, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, as to whether or not any causal connection exists between the direct fall on the knee which Ms. Stewart reported to you as occurring two or three months prior to your February 16th appointment and the diagnosed conditions which you have described to us that existed in February of 1990?
A ... I’m sorry. I cannot make a direct association between those two.
Q... All right, why not?
A Several reasons. From the medical standpoint, the findings were consistent with normal use, wear and *56 tear of the knee, although they could be associated with some element of trauma. The actual findings, three months — two to three months after the injury cannot be necessarily directly related to the reported fall. And the changes that — Some of the changes that were found can also be associated with postarthroscopic evaluation. In other words, her knee had been injured technically from the operation. In other words, an operation does cause some injury of any kind. And she had had two previous arthroscopic operations, including one that involved a lateral release which can cause significant internal scarring, several years before that.
Q Now, Doctor, do you have an opinion to a reasonable degree of probability, medical probability, as to whether or not any type of connection exists between the peroneal nerve obstruction that you treated in April of 1990 and the fall directly on the knee that she had reported happened two or three months prior to your February 1990 appointment?
A That based on the change in the symptoms postoperatively that she was not, at least to my awareness, complaining of those types of problems prior. The fall was not directly related to the peroneal nerve.
Q Now, before February of 1990, Ms. Stewart had had other surgeries with her knee. You’ve already testified to that. Is that right?
A That’s correct.
Q And did these prior surgeries render the knee unstable or prone to additional injury?
A Her prior procedures, I do not believe rendered her knee unstable or more susceptible to injury.
Q Do you have an opinion, Doctor, to a reasonable degree of medical probability, as to whether or not the accident where she fell directly on her knee two to three months prior to February 1990 caused, either by *57 producing a new injury or by aggravating an old injury, any of the injuries for which you have performed surgeries since February of 1990?
A I. cannot state within a reasonable degree of medical certainty whether that fall contributed to or caused those problems.

Stewart’s lawyer then filed a motion on March 7,1991, for an extension of time to obtain a second deposition from Dr. Reckmeyer and, as support for that request, offered counsel’s affidavit which included:

Dr. Reckmeyer gave testimony which contradicted previous statements and medical ■ records and were surprises to the affiant inasmuch as they were different than answers and information previously supplied by Dr. Reckmeyer.
. . . [Subsequent to said deposition, the undersigned reported the results of the deposition to the plaintiff. The plaintiff conferred with Dr. Reckmeyer and Dr. Reckmeyer contacted the undersigned affiant, explaining that he had been confused by several questions and that his testimony would have been significantly different had said confusion not occurred.

Dr. Reckmeyer’s deposition was filed with the compensation court on March 8, 1991. Amigo’s Restaurant objected to any allowance of time for Stewart’s obtaining another deposition from Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
480 N.W.2d 211, 240 Neb. 53, 1992 Neb. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-amigos-restaurant-neb-1992.