Walmart, Inc. v. Gallagher

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 24, 2022
DocketN21A-07-003 PRW
StatusPublished

This text of Walmart, Inc. v. Gallagher (Walmart, Inc. v. Gallagher) 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
Walmart, Inc. v. Gallagher, (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

WALMART, INC., ) Employer-Below, ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. N21A-07-003 PRW ) PAMELA GALLAGHER, ) Claimant-Below, ) Appellee, )

Submitted: February 24, 2022 Decided: May 24, 2022

Upon Walmart Inc.’s Appeal from the Industrial Accident Board, AFFIRMED.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Maria Paris Newell, Esquire, HECKLER AND FRABIZZIO, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Appellant Walmart, Inc.

Gary S. Nitsche, Esquire, and Joel H. Fredericks, Esquire, WEIK NITSCHE & DOUGHERTY LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Appellee Pamela Gallagher.

WALLACE, J. Walmart, Inc. files this appeal from Industrial Accident Board’s (the “Board”

or “IAB”) grant of Pamela Gallagher’s Petition to Determine Additional

Compensation Due. The Court finds the Board’s decision is supported by substantial

evidence and is free from legal error. Accordingly, the Board’s decision is

AFFIRMED.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Pamela Gallagher worked for Walmart for approximately five years.1 Her job

required her to unload trucks, bend down and lift boxes, and break down boxes.2

During her shift on June 13, 2018, Ms. Gallagher “bent over at one point and . . . felt

excruciating pain in [her] lower back.”3 She was immediately “stuck in a bent over

position.”4 The pain concentrated in her low back and radiated into her right thigh.5

Ms. Gallagher was taken by ambulance to the Saint Francis Hospital emergency

room for evaluation and treatment.

In the ambulance, Ms. Gallagher told the EMT’s that she thought she was

1 Transcript of Apr. 23, 2021 IAB Hearing at 10 (marked as “Tab 2” in the IAB Record; hereinafter “Hr’g Tr.”), Walmart v. Gallagher, N21A-07-003 PRW, Aug. 13, 2021 (D.I. 5). 2 Id. 3 Id. at 11. 4 Id. 5 Id. at 12.

-2- suffering a flare up from a prior “sciatica” issue.6 Ms. Gallagher’s sciatica began

after the birth of her son, more than thirty years before.7 She described the sciatica

symptoms as gradual, inconsistent pain that came and went, mainly affecting her

buttocks area.8 Before June 13, 2018, her sciatica would flare up and go away in a

short period of time.9 This condition did not impede her ability to work, and

Ms. Gallagher did not recall receiving any specific medical treatment—other than

one spinal injection—over the years for her sciatica.10 According to Ms. Gallagher,

the sciatica symptoms and the pain resulting from the June 13, 2018 incident weren’t

the same.11

After being discharged from Saint Francis, Walmart sent Ms. Gallagher to

Concentra to treat the work injury and coordinate her continued care.12 While at

Concentra, Ms. Gallagher participated in physical therapy, completed a battery of

6 Id. at 12. 7 Id. 8 Id. at 12-13. 9 Id. at 16. 10 Id. at 13-14. Other than one prior back injection, Ms. Gallagher did not receive any other therapeutic, medical, chiropractic or other treatment for sciatica. Id. at 14. 11 See id. at 25-26, 32-33, 45-46, 48-50. 12 Id. at 14-15. Concentra medical records reflect Ms. Gallagher reported a “prior history of sciatica with some involvement to the left thigh.” Id. at 15.

