Vandiver, Kellise v. Unilever

2017 TN WC 113
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedJune 7, 2017
Docket2017-08-0042
StatusPublished

This text of 2017 TN WC 113 (Vandiver, Kellise v. Unilever) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vandiver, Kellise v. Unilever, 2017 TN WC 113 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT MEMPHIS

KELLISE VANDIVER, ) Docket No. 2017-08-0042 Employee, ) v. ) UNILEVER MANUFACTURING, INC., ) State File No. 72740-2016 Employer, ) And ) INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE ) Judge Amber E. Luttrell STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA, ) Insurance Carrier. )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER DENYING REQUESTED BENEFITS

This matter came before the undersigned Workers' Compensation Judge on May 18, 2017, upon the Request for Expedited Hearing filed by Kellise Vandiver. The present focus of this case is whether Ms. Vandiver is entitled to medical and temporary disability benefits for her alleged right shoulder injury. The central legal issue is whether she is likely to establish at a hearing on the merits that she suffered an injury arising primarily out of and in the course and scope of her employment. For the reasons set forth below, the Court holds Ms. Vandiver did not meet her burden and thus is not entitled to the requested benefits at this time.

History of Claim

The hearing testimony and exhibits established the following facts. Ms. Vandiver worked for Unilever Manufacturing beginning on May 23, 2016, as a line technician on two different lines. She worked as a wrapper operator on "gram 3" loading rolls of ice cream wrapper paper onto a machine, and on the carton loader machine loading stacks, of cardboard packaging. 1 Ms. Vandiver alleged an injury to her right shoulder beginning on July 28, 2016, while working on the carton loader machine. She testified her machine 1 The parties referred to the machine in question as gram 3 or line 3. Ms. Fuller testified gram 3 stands for the manufacturer of the technology that makes the popsicles. was difficult to operate that day causing soreness in her right shoulder. Specifically, she stated a lever was difficult to pull, resulting in pain. She reported the problem with the machine to her supervisors, Major Walker and Rodney Ford. Mr. Walker attempted to pull the lever on the machine, acknowledged it was difficult to pull- back, and advised he would report the issue to maintenance. He filled out a Unilever Near Miss Notification and referred Ms. Vandiver to the onsite nurse for ice and ibuprofen.

Ms. Vandiver continued working on the same machines with difficulty until September 1 (,when she "felt like someone had taken a knife and cut my right shoulder." The next day, Ms. Vandiver sought emergency treatment at Lauderdale County Hospital. The physician diagnosed a shoulder strain and took Ms. Vandiver off work for three days.

Following this second incident, Unilever prepared a First Report of Injury noting the date of injury as July 28, 2016, and sent Ms. Vandiver to Fast Pace Urgent Care for initial treatment. Ms. Vandiver provided a history of pulling a bar on a machine at work that caused pain and soreness in her shoulder over the last month. She also described the sharp pain she experienced on September 11. The provider referred her for an orthopedic evaluation and MRI of the shoulder. Unilever subsequently offered a panel of physicians, from which Ms. Vandiver selected Dr. Riley Jones, an orthopedist, for treatment.

Ms. Vandiver saw Dr. Jones and associated her shoulder pain with her lifting, pulling, pushing, and reaching work duties. Dr. Jones diagnosed biceps tendinitis, injected her shoulder, and ordered PT. He subsequently ordered an MRI, which indicated mild supraspinatus tendinosis and moderate acromioclavicular arthrosis with a small subacromial spur. Based on review of the MRI, Dr. Jones concluded, "the injury was not caused by the course of employment." Dr. Jones noted the MRI report indicated an interstitial tear involving the anterior tendon insertion but no full thickness rotator cuff tear. He further noted a small subacromial spur. Dr. Jones explained,

Pt is coming in today and questioning me about why I did not think this was caused by work. I have gone over with her discussion of the new law. The patient has not had a specific injury and upon questioning she really does not do any overhead work. In reviewing all of this, it appears that this is primarily a degenerative type of tear and not related to any specific injury or job duty. Therefore, I do not think she meets the 51% being caused by her work. I told her she can get treatment from another orthopedic surgeon on her private insurance.

Following Dr. Jones' opinion, Unilever denied Ms. Vandiver's claim, and Ms. Vandiver sought additional treatment from Dr. Tim Sweo at Sports Orthopedic and Spine.

During Ms. Vandiver's treatment with Dr. Sweo, he ordered an EMG of the right

2 upper extremity to determine if her pain was radicular in nature. The EMG study revealed moderate carpal tunnel syndrome. Dr. Sweo also diagnosed a partial rotator cuff tear in the right shoulder based on the MRI and ordered surgery for both conditions. Regarding causation, Dr. Sweo stated,

Ms. Vandiver developed right shoulder pain with weakness and some arm numbness last year. Unfortunately, I don't know if she had an injury or not or if it was cumulative. MRI exam does show partial RC tear. And most of her symptoms I believe are attributable to that. And is likely work-related. A nerve conduction study also showed carpal tunnel syndrome on the right side. And I cannot make a determination whether that is likely work-related unless she had no symptoms at all in that UE prior to that then most likely it would be.

Ms. Vandiver last saw Dr. Sweo in April 2017, at which time he still recommended surgery for her right shoulder and right wrist. Dr. Sweo noted that Ms. Vandiver advised that she needed to wait a few more months before undergoing surgery.

In addition to the incidents she described when her shoulder pain began, Ms. Vandiver testified to problems she had with the two machines. She stated she was required to lift rolls of wrapper paper weighing twenty-two pounds as high as eye level on the wrapper machine. On the carton loader machine, Ms. Vandiver was required to lift her arm as high as her head to pull back the lever. During cross-examination, Unilever showed Ms. Vandiver videos of each job she performed to dispute her testimony regarding how high she reached to operate the machines. Ms. Vandiver confirmed the videos accurately portrayed the wrapper operator and carton loader job duties. Regarding the wrapper operator position, Ms. Vandiver acknowledged the video showed the operator lifting the roll to waist or chest level instead of eye level.

Unilever's human resources representative, Bernadette Fuller, testified the videos showed the exact ·machines Ms. Vandiver worked on at the time of her alleged injury. She further testified the video of the carton loader job showed the operator reach just below eye level to pull the lever.

At the hearing, Ms. Vandiver testified she still needs surgery and asserted she never had problems with her shoulder before her work-injury. Unilever countered that Ms. Vandiver is not entitled to further benefits based upon Dr. Jones' opinion her condition was degenerative in nature and not related to any specific injury or job duty. Unilever further contended the law is unsettled regarding compensability for aggravation of pre-existing conditions.

3 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

To prove a compensable injury, Ms. Vandiver must show her alleged injury arose primarily out of and in the course and scope of her employment and that it was caused by an incident, or specific set of incidents, identifiable by time and place of occurrence. Further, she must show, "to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that [her alleged work injury] contributed more than fifty percent (50%) in causing the ...

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

§ 50-6-102
Tennessee § 50-6-102(14)
§ 50-6-239
Tennessee § 50-6-239(d)(l)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 TN WC 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vandiver-kellise-v-unilever-tennworkcompcl-2017.