Wallin, Wallace v. PepsiCo

2015 TN WC 51
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedMay 18, 2015
Docket2014-02-0050
StatusPublished

This text of 2015 TN WC 51 (Wallin, Wallace v. PepsiCo) 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
Wallin, Wallace v. PepsiCo, 2015 TN WC 51 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

FILED May 18,20 15

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Tim e: 10:57 A.' l

COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION

EMPLOYEE: WALLACE WALLIN DOCKET#: 2014-02-0050 STATE FILE#: 83254-2014 EMPLOYER: PEPSICO DATE OF INJURY: 10/14/2014

INSURANCE CARRIER: INDEMNITY INS. CO. OF NA

CLAIMS MGT: SEDGWICK

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER

THIS CAUSE came before the undersigned Workers' Compensation Judge on May 8, 2015, upon the Request for Expedited Hearing filed by Wallace Wallin (Mr. Wallin), the employee, on February 23, 2015, pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-239 to determine if the Employer, PEPSICO (Pepsi), is obligated to provide temporary partial disability benefits. Ms. Jill Talley represented Mr. Wallin. Mr. Ned Babb represented Pepsi. Considering the applicable law, testimony of the witnesses, documentary evidence, argument of counsel and the technical record, this Court finds that Mr. Wallin is not entitled to the requested disability benefits.

ANALYSIS

Issue

Whether Mr. Wallin is entitled to temporary partial disability benefits from November 10, 2014, through February 1, 2015.

Evidence Submitted

The following witnesses testified:

• Mr. Wallin • Ms. Lobrane Greene-Transportation Supervisor.

The Court designated the following as the technical record:

• Petition for Benefit Determination

1 • Dispute Certification Notice • Request for Expedited Hearing.

The Court did not consider attachments to the above filings unless admitted into evidence during the Expedited Hearing. The Court considered factual statements in the above filings as allegations unless established by the evidence.

The Court admitted the following into evidence:

• Exhibit 1: Affidavit ofMr. Wallin (2 pages) • Exhibit 2: Affidavit of Rachel Still, Quality Manager (2 pages) • Exhibit 3: Medical Records (238 pages).

Stipulations of the Parties

The Parties agreed to the following stipulated facts:

• The only period of temporary partial disability in question is November 10, 2014, through February 1, 2015: • Dr. John Reynolds, the authorized treating physician (ATP), released Mr. Wallin for work with a restriction of no use of his left arm for the period in question. • Mr. Wallin's compensation rate is $731.82.

History of Claim

Mr. Wallin worked as a transport driver for Pepsi. He performed no other duties for Pepsi prior to his injury. He suffered an injury to his left mm and other body parts in a motor vehicle accident on October 14, 2014. Pepsi accepted compensability ofthe claim and provided medical and temporary disability benefits.

Pepsi provides transitional duty to its injured employees to facilitate recovery by offering employees light-duty work according to the employees' work-restrictions.

Dr. Reynolds initially placed Mr. Wallin off work following surgery on October 20,2014, but he modified Mr. Wallin's restriction to no use of his left arm on Friday, October 31, 2014. Dr. Reynolds prescribed pain medication following the surgery, but Mr. Wallin testified that he did not take the medicine as prescribed because he felt he could not work while taking the medicine.

Mr. Wallin did not work over the weekend but reported to work on Monday, November 3, 2014. He gave his work restriction to Ms. Greene. Mr. Wallin initially sat in the conference room for two to three hours, and then Ms. Greene brought him a short stack of citations to sort. Mr. Wallin sat at a table as he sorted the citations. He testified that he had trouble sorting the papers using only one hand, so he used his left hand "to hold down the papers and stuff." Ms. Greene testified that she observed Mr. Wallin holding a coffee cup in his left hand during the same time period.

