Turcios v. Holiday Inn Fair Oaks

483 S.E.2d 502, 24 Va. App. 509, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 215
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 8, 1997
Docket2242954
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 483 S.E.2d 502 (Turcios v. Holiday Inn Fair Oaks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turcios v. Holiday Inn Fair Oaks, 483 S.E.2d 502, 24 Va. App. 509, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 215 (Va. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

ANNUNZIATA, Judge.

Claimant, Paula Turcios, appeals the decision of the commission reversing the deputy commissioner’s credibility findings and denying her application for temporary total disability benefits for an alleged injury by accident arising out of and in the course of her employment with employer, Holiday Inn Fair Oaks. Claimant contends that the commission’s decision was arbitrary and must be reversed. We agree.

I.

All the evidence was taken before the deputy commissioner. Claimant testified that in the course of cleaning one of employer’s rooms on December 9, 1992, she slipped on baby powder on the bathroom floor, which caused her to fall and land on *512 her buttocks. Claimant attempted to continue working in the room, but upon bending to make the bed, she felt pain which precluded her from continuing. Claimant waited in the room. When her supervisor, Marguerita Gomez, passed by, claimant recounted her slip and fall and the resulting pain she felt in her back, neck and legs. Gomez testified and confirmed claimant’s recitation of the incident.

Gomez stated that she reported the incident to her manager, Cathy Kolodziej, who referred Gomez and claimant to Michelle Wertz, employer’s personnel director. Claimant testified that she told Kolodziej she had fallen and that her pain began when she bent over to make the bed. Gomez testified that, acting as claimant’s interpreter, she told both Kolodziej and Wertz claimant had slipped and fallen on the bathroom floor. Claimant had difficulty understanding what Gomez told Kolodziej and Wertz because she does not understand English well. Neither claimant nor Gomez saw Kolodziej or Wertz prepare a report describing the incident they had reported.

In November 1994, Donald Roberts replaced Wertz as employer’s human resources director. Roberts testified that both Wertz and Kolodziej were no longer employed by employer. Roberts identified an internal report prepared on December 9, 1992 by Kolodziej as a form used by employer when an employee is injured. Roberts also identified “Employer’s First Report of Accident” prepared by Wertz also on the day of the incident. The internal accident report describes the incident as follows: “[Claimant] was making the bed in # 607, she went to tuck the corner in, when she was moving in a fast pace and strained her neck which caused her back to ache.” Employer’s First Report of Accident describes the occurrence as follows: “[claimant] was making the bed in 607 when she tucked in the corner, and pulled neck causing back pain.”

On December 10, 1992, claimant sought medical treatment from an emergency clinic. Claimant testified that she did not describe the circumstances of her accident to the people at the clinic because of her poor command of English and because *513 nobody at the clinic could translate for her. She testified that she described her pain and its onset in response to the questions asked. The clinic report from the December 10 visit states that claimant suffered a “work related injury on 12-09-92 while making bed at Holiday Inn — c/o low back pain — Pt. speaks very little English — Pt. states she was bending not lifting when injury occurred.” The report of a radiology examination conducted the same day notes, “c/o back pain. Injured when making bed yesterday.” Because of the poor copy quality of the clinic report in the record from the commission, the clinic’s diagnosis of claimant’s condition is not discernible. However, it is clear the physical findings in the clinic’s report address the condition of the L-5 area of claimant’s spine. Claimant next sought medical attention in October 1993 when she returned to the emergency clinic, apparently complaining of back pain. The record contains no medical reports from the October 1993 visit.

Claimant thereafter sought medical treatment in May 1994 from Dr. Julio C. Gonzalez. Dr. Gonzalez’s initial report of May 16, 1994 states, “[claimant] is being evaluated in regard to injuries sustained at work around December 9, 1992. The patient presents with severe pain in the lumbosacral areas that radiates to the right lower extremity.”

Dr. Gonzalez diagnosed right sciatic neuralgia secondary to trauma, chronic back pain, and lumbosacral contusion. He opined that claimant may have denervation activity in the L-5 roots, the same spinal area noted in the medical report from the emergency clinic claimant initially consulted. Furthermore, an MRI revealed spondylolysis at L-5 and a grade II spondylolisthesis at L-5/S-1. Dr. Gonzalez’s initial report also relates the history of claimant’s condition as follows:

Around December 9, 1992, [claimant] was cleaning a bathroom and skidded on a slippery floor and fell to the floor in a sitting position. The patient was able to stand up on her own, and try to continue working, cleaning hotel rooms, and was trying to finish dressing the bed, she suddenly became stiff in the back and could not move. She went ahead and informed the incident to the supervisor, and, apparently, *514 they did not take any account of the incident, as it was, and maybe they misunderstood that she fell in a sitting position before moving to the bed. She was sent several days later “clinic”, [sic] where she was examined and released. She was place [sic] off work for about seven days and then, when she returned to work, she tried to obtain light duty status, but she could not get it. She went on working with difficulties, and the pain continued. Several months later, she became acutely ill, for the same symptomatology, and went to the clinic again. The pain is described as shooting from the back to the right lower extremity, and it is worse at the end of the day, after making twelve to fifteen and sometimes eighteen rooms in the hotel....

Dr. Gonzalez examined claimant nine times between May 16 and July 21, the day he instructed her to remain out of work. In the reports from six of those visits, Dr. Gonzalez noted that claimant was under his care in regard to injuries sustained at work in December 1992. Dr. Gonzalez treated claimant for the same condition during each of these visits.

II.

There is no dispute that claimant injured her back on December 9, 1992, while working for employer. There is also no dispute that claimant was totally disabled as of July 21, 1994. The question before the commission was whether the evidence established that claimant suffered an “injury by accident” on December 9, 1992, and, if so, whether that injury was causally related to her total disability.

A. INJURY BY ACCIDENT

Determination of whether an “injury by accident” occurred depends on whether claimant slipped and fell in the bathroom as she and Gomez described. There is no dispute that if claimant slipped and fell in the bathroom, she suffered *515 an “injury by accident” within the meaning of the Act. 1 Conversely, there is no dispute that in the absence of a slip and fall in the bathroom, no “injury by accident” occurred.

Claimant bore the burden of proving the slip and fall occurred. See, e.g., Hercules, Inc. v. Stump, 2 Va.App.

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483 S.E.2d 502, 24 Va. App. 509, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turcios-v-holiday-inn-fair-oaks-vactapp-1997.