-3- chiropractic treatments, and underwent an MRI.13 After receiving the MRI results,

Concentra referred Ms. Gallagher to Dr. Selina Xing, M.D. Dr. Xing recommended

that Ms. Gallagher receive a back injection—a selective nerve root block.14

Concurrently, Concentra referred Ms. Gallagher to a neurologist at Christiana Care

to “confirm the need for . . . the [selective nerve root block] injections.”15 After

completing an examination, the neurologist agreed with the reasonableness and

necessity of the nerve root block injection.16 During the month of December 2018,

Dr. Xing performed the selective nerve root block procedure.17

That provided Ms. Gallagher temporary relief but about five months later

Ms. Gallagher’s pain returned to its pre-procedure level.18 In June 2019, Dr. Xing

repeated the selective nerve root procedure.19 Like the first injection, this second

procedure provided Ms. Gallagher short-term relief. But after six months,

Ms. Gallagher’s pain returned.20

13 Id. at 15. 14 Id. at 16. 15 Id. at 16-17. 16 Id. at 17. 17 Id. 18 Id. 19 Id. at 17-18. All of Ms. Gallagher’s workers’ compensation claims were processed and paid by Walmart’s workers’ compensation carrier. Id. at 18. 20 Id. at 18.

-4- In early 2020, Ms. Gallagher’s pain became worse than it had been prior to

the selective nerve block injections.21 She tried acupuncture but that didn’t relieve

her back pain.22 Dr. Xing recommended, for a third time, that Ms. Gallagher repeat

the selective nerve root block procedure.23 Soon thereafter, she performed that

procedure. Just as with the first two injections, Ms. Gallagher received only

temporary relief.24 Approximately six months after the third try, Ms. Gallagher’s

pain returned. So Dr. Xing referred Ms. Gallagher to Dr. Mark Eskander, a board-

certified orthopedic spine surgeon.25

On October 1, 2020, Dr. Eskander recommended that Ms. Gallagher undergo

spinal fusion surgery and classified Ms. Gallagher as totally disabled pending

surgery.26 Ms. Gallagher agreed to the surgery but it was postponed because

Walmart’s workers’ compensation insurance carrier declined to pay for it.27

Up to this point in Ms. Gallagher’s treatment, Walmart never contested that

Ms. Gallagher suffered a work-related injury on June 13, 2018, or that any given

21 Id. at 19. 22 Id. at 20. 23 Id. at 20-21. 24 Id. at 21. 25 Id. at 21. Ms. Gallagher’s last day of work had been August 27, 2020. Id. at 28. 26 Id. at 22. 27 Id. at 22-23.

-5- treatment or procedure wasn’t both necessary and appropriate. Indeed, Walmart

paid for all treatments related to the June 2018 work injury—until Dr. Eskander

recommended spinal fusion surgery.

On October 29, 2020, Ms. Gallagher filed a Petition to Determine Additional

Compensation Due to an Insured Employee. Ms. Gallagher claimed she was entitled

to total disability benefits, payment of medical expenses, including the surgery

recommended by Dr. Eskander, and attorney’s fees.

The Industrial Accident Board conducted a hearing on Ms. Gallagher’s

petition. Prior to the hearing, the Parties submitted a stipulation of facts to the Board.

Through that stipulation, the parties agreed that: (1) Ms. Gallagher had sustained a

compensable injury to her low back as a result of a June 13, 2018 work-related

accident while working for Walmart; (2) Ms. Gallagher had filed a Petition to

Determine Additional Compensation Due “seeking payment of all medical expenses

and periods of disability associated with the low back surgery proposed by Dr. Mark

Eskander;” and, (3) Walmart disputed the reasonableness, necessity and causal

relationship of the low back surgery to the June 13th work-related accident.28

After a comprehensive review of the evidence presented at the hearing, the

Board granted Ms. Gallagher’s Petition for Additional Compensation Due.

28 Joint Stipulation of Facts (marked as “Tab 7” in the IAB Record; hereinafter “Jt. Stip.”), Walmart v. Gallagher, N21A-07-003 PRW, Aug. 13, 2021 (D.I. 5).

-6- The Board reviewed Ms. Gallagher’s medical records beyond those relevant to her

present injury and considered the medical expert testimony offered through the

depositions of both Dr. Eskander and Walmart’s expert, Dr. Andrew Gelman.

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