White, Shalanda v. Federal Express Corp.

2025 TN WC App. 8
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedMarch 6, 2025
Docket2021-08-1065
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 TN WC App. 8 (White, Shalanda v. Federal Express Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White, Shalanda v. Federal Express Corp., 2025 TN WC App. 8 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

FILED Mar 06, 2025 03:00 PM(CT) TENNESSEE WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Shalanda White ) Docket No. 2021-08-1065 ) v. ) State File No. 2571-2021 ) Federal Express Corp., et al. ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Heard January 21, 2025 Compensation Claims ) in Jackson, TN Shaterra R. Marion, Judge )

Reversed and Remanded

In this compensation appeal, the employee argues the trial court erred in determining she did not give sufficient notice of her alleged gradual injury. Prior to reporting a work-related injury, the employee had suffered from pain in both knees for a period of time and had received medical treatment on her own. After reporting to her physician that she had suffered an increase in symptoms while at work, her physician referred her to a specialist. After attending several appointments with a specialist and undergoing objective testing, the specialist reviewed the results of the objective testing with the employee and recommended surgery in both knees. The employee then gave written notice of her injury to her manager. The employer initially denied the claim based on a lack of evidence of medical causation. It later raised a notice defense, contending the employee knew or should have known she had a work-related injury causing permanent physical impairment more than fifteen days before she provided written notice. After a trial, the court found the employee knew or should have known she had a work-related cumulative trauma injury more than fifteen days prior to her written notice of injury and was therefore barred from receiving compensation. The employee has appealed. Upon careful consideration of the record and arguments of counsel, we reverse the trial court’s decision and remand the case.

Judge Meredith B. Weaver delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board in which Presiding Judge Timothy W. Conner and Judge Pele I. Godkin joined.

Christopher L. Taylor, Memphis, Tennessee, for the employee-appellant, Shalanda White

Stephen P. Miller and Joseph B. Baker, Memphis, Tennessee, for the employer-appellee, Federal Express Corp.

1 Factual and Procedural History

Shalanda White (“Employee”) began working part-time for Federal Express Corp. (“Employer”) in December 2004 as a package handler. Eventually, she became a full-time team leader on offload. Employee described her job duties in this position as follows: “I was on a bed of rollers, pushing and pulling containers, 3,000 pounds plus, with one other employee at that particular time. I was pushing freight uphill. . . . And I was on my knees in the plane, maneuvering freight and loading up to 2,000 pounds.”

On October 20, 2020, Employee had a telehealth visit with her family physician, Dr. Lyle G. Bohlman, with complaints of ankle pain and swelling and pain in her right knee. Employee provided a history of a swollen knee “x 3 days” and “states [she] was exercising when it started swelling and hurting.” Employee indicated she had “some ankle pain and some [r]ight knee pain when [she] got off work [and] she had a swollen knee since yesterday.” She denied having suffered any known injury, and Dr. Bohlman noted Employee had “known [degenerative