Telling Industries v. Petty

378 S.W.3d 167, 2010 Ark. App. 602, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 640
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 15, 2010
DocketNo. CA 10-236
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 378 S.W.3d 167 (Telling Industries v. Petty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Telling Industries v. Petty, 378 S.W.3d 167, 2010 Ark. App. 602, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 640 (Ark. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURTNEY HUDSON HENRY, Judge.

| TAppellant Telling Industries appeals the decision of the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission awarding ap-pellee Cornell Petty medical and temporary total disability benefits arising from a work-related accident. For reversal, appellant contends that the Commission erred in finding that appellee rebutted the presumption that the accident was substantially occasioned by the use of an illegal substance. We affirm.

The record of the hearing before the administrative law judge reflects that ap-pellee worked as a “catcher” for the operator of a machine that fabricates c-shaped steel beams that range in length from eight to fifty-five feet. The machine is thirty feet long and ten feet wide, and steel is fed into the machine from a coil that is loaded by crane onto a pillar or “tree” that is positioned ten feet away from the machine. The steel used to produce the beams is wrapped around the coil and, when delivered, the steel is held in place by a band that the ^operator must sever with bolt cutters in order to insert the steel into the machine. As a catcher, appellee’s task was to stand in front of the machine while the operator cut the band, to pick up the loose end of the steel, and then to press a button as the operator fed the steel into the machine. Appellee was also responsible for removing the finished product from the other end of the machine and placing the beams onto a table.

Toward the end of the shift on Tuesday, November 8, 2008, the crane operator loaded a nine-thousand-pound coil of 18-gauge steel onto the pillar servicing the machine operated by Vernon Ross. The pillar actually holds two coils, but only one coil was placed onto the pillar, which caused the pillar to tilt to one side because of the uneven distribution of weight. When Ross cut the band on the coil, the steel began to unravel at a rapid pace, and it struck appellee, lacerating his left forearm. Appellee received treatment at the emergency room and also submitted a urine sample for drug testing. The test revealed the presence of Methadone and Methadone metabolites, but appellee did not have a prescription for that drug. Given the positive test result, appellant controverted appellee’s claim seeking medical treatment for a severed tendon in his left forearm and temporary total disability benefits.

In speaking about the accident, Ross testified that the loosened end of the steel normally falls harmlessly to the floor when the band around the coil is cut but that the steel on that occasion unexpectedly “shot out,” like the unwinding of a rubber band that is tightly wrapped around a finger. He stated that the steel began to unravel seconds after he cut the band and testified that, once it started, “there just wasn’t no stopping it.” Ross said that 1^appellee was standing where he was instructed to stand, which he described as the safest place, and he concluded that there was nothing appel-lee could have done to avoid being injured. Ross believed that he escaped serious injury, perhaps even death, because the steel struck appellee first, which gave Ross time to jump out of the way. Ross said that the event was not a common occurrence with that gauge of steel, and he surmised that it happened because the pillar was unbalanced. He recalled that a similar accident occurred months before, but he explained that the steel unwound on that occasion because he had not locked the coil into place. Ross also testified that a similar machine at the plant was equipped with an arm to keep the steel from coming undone when the band is cut but that his machine did not have such an arm. Because of the danger associated with working with the steel, Ross said that he wore a hard hat, safety glasses, protective gloves, and steel-toed boots. Appellant also provides employees with cotton safety sleeves for their arms, but Ross said that neither he, appel-lee, nor any other employee was wearing sleeves that day because none were in stock. Ross said that he did not notice anything unusual about appellee’s behavior or reactions on the day of the accident.

Appellee testified that he was standing in position at the front of the machine waiting to press the button when the coil “went haywire.” He said that he raised his left arm to shield his neck and that he would have been killed had the steel struck him there. Appellee stated that he had never known a coil to act that way. He testified that he was not wearing safety sleeves that day because none were available. Appellee denied that he was trying to catch the 14steel as it was unraveling, as stated in the investigative report prepared by his supervisor. He further testified that he spent the weekend before the accident in St. Louis and that his friend gave him a small capful of Methadone on Friday evening for back pain. Appellee said that the drug did not alleviate his discomfort and that it did not affect him. He testified that he worked on Monday and most of the day Tuesday when the accident occurred and that his judgment was not impaired as a result of taking a small dose of the drug the previous Friday.

Brent Sanders, appellee’s supervisor, testified that the investigative report stated that appellee was trying to catch the steel unraveling from the coil and that appellee was cited for being inattentive and for failing to wear safety sleeves. He said that he wrote the report after speaking with Ross and others and that appellee reviewed and signed the report the day following the accident. Sanders recalled that they were out of arm guards the week before the accident, but he stated that the sleeves were in supply that day and that he had seen appellee wearing the sleeves earlier during his shift. He detected nothing unusual in appellee’s behavior before the accident.

Appellant also presented the testimony of Russell Ford, the plant manager. Ford stated that he did not know whether appel-lee was wearing safety sleeves at the time of the accident, and he offered the opinion that appellee would not have been injured had he been wearing them. He also testified that arm guards were available that day and that he was not aware of any occasion when sleeves were not in supply. Ford added that it was highly unusual for steel to unravel from the coil.

|fiDr. Hank Simmons, a toxicologist, reviewed the results of appellee’s urine test. He testified that Methadone was an opioid that is prescribed for the treatment of chronic pain. Ingestion of the drug produces feelings of euphoria, indifference, and also sedation, and its usage negatively affects a person’s reaction time and the ability to perform safety-sensitive tasks. Simmons said that the test showed Methadone at a concentration level of 2,367 nano-grams per milliliter and Methadone metabolites at a level of 1,058 nanograms per milliliter. He testified that the concentration levels did not allow him to draw any conclusions as to appellee’s impairment at the time of the accident, but he described the levels as being “pharmacologically significant,” meaning that a sufficient amount of the drug had been taken to produce a demonstrable effect. While Simmons could not determine the amount of Methadone that appellee consumed, he did say that appellee had ingested the drug on one or more occasions within a few days of testing. Simmons testified that the drug remained in a person’s system longer than the person would experience its intoxicating effects, and he said that a single dose, unless it was a large one, would not produce detectible symptoms the next day.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
378 S.W.3d 167, 2010 Ark. App. 602, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/telling-industries-v-petty-arkctapp-2010.