Unified Door & Hardware/Prevent Security v. Logullo, Jr.

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 22, 2025
DocketN25A-04-001 CLS
StatusPublished

This text of Unified Door & Hardware/Prevent Security v. Logullo, Jr. (Unified Door & Hardware/Prevent Security v. Logullo, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unified Door & Hardware/Prevent Security v. Logullo, Jr., (Del. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

UNIFIED DOOR & HARDWARE/ ) PREVENT SECURITY, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. N25A-04-001 CLS ) THOMAS LOGULLO, JR., ) ) Appellee.

Date Submitted: July 22, 2025 Date Decided: October 22, 2025

MEMORANDUM OPINION

On Appeal from the Industrial Accident Board, AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part.

Nicholas E. Bittner, Esquire of HECKLER & FRABIZZIO, Attorney for Appellant.

Jessica L. Welch, Esquire of DOROSHOW, PASQUALE, KRAWITZ & BHAYA, Attorney for Appellee.

SCOTT, J. INTRODUCTION

This matter comes before the Court on appeal by Employer from a decision

of the Industrial Accident Board of Delaware (“IAB”) to compensate Claimant for

work-related injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident.

After a hearing, the Board found that Claimant’s injuries were compensable

and causally related to the work accident, concluded that Claimant was totally

disabled and would continue to be totally disabled, and awarded Claimant attorneys’

fees and medical witness fees.

For the reasons set forth below, the Board’s decision was supported by

substantial evidence and free from legal error, but the attorneys’ fees awarded

exceeded the statutory maximum. Thus, the Board’s decision is AFFIRMED in

part, REVERSED in part.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1

I. CLAIMANT’S ACCIDENT AND THE HEARING

On September 11, 2020, Thomas Logullo, Jr. (“Claimant”), suffered injuries

to his neck, left shoulder, and low back while in the scope and course of his

employment as a security technician for Unified Door and Hardware/Prevent

Security (“Employer”).2 The incident occurred when Claimant was driving the

1 The facts are taken from the record provided by the IAB. 2 Tr. Logullo, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 55, 57–60. company van to a job site and a car rear-ended Claimant at a stop light, causing the

company van to hit the car in front of it.3 The impact caused books and manuals that

were in the van to fall on top of Claimant.4

On September 6, 2022, Claimant filed a petition to determine compensation

due for his neck, left shoulder, and low back injuries that resulted from the motor

vehicle accident on September 11, 2020.5 The Board held a hearing on Claimant’s

petition on October 24, 2024. The Board heard testimony from Claimant and

considered deposition testimony from Dr. James Zaslavsky, D.O., on behalf of

Claimant and Dr. Scott A. Rushton, M.D., and Dr. Samuel Matz, M.D., on behalf of

Employer.

Claimant testified that immediately following the accident police responded

to the scene, but he did not report any injuries at that time and drove home.6 Despite

being able to drive the van home, Claimant did not work the rest of the day because

he was “in shock.”7 Claimant also stated that he was initially concerned about

seeking treatment because of his medical history and the heightened risk amidst the

3 Tr. Logullo, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 57. 4 Id. at 60. 5 See generally Claimant’s Pet. to Determine Compensation Due, Logullo v. Unified Door & Hardware/Prevent Security, IAB Hearing No. 1504830 (Sept. 6, 2022). 6 Tr. Logullo, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 57–60. 7 Id. at 58. ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.8 At the time of the accident, Claimant was receiving

treatment for atrial fibrillation (“AFib”).9

In the days following the accident, Claimant experienced worsening pain in

his neck, shoulders and low back.10 Radiating pain from the injuries developed into

headaches, tingling, and numbness.11 Hoping the pain would “subside,” Claimant

modified his work hours to an “average[] [of] maybe 20 hours for the next couple

weeks.”12 By the end of September, Claimant’s symptoms “were[] [not] getting

better.”13 On September 28, 2020, Claimant reported his symptoms to his primary

care doctor at the Department of Veteran’s Affairs (“VA”).14

In October 2020, Dr. Michael Kelman fully examined and provided Claimant

with chiropractic care twice per week.15 Dr. Kelman continued to monitor

Claimant’s condition and took Claimant out of work.16 Although the chiropractic

care provided temporary relief, it did not resolve his pain, so Dr. Kelman ordered

MRI studies of Claimant’s neck and back.17 He was then referred to Dr. Zaslavsky,

8 Tr. Logullo, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 60–61. 9 Id. at 61. 10 Id. at 58–59. 11 Id. at 62. 12 Id. at 59. 13 Id. at 60. 14 Id. at 61–62. 15 Id. at 64. 16 Id. 17 Id. at 64–65; Tr. Zaslavsky, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 29. an orthopedic surgeon, for further evaluation.18 Claimant underwent MRI studies on

January 27, 2021 and Dr. Zaslavsky performed a full examination, including a

“complete [medical] history” of Claimant in March 2021.19

Dr. Zaslavsky has been one of Claimant’s treating physicians since March

2021.20 When Dr. Zaslavsky first examined Claimant in March 2021, Claimant told

Dr. Zaslavsky about the motor vehicle accident and that he “developed neck pain

that radiates into both of his shoulders and into his arms . . . . He also [had] numbness

and tingling and headaches.”21 Claimant informed Dr. Zaslavsky that he was having

“difficulty lifting, sitting, and driving.”22 Dr. Zaslavsky testified that Claimant “did

not have any history of neck problems before the motor vehicle injury[.]”23

Dr. Zaslavsky explained that Claimant’s symptoms of numbness, tingling, and

radiating pain in Claimant’s neck were “indicative of cervical radiculopathy and

some type of narrowing around that nerves that is symptomatic at this time.”24 Dr.

Zaslavsky performed a Spurling’s test which is a “compressive maneuver of the

foramen . . . in the cervical spine[,]” that if positive, “elicits shooting pain into the

18 Tr. Logullo, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 65; Tr. Zaslavsky, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 4. 19 Tr. Logullo, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 65; Tr. Zaslavsky, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 6, 18. 20 Tr. Zaslavsky, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 6. 21 Id. at 20. 22 Id. at 19. 23 Id. 24 Id. at 20. arm[.]”25 Claimant tested positive on his left side.26 Dr. Zaslavsky also reviewed

Claimant’s MRI films and report from January 2021.27 “The MRI showed a

considerable amount of degenerative changes, especially at C3-[C]4 and C5-[C]6.

At those two levels, there appeared to be disc protrusions, disc osteophyte

complexes. At C5-[C]6, there was a severe amount of foraminal compression

bilaterally.”28

Based on Claimant’s complaints, the positive left-sided Spurling’s test, and

the MRI films and report, Dr. Zaslavsky diagnosed Claimant with stenosis.29

Stenosis is . . . a compression of the nerves as they leave the spine by sometimes an acute disc herniation, which is a large piece of disc material that could be squeezing the nerves, and sometimes it[] [is] just through degenerative changes where there[] [is] facet overgrowth and ligamentum hypertrophy, which are signs of degenerative disease. When a person has stenosis, there[] [is] always a critical threshold to where it becomes symptomatic.30

When that pain crosses a threshold . . . we get a hundred percent symptoms. You get shooting pain, you get numbness, you get tingling into the fingers. You start to get weakness along the path of the crushed nerve, and you start to develop considerable neurologic changes which can significantly impact your life.31

25 Tr. Zaslavsky, IAB Hearing No. 1504830, at 20. 26 Id. at 20–21. 27 Id. at 20. 28 Id. at 21–22. 29 Id. at 20–22, 28. 30 Id. at 22. 31 Id. at 23. Dr.

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