Torres v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division

2011 WY 93, 253 P.3d 175, 2011 Wyo. LEXIS 94, 2011 WL 2306238
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 2011
DocketS-10-0123
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2011 WY 93 (Torres v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Torres v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Workers' Safety & Compensation Division, 2011 WY 93, 253 P.3d 175, 2011 Wyo. LEXIS 94, 2011 WL 2306238 (Wyo. 2011).

Opinion

GOLDEN, Justice.

[¶1] Appellant Will Torres sought worker's compensation benefits relating to an August 2007 back surgery that he claimed was the product of a work-related injury he suffered in December 2006. The Wyoming Workers' Safety and Compensation Division (Division) denied benefits The Division's denial was upheld by the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) and, later, by the district court. We will also affirm the denial of benefits.

ISSUE

[¶2] Torres presents the following issue for our consideration:

*177 Whether the Office of Administrative Hearing's Decision that Mr. Torres was not entitled to worker['ls compensation benefits for his August 15, 2007[,] surgery and for worker|'s]l compensation benefits thereafter was arbitrary and capricious and not supported by the standing case lawl.]

FACTS

[¶3] Torres began working for Home Depot in Cheyenne as a supervisor in the area of door and window installation in December 2000. His employment duties included, among other things, lifting and moving heavy merchandise. Since 2004, Torres has submitted three injury reports concerning his back.

[¶4] In July 2004, Torres claimed he injured his low back when he bent over to pick up a coffee cup and something in his back "went pop." On that occasion, Torres sought medical treatment from his family physician, complaining of pain in his low back and buttocks area, pain radiating down his left leg and across the anterior shin, and numbness in both legs to the knees. An MRI performed on Torres' lumbar spine on July 7, 2004, revealed a degenerative back condition. In particular, the MRI showed diffuse disc desiccation, with slightly more marked desiccation and loss of dise height at the L4-L5 level, and dise desiccation and bulging at the LG-S1 level of the spine. In September 2005, Torres claimed to have injured his back while moving a heavy pallet. Torres did not seek medical attention because he deemed the injury to be insignificant.

[¶5] The third reported injury, which is the focus of this appeal, occurred on December 28, 2006. Torres claimed he injured his low back, as well as his right shoulder and wrist, in a slip-and-fall accident in the Home Depot parking lot. 1 Torres saw Dr. Cynthia Choy at Healion Emergent Care in Cheyenne, complaining of low back pain and bilateral anterior thigh numbness. An x-ray and MRI taken of Torres' lumbar spine revealed the degenerative dise disease, but showed no evidence of acute injury. The radiologist, Dr. Jason Lindsey, noted mild degenerative changes at the L4-L5 level of the spine, with no significant dise bulge, protrusion, or herniation. At the LG-S1 level, Dr. Lindsey noted mild degenerative change in the right facet joint, but otherwise within normal limits. Dr. Lindsey also noted there was no significant interval change since the 2004 MRL

[¶ 6] On January 9, 2007, Torres saw Dr. Vincent J. Ross of Smart Sports Medicine Center with complaints of low back pain and pain radiating down both legs. Dr. Ross generally diagnosed Torres with a lumbar sprain and sacroiliac sprain and recommended Torres undergo physical therapy two to three times per week. Torres participated in some therapy sessions, but the pain in his low back continued. Dr. Ross eventually referred Torres to Dr. Steven J. Beer, a neurosurgeon, for further evaluation.

[¶7] Dr. Beer first saw Torres on February 26, 2007. Torres reported that he had been experiencing severe low back and bilateral buttock pain since falling at work on December 28, 2006, but did not inform Dr. Beer about his previous back injuries and low back pain, or about his 2004 lumbar MRL Dr. Beer reviewed Torres' 2007 MRI and noted that it showed "multilevel degenerative disease." Dr. Beer initially diagnosed a lumbar sprain and recommended conservative treatment. - He referred Torres to Dr. George Girardi at Yellowstone Surgery Center in Cheyenne for epidural steroid injections.

[¶8] On March 9, 2007, Dr. Girardi performed an epidural steroid injection at the L4-LS level of the spine, which gave Torres temporary relief of his pain. Dr. Girardi's report for that injection noted that he was treating Torres for "[lJow back pain with bilateral leg pain due to Iumbar degenerative dise disease." Torres saw Dr. Girardi again on April 18, 2007, and was administered bilateral L4-L§ interarticular facet joint injections, which also provided only short term relief of the pain. Dr. Girardi's notes on that *178 date indicated that Torres was suffering from "low back pain due to lumbar spondylosis."

[¶9] Torres returned to Dr. Beer on May 7, 2007, for further evaluation and treatment. After considering the results of the injections, and suspecting that the L4-L5 and L5-S1 facet joints were the source of Torres' symptoms, Dr. Beer suggested a fusion from the L4 level through the S1 level of the spine. Torres agreed to proceed with the surgery. On August 16, 2007, Dr. Beer performed the recommended two-level fusion surgery. 2 Dr. Beer's Operative Report noted a preoperative/postoperative diagnosis of "lumbar spondylitic disease, L4-L5 and L5-S1."

[¶10] The Division initially concluded that Torres had suffered a compensable injury as a result of the December 2006 slip-and-fall accident and awarded benefits. However, in a series of eight "Final Determination" letters issued between October 4 and October 22, 2007, the Division denied Torres medical and temporary total disability benefits related to the August 2007 back surgery. Central to the Division's denial was its determination that the surgery was not causally related to the December 2006 work accident. Torres objected to the denial of benefits, and the matter was referred for hearing before the OAHS. 3

[¶11] A contested case hearing was convened on April 1, 2008. The hearing examiner received into evidence Torres' current and past medical records, and heard testimony from Torres. The hearing examiner also considered the deposition testimony of Dr. Beer and Dr. Ross and a report prepared by Dr. Nathan S. Simpson, who conducted an independent medical evaluation on behalf of the Division.

[¶12] Dr. Beer testified that he performed the surgery to repair instability in the L4-L5 and L6-S1 facet joints in Torres' back, which he believed was the source of Torres' low back pain. Dr. Beer noted that his intraoperative findings confirmed what he had identified on the 2007 MRI and his preoperative diagnosis; Torres had "some degenerative changes in his facet joints, and some looseness of the joints." Dr. Beer testified that facet joint instability can result from a fall similar to that suffered by Torres. He also acknowledged that it can be caused by degenerative changes in the spine. Relying on his medical findings and the history provided by Torres, Dr. Beer opined that Torres' need for back surgery was directly related to his December 2006 work-related injury.

[¶13] Dr. Ross generally testified that the 2007 MRI showed degenerative changes in Torres' low back, but was otherwise fairly normal. He testified that Torres did not appear to have neurological deficit, and that he diagnosed Torres' condition as a lumbar and sacroilige sprain. Dr.

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2011 WY 93, 253 P.3d 175, 2011 Wyo. LEXIS 94, 2011 WL 2306238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torres-v-state-ex-rel-wyoming-workers-safety-compensation-division-wyo-2011.