Tidwell v. Walker Construction

151 S.W.3d 127, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 1936, 2004 WL 2902475
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 2004
Docket26159
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 151 S.W.3d 127 (Tidwell v. Walker Construction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tidwell v. Walker Construction, 151 S.W.3d 127, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 1936, 2004 WL 2902475 (Mo. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

JOHN E. PARRISH, Presiding Judge.

Gene Tidwell (claimant) appeals a final award of the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (the commission) denying compensation. This court affirms.

*129 Chronology

This appeal has followed a proeedurally tortured path. The following is a chronology of relevant events occurring prior to reaching this court.

August 17, 2001 Claim for Compensation filed
October 10, 2002 Hearing before Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
November 4, 2002 Final Award Denying Compensation entered by ALJ
November 25, 2002 Claimant filed his Application for Review by the commission
February 7, 2003 Claimant filed pleading denominated “Motion to Consider Additional Evidence and to Suspend Briefing Schedule”
March 10, 2003 Pleading opposing claimant’s request of February 7 filed by C.A. Walker Construction Co. (employer) and Frank Gates U.S.A. (insurer)
March 14, 2003 The commission entered order stating claimant’s request was granted and remanded case to ALJ “to hold a hearing to allow [claimant] to introduce additional evidence ... and for the employer to respond or object as appropriate”
April 8, 2003 Hearing before ALJ to receive evidence as directed commission’s March 14, 2003 order
May 15, 2003 Parties file joint motion requesting the commission to remand case for ALJ to enter award upon consideration of all the evidence
May 30, 2003 Motion to remand to ALJ to render new award denied
February 10, 2004 Final Award Denying Compensation entered by the commission

Facts

Claimant filed a claim for workers’ compensation based on injuries he alleged were suffered July 2, 2001. Claimant asserted he was injured while using a chain saw to remove a tree trunk while working for employer; that he felt a pull in his low back while working with the chain saw that worsened as he continued working. Following a hearing, the ALJ found claimant did not sustain an accident resulting in injuries arising out of and in the course of his employment on the date alleged. The ALJ entered an award denying compensation. Claimant sought review of the ALJ award by the commission.

The commission entered the final award denying compensation that is the subject of this appeal. The commission’s order includes the findings:

Subsequent to the trial of this matter and after the award of the [ALJ] was issued, the employee filed a motion to present additional evidence. The Commission remanded the matter to the Division of Workers’ Compensation (Division) for an evidentiary hearing to introduce this evidence for consideration by the Commission.
The transcript of that remand hearing was received by the Commission, and after careful review, the Commission finds that the evidence is not newly discovered and was available to the employee prior to the trial and further that even if admitted into evidence the proposed evidence lacks the probative value necessary to cause a change in the underlying decision to deny the employee benefits. Therefore the Commission denies the employee’s motion to introduce new evidence.

The commission found the award of the ALJ was supported by competent and substantial evidence and was in accordance with The Workers’ Compensation Law. *130 The commission affirmed the ALJ’s award of no compensation and incorporated the award and decision of the ALJ in the commission’s award by incorporation by reference.

The findings adopted by the commission include:

The claimant was adamant that he hurt his back while using the chain saw on Monday afternoon, July 2, and that he had to leave work at noon the next day because of back pain. According to the claimant, Mr. McMullin was present on Monday running the bucket [in which claimant asserted he was located for purposes of trimming a tree at United Methodist Church in Kennett at the time of his alleged injury]. Mr. Walker [owner and operator of employer] verified that the claimant returned to Dexter with the truck early on the afternoon of July 3. However, the testimony of Bob Coleman and Robert McMullin, along with business records, show that that [sic] claimant was not working at the church on July 2, but that he was working at the Kennett school site (there was no tree trimming at the school site). That evidence further shows that the claimant last worked at the church on Thursday and Friday, June 28 and 29. He then worked for ten hours on Saturday, June 30, in Dexter at the Chamber of Commerce site. The evidence shows that Robert McMullin only worked in Kennett on June 28 and 29. The records confirm that the claimant worked during the morning of July 3 at the Kennett School.
The claimant was adamant that he told Dr. Jalal on three separate visits about the chain saw incident. However, Dr. Jalal’s notes do not record any such statement. Further, Dr. Jalal’s notes indicate that he had radicular symptoms for a month prior to his first visit on July 5. There was only one off-work slip from Dr. Jalal. There was no mention of a work-related accident in the radiology report from the Dexter Hospital. The first mention of a chain saw is contained in the report from Dr. Ray dated July 23, 2001. That report mentions a four-foot long chain saw and that he worked until the next day. In an independent reported dated October 19, 2001, Dr. Petkovich wrote: “He [the claimant] specifically stated he was walking on a chair rail and he twisted his lower back.” He did not record anything about a chain saw. Nowhere else is a chair rail mentioned.
In his deposition, the claimant denied that he had any hobbies. Robert McMullin testified that the claimant told him he thought he hurt himself water skiing. The claimant denied that he said that. He further denied that he had a boat or that he had ever water skied. However, a physical therapy note from August 6, 2001, stated: “I [the claimant] hurt really bad on Friday night. I took my ultra-light plane over to Kentucky lake [sic] and I could not stand to drive back.”

The ALJ’s findings, which the commission adopted, further state:

[T]o rule in the claimant’s favor, I would first have to find that Dr. Jalal on three separate occasions failed to record how the accident happened. I would also have to find that Dr. Jalal incorrectly stated that he had had radicular symptoms for a month and that the doctor had incorrectly recorded that the claimant told him he had passed a kidney stone. I would have to find that the Dexter Hospital incorrectly recorded the claimant’s history. I would also have to find that Dr. Petkovich mis-recorded the mechanism of injury. To paraphrase [another ALJ], it may be possible that *131 one doctor mistakenly failed to note a cause of injury, but it is [sic] strains credibility to assume that three doctors did. Mason v.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.3d 127, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 1936, 2004 WL 2902475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tidwell-v-walker-construction-moctapp-2004.