Washington County School District v. Labor Commission

2015 UT 78, 358 P.3d 1091, 794 Utah Adv. Rep. 118, 2015 Utah LEXIS 224, 2015 WL 5037948
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 2015
DocketNo. 20130847
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2015 UT 78 (Washington County School District v. Labor Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington County School District v. Labor Commission, 2015 UT 78, 358 P.3d 1091, 794 Utah Adv. Rep. 118, 2015 Utah LEXIS 224, 2015 WL 5037948 (Utah 2015).

Opinion

Chief Justice DURRANT,

opinion of the Court:

Introduction

T1 This case concerns the scope of the Utah Workers Compensation Act. Specifically, we are asked to address the causal connection that an employee must establish between an initial workplace injury and a subsequent non-workplace injury in order to recover workers' compensation for the subsequent injury. In January 2008, Steven Brown, suffered a back injury when he fell down the steps of his bus while at work as a school bus driver for the Washington County School District (School District). This injury required medical treatment and eventual spinal surgery. He received workers' compensation for this injury. Subsequently, in September 2007, Mr. Brown was reinjured when a child jumped on his back and knocked him to the ground at a local festival. He required additional spinal surgery for this second injury.

(2 Mr. Brown requested and received workers' compensation for his second injury. The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) with the Utah Labor Commission (Commission) determined that his second injury was causally linked to his workplace injury and awarded benefits,. The School District appealed the ALJ's decision to the Commission, which affirmed. It then appealed to the court of appeals, which also affirmed. The School District presents two issues on appeal.

13 First, it claims the court of appeals erred in determining that the second injury was a natural result of the primary injury and thus compensable under the Utah Workers' Compensation Act. Mr. Brown disagrees. Specifically, the parties argue over what causal connection is required between the primary workplace injury and the subsequent non-workplace injury in order to allow workers' compensation benefits for the see-ond injury. After reviewing the statute and our caselaw, we clarify that under the direct and natural results test we adopted when interpreting the Workers' Compensation Act in Mountain States Casing Services v. McKean,1 the compensable workplace injury must be a significant contributing cause of the subsequent non-workplace injury. We remand to the Commission to decide whether Mr, Brown's injury meets this clarified standard.

T4 Second, the School District challenges the court of appeals' decision affirming the Commission's finding that there were no conflicting medical reports that required submission of the issue of medical causation to a medical panel. Because we have clarified the applicable standard and remand the case to the Commission, we decline to address the School District's second issue. As additional hearings on medical causation will be required, the ALJ will have to decide anew if there are conflicting medical opinions and thus whether a medical panel is appropriate.

Background

15 This case concerns the causal relationship between injuries that resulted from two separate incidents involving Mr. Brown.2 The first incident occurred on January 27, 2008, when Mr, Brown fell down the steps of a school bus and injured his lower back. At the time, he was employed as a school bus driver for the Washington County School District. As a result of the accident, Mr. Brown received pain management and eventually underwent surgery to address "a large extruded dise herniation" on the left side of his lumbar spine. He sought, and was awarded, workers' compensation benefits for this injury and in October 2004, he returned to work driving a school bus for the School District.

T6 Subsequently, on September 1, 2007, Mr. Brown was attending the local "Peach Days" celebration when a child jumped on his back, knocking him to the ground. Following the incident, he experienced "constant [1093]*1093stabbing, burning pain in his lumbar area that radiated from his back all the way down his legs." His treating physicians identified an injury to the right side of his lower back, and he underwent corrective surgery. Mr. Brown filed for workers' compensation benefits, and the School District denied lability, "assert[ing] that Brown had sustained a subsequent non-industrial intervening accident . over four years after the industrial accident, for which [it] did not have workers' compensation lability." An ALJ with the Labor Commission held a hearing and concluded that "all medical evidence support[ed] a finding that the prior industrial dise injury was a contributing cause to the outcome and injury resulting from the festival incident." The School District appealed this decision to the Commission, which affirmed the ALJ's decision. It then appealed to the court of appeals, which affirmed the Commission's decision.3 Below, we review the medical evidence and then discuss the parties' arguments on appeal.

17 Following Mr. Brown's fall from the bus in January 2003, he was treated for left-side lower-back pain by Dr. Dale Stott. Dr. Stott attempted to manage his pain with various procedures, including steroid injections and a nerve block. But Mr. Brown continued to experience back pain and was referred to a spinal surgeon, Dr. Mark Ka-bins. In August 2004, Mr. Brown was given an MRI and Dr. Kabins concluded based on the MRI that he was suffering from a large disk herniation and sequestration in his lower spine at L4/5-the fluid between these disks had ruptured, been squeezed out, and separated from the main part of the disk. In late August 2004, Dr. Kabins performed surgery on the left side of Mr. Brown's lower spine to repair this damage. In postoperative examinations, Dr. Kabins noted that Mr. Brown "does have intermittent back discomfort, but is clearly improved and stable." Dr. Kabins prescribed pain medication and treated Mr. Brown again for a flare-up of back discomfort in mid-October 2004. But three weeks later, Dr. Kabins reported that Mr. Brown was "doing well with minimal discomfort." Mr. Brown returned to work for the School District as a bus driver in October 2004.

T8 Mr. Brown did not seek medical attention for his back for more than two years. But in March 2007, Mr. Brown visited Dr. Stott and reported low back pain and pain and numbness in his left leg. He indicated that this pain had existed during the prior two years and that he suffered daily. Dr. Stott diagnosed Mr. Brown with "Failed Back Surgery Syndrome" and "[pJrobable recurrent dise herniation," and ordered an MRI. The March 2007 MRI revealed a reoc-currence of issues at the previous injury site. Specifically, it showed an L4/5 recurrent dise extrusion, meaning that the disk had ruptured and fluid had been excreted. The MRI indicated that this injury was also affecting the right side of Mr. Brown's spine. The radiology report found that the dise extrusion had mildly compromised both the lateral recesses, the area within the spinal canal on either side of the spine, and the right neuro-foramen, the opening on the right side of the vertebra that allows nerves to pass from the spinal cord to other parts of the body. Dr. Stott tried to manage Mr. Brown's pain with steroid injections in April and May 2007.

T 9 In addition to the March 2007 flare-up, Mr. Brown "testified that he never recovered from the January 27, 2008 accident and was always stiff and sore and would have flair [sic] ups that required pain medication." This pain medication was covered by workers' compensation.

T10 Four months after receiving steroid injections for his back pain, Mr. Brown was injured while attending a local festival when a child jumped onto his back, knocking him to the ground. Mr. Brown did not see, and could not identify, the child who jumped on him.

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Bluebook (online)
2015 UT 78, 358 P.3d 1091, 794 Utah Adv. Rep. 118, 2015 Utah LEXIS 224, 2015 WL 5037948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-county-school-district-v-labor-commission-utah-2015.