V. Oseguera v. WCAB (F&P Holding Company)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 6, 2017
Docket172 C.D. 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of V. Oseguera v. WCAB (F&P Holding Company) (V. Oseguera v. WCAB (F&P Holding Company)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
V. Oseguera v. WCAB (F&P Holding Company), (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Victor Oseguera, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 172 C.D. 2017 : Submitted: August 11, 2017 Workers’ Compensation Appeal : Board (F&P Holding Company), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE PELLEGRINI FILED: September 6, 2017

Victor Oseguera (Claimant) petitions for review of the order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) affirming the Workers’ Compensation Judge’s (WCJ) decision denying his claim petition because he failed to meet his burden of establishing that he sustained a new injury or a material aggravation of a pre-existing condition as a result of his work duties. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. On December 26, 2011, Claimant sustained a low back injury while harvesting mushrooms for F&P Holding Company (Employer). Employer filed a medical-only notice of compensation payable acknowledging that Claimant suffered a work-related low back strain when lifting a box. Claimant returned to work on modified-duty status at his pre-injury wage. Because of increased pain, on August 26, 2012, his chiropractor, Dr. Borja, removed him from work. Claimant filed a claim petition that same day. After being released by Dr. Borja, on October 18, 2012, Claimant returned to work in a light-duty position again at his pre-injury wage. Claimant performed numerous different light-duty positions and was eventually given a seated job laminating plastic on paper.

On November 20, 2012, at Employer’s request, Samuel Ross Noble, M.D. (Dr. Noble) examined Claimant. After this exam and upon reviewing Claimant’s medical records, Dr. Noble diagnosed Claimant with a work-related low back strain but also opined that an MRI conducted one month after Claimant’s work injury showed that he had pre-existing, non-work-related lumbar spine degenerative disc and joint disease. In his report dated January 13, 2013, Dr. Noble opined that Claimant had fully recovered as of his November 20, 2012 evaluation, did not need further medical treatment or work restrictions, and could return to his regular, pre-injury position.

Employer issued a notice of ability to return to work and offered Claimant his pre-injury, full-duty harvester position as of January 26, 2013. Claimant refused the position and provided Employer with work restrictions from another chiropractor that any position he was offered must comply with before he could return to work. Employer then filed a petition to terminate compensation benefits.

2 Following a hearing during which competing medical records and testimony were provided, on October 29, 2013, WCJ Terry Knox (WCJ Knox) accepted Dr. Noble’s opinion that Claimant’s degenerative lumbar condition was pre-existing. WCJ Knox went on to find:

I find that Claimant suffered a December 26, 2011, low back strain and sprain that caused transient aggravation of pain and radicular symptoms from his pre-existing L2- 3 and L3-4 degenerative disc disease, which was not materially aggravated by the work injury. I find that his work activities from December to August 2012 were sufficient to occasionally exacerbate his symptoms, requiring continuing conservative treatment, as well as causing some limited periods of work-related disability, for which he was appropriately compensated. . . . I find that he left work due to those increasing symptoms effective August 27th based upon medical recommendation and that he returned to work without earnings loss on October 18th.

(Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 18a.) Moreover, WCJ Knox credited Dr. Noble’s opinion that Claimant was fully recovered as of his November 20, 2012 evaluation, and found that Employer met its burden of proving Claimant was fully recovered from his work-related injury.

Based on these findings, WCJ Knox granted Claimant’s claim petition and ordered Employer to pay Claimant temporary partial disability benefits between December 26, 2011, and August 26, 2012, as well as temporary total disability benefits from August 27, 2012, to October 17, 2012, inclusive. However, WCJ Knox also granted Employer’s termination petition effective

3 November 20, 2012, because Claimant, as of that date, had fully recovered from his work-related injury. No appeal was taken from this decision.

II. While all of that was going on, as of March 2013,1 Claimant was still working for Employer in a light-duty capacity laminating plastic on paper. He stopped working on March 18, 2013, because of pain in his lower back that radiated down both of his legs. That same day, Claimant’s current treating chiropractor, Donna M. Kulp, D.C. (Dr. Kulp), provided Claimant with a note stating that he could no longer work, which he provided to Employer. Claimant never returned to his job with Employer or to work in any capacity.

On November 25, 2014, Claimant filed the current claim petition listing his date of injury as March 18, 2013, and describing the injury as “AGGRAVATION OF LOW BACK PAIN AND A LOW BACK INJURY, BILATERAL LEG PAIN.” (R.R. at 1a.) With respect to how the injury

1 The time periods in these two proceedings technically overlap because in his current appeal, Claimant alleges that he suffered an aggravation of his work-related injury and had to cease working on March 18, 2013, before WCJ Knox issued his decision on Claimant’s first claim petition. However, as WCJ Knox stated in his October 29, 2013 opinion:

I make no finding whether Claimant’s stopping work in March 2013 was due to recurrence of the December 2011 work injury, whether it was due to a material aggravation of that injury, whether it was due to a new injury, or whether it was not at all work- related. Those issues were not before me in the pending petitions.

(R.R. at 17a.)

4 happened, Claimant stated “[w]hile at work on a till making job my symptoms increased, due to the job duties.” (Id.) Employer denied all material allegations.

At a hearing before WCJ James Stapleton (WCJ Stapleton), Claimant testified that he worked for Employer for 12 or 13 years. For approximately five months prior to March 18, 2013, he had been performing a variety of light-duty jobs for Employer, including laminating paper and loading tills into plastic trays. Claimant was seated for long periods of time in these jobs with only two breaks – one 15-minute break and one hour-long break. Claimant would get pain in his lower back and down into both legs, with more pain in his right leg. Claimant testified that at the advice of his chiropractor, Dr. Kulp, he stopped working completely on March 18, 2013, because of increased pain. Claimant further testified that he had not returned to work anywhere since that time because “I think that if I was to get another job, it’d still bother me. That’s the reason I haven’t gotten another job.” (R.R. at 34a.) As of the date of the hearing, Claimant continued to treat with Dr. Kulp and she had not yet released him to return to work. Claimant testified that he finds his treatment with Dr. Kulp helpful for a few hours, but then the same pain returns. He still experiences pain in his lower back and a stabbing, piercing pain into his right leg, and he takes Tylenol or Advil when he gets a lot of pain. He admitted he was not treating with any other physicians.

On cross-examination, Claimant admitted that he did not suffer a specific event at work in March 2013 that caused him any injury. Rather, he believed he never fully recovered from the December 2011 injury and the

5 symptoms that caused him to leave his employment in March 2013 were a continuation of that previous injury.

Claimant also submitted the deposition testimony of Dr. Kulp, a licensed chiropractor.

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