Vredeveld v. Gelco Express

383 N.W.2d 780, 222 Neb. 363, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 907
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1986
Docket85-345
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 383 N.W.2d 780 (Vredeveld v. Gelco Express) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vredeveld v. Gelco Express, 383 N.W.2d 780, 222 Neb. 363, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 907 (Neb. 1986).

Opinion

Shanahan, J.

Ann Vredeveld appeals the dismissal of her petition on rehearing in the Nebraska Workmen’s Compensation Court. We affirm.

In October 1983 Vredeveld was employed as a route driver for Gelco Express in Grand Island and was responsible for loading and unloading various items of freight ranging in weight from V2 to 200 pounds. On October 14,1983, Vredeveld was attempting to load a 175-pound gas tank onto her truck when she suffered “sharp pains” in her “right side.” Vredeveld completed the route but, later that day, notified her supervisors of her injury and requested to be temporarily replaced. Gelco refused to grant temporary leave, and Vredeveld continued to drive her route. On October 25 Vredeveld saw her family physician, Dr. Sheridan Anderson, who diagnosed Vredeveld as suffering from an “acute muscle sprain” of the right abdominal muscle, known in medical parlance as the “abdominis rectus.” Anderson recommended that she “stay off work and do no lifting.”

Vredeveld left her employment with Gelco and continued to *365 see Dr. Anderson for treatment. As a result of the injury, Gelco paid Vredeveld benefits for temporary total disability and also paid Vredeveld’s medical expenses. When her temporary disability payments were discontinued on May 13, 1984, Vredeveld filed a petition in the Nebraska Workmen’s Compensation Court claiming “permanent partial disability” resulting from the injury sustained October 14, 1983. In its answer Gelco admitted that Vredeveld had sustained “strained stomach muscles arising out of and in the course of her employment by [Gelco]” but denied Vredeveld’s alleged “permanent partial disability as a result of the strained stomach muscles.”

At the rehearing, Vredeveld described the circumstances surrounding the accident and residual effects of the injury. In particular, Vredeveld described the pain she felt when she carried an item “of any weight at all”: “I have pain in my right side. It starts burning, [I] get muscle spasms. If I do anything that is very strenuous then the left side will pick up on the same thing.” Vredeveld also testified, however, that the symptoms were “not as bad now as they were at the time of the accident.”

Prior to the rehearing, Vredeveld was examined, at Gelco’s request, by Dr. John G. Yost and Dr. A.E. Van Wie. On her own initiative Vredeveld had continued to see Dr. Anderson periodically and had also consulted Dr. Barton Hultine, a self-employed “rehabilitation specialist and vocational expert.” Apart from Vredeveld’s testimony, the evidence presented to the three-judge panel consisted solely of the observations and conclusions of the four doctors.

Dr. Anderson is a general practitioner in Grand Island and was Vredeveld’s family doctor for a few years prior to his initial diagnosis of Vredeveld’s abdominal injury. Anderson testified that Vredeveld had been “disabled from her work” at the time of the initial examination and had continued to suffer “much of the restrictions in her activity that she had at the beginning.” In Anderson’s opinion Vredeveld was burdened with a “degree of disability that would preclude her ability to work at a variety of jobs,” including “the kind of work she was doing before,” for a period of possibly 10 or more years. Although he was not familiar with any manner of fixing a percentage of disability, *366 Anderson testified that if the percentage was based on the kind of work Vredeveld performed for Gelco, her disability was 100 percent.

During cross-examination, Anderson conceded that his conclusions were based solely on Vredeveld’s “subjective complaints” and noted that in this kind of case, “where you can’t look at a lab report,. . . it’s all judgment.” Anderson also admitted that his office notes and records indicated that Vredeveld’s condition had gradually improved from November 1983 to March 1984, culminating in his notation on March 14, 1984, that the tenderness was “less” in the abdominal region.

Dr. Hultine also testified on Vredeveld’s behalf and recited the findings of his “examination” conducted on March 7,1985. Hultine has a doctorate in vocational rehabilitation from the University of Western Colorado but has no “medical background” and no “skill in making any medical determination.” Hultine’s examination consisted of reviewing the medical findings of Anderson and conducting a brief test of Vredeveld’s ability to move, stretch, and bend. Hultine observed that Vredeveld was “unable to carry more than ten pounds without discomfort,” was “very restricted in her ability to bend, to squat, to crawl or to climb, ” and concluded that her future employment was restricted to something “sedentary” in nature.

To rebut testimony from Anderson and Hultine, Gelco offered the testimony of Dr. Yost and Dr. Van Wie. Yost, a specialist in orthopedic surgery, examined Vredeveld on April 26, 1984. After listening to Vredeveld’s history concerning the injury, Yost took x rays of Vredeveld’s dorsal spine, chest, and left shoulder and had her exercise her various joints “through the entire range of motion.” During the exercise portion of the examination, Vredeveld, when prompted by Yost, complained of tenderness in her abdominal region but, nevertheless, was able without complaint “to bend over and touch her toes with rhythmic motion.” Based upon the one examination, Yost felt that Vredeveld’s “subjective complaints were far, far greater than any objective findings” and concluded that she had initially sustained a “sprain of her abdominal muscles” that should have taken a “maximum of about six weeks” to heal. *367 Accordingly, Yost also felt that Vredeveld could “probably perform any and all types of work she so desired.”

On cross-examination Yost was asked to reconcile an apparent discrepancy in his testimony, namely, how he could, more than 7 months after the incident, diagnose Vredeveld as suffering from a sprained abdominal muscle, while stating that any such sprain should have been healed within 6 weeks of the accident. Yost explained that he had found no objective indication that Vredeveld was suffering from a sprain as of April 1984 but had simply “assumed she had a sprain and gave her the benefit of the doubt, by believing what she told [him].” Although conceding that it would be virtually impossible to detect objective signs of a sprained muscle more than 7 months after the initial sprain, Yost stated: “I didn’t think she had anything when I examined her. I thought she’d have been back to work. I could see no reason that this woman had any injury at the time I saw her that would keep her from working.”

Dr. Van Wie, a surgeon, examined Vredeveld on January 14, 1985, and could not find “any basis” for Vredeveld’s “complaint of pain in her abdominal area.” Although he did not actually make a diagnosis, explaining, “I saw her late, after the fact,” Van Wie commented: “I don’t know when this so-called injury occurred, but she had nothing I could base any injury on at this time, other than some subjective complaints.” Van Wie also noted that Vredeveld’s “abdominal musculature was better than the average female for that age.”

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Bluebook (online)
383 N.W.2d 780, 222 Neb. 363, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vredeveld-v-gelco-express-neb-1986.