2 After he sorted the citations, Ms. Greene sent Mr. Wallin to Ms. Rachel Still, quality manager, for additional work. Ms. Still asked Mr. Wallin to sort paperwork. Mr. Wallin testified that he had the same problem holding the paperwork that he had with the citations. Mr. Wallin also made copies on a copying machine but did not use his left arm to make those copies.

On November 4, 2014, Mr. Wallin reported to Ms. Still. She asked him to inspect empty, plastic, twenty- (20) ounce bottles. Mr. Wall in testified that Ms. Still asked him to hold the bottle up to the sunlight and mark the impurities in the bottle with his other hand. Mr. Wallin testified that he could not perform the task because it caused pain in his left arm to hold and mark the bottles. He made a comment to others in the room that his arm hurt. Later in the day, Ms. Still asked Mr. Wallin to file paperwork in a filing cabinet. Mr. Wallin testified that he had to use one arm to separate the files while he used the other hand to place the paperwork in the files. Mr. Wallin testified that he told Ms. Still that he had to use his left arm to file the paperwork, and that Ms. Still replied, "Do the best you can."

Later on November 4, Mr. Wallin reported to Nancy Meeker, supply chain coordinator, for further work assignment. Ms. Meeker asked Mr. Wallin to follow the janitor and wipe a countertop or mirror with his right hand. Mr. Wallin testified that his injured fingers and hand began to swell that afternoon.

On November 5, 2014, Mr. Wallin filed paperwork for Ms. Still. Mr. Wallin testified that he had to use his left arm to do the filing.

On November 6, 2014, Mr. Wallin filed paperwork. He told Wayne Bevins, a co-worker, that his arm hmt. Mr. Wallin spoke to Ms. Greene about his arm after he finished filing. He told her that he had tried to call Dr. Reynolds on two occasions because his arm hurt. Ms. Greene told him that if his arm hurt that badly, he ought to go to the doctor, so Mr. Wallin left work and went to Dr. Reynolds' office. Dr. Reynolds was not there. His staff scheduled Mr. Wallin an appointment with Dr. Reynolds for the following morning (Ex. 3, page 133).

Mr. Wallin saw Dr. Reynolds on November 7, 2014. Mr. Wallin told Dr. Reynolds that he had noticed drainage from his wound and suffered pain, " .... not in the forearm, but mostly in the posterior left chest wall just below the scapula (Ex. 3, page 109)." Dr. Reynolds sent Mr. Wallin for aCT scan of his thorax region and took Mr. Wallin off work until his next appointment (Ex. 3, page 110).

Mr. Wallin returned to Dr. Reynolds on November 10, 2014, and primarily complained of pain in his thorax area. Dr. Reynolds ordered physical therapy for the affected area. Concerning Mr. Wallin's forearm, Dr. Reynolds advised continued use of a brace and encouraged Mr. Wallin to work on active range of motion (Ex. 3, pages 107-8). Mr. Wallin called Ms. Greene after his appointment and told her that Dr. Reynolds had not changed his work restriction. Mr. Wallin also told Ms. Greene that he had used his left arm the prior week at work.

After November 10, 2014, Mr. Wallin did not return to work except for a few days in

3 1 December. He called work every day, spoke to Ms. Greene, and told her "he could not handle it that day."

On December 15, 2014, Mr. Wallin returned to Dr. Reynolds. Dr. Reynolds recommended that a spine specialist examine him (Ex. 3, page 197). Dr. Reynolds made the same recommendation on January 12,2015 (Ex. 3, page 196). Dr. Reynolds's focus was Mr. Wallin's neck and shoulder. His arm had continued to heal, and he could move it well (Ex. 3, page 103). Mr. Wallin saw Dr. Patrick Bolt's physician assistant, Ashley Self(PA Self), on February 2, 2015. PA Self excused Mr. Wallin from work. Pepsi has paid Mr. Wallin temporary total disability benefits since that date.

Ms.

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2015 TN WC 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallin-wallace-v-pepsico-tennworkcompcl-2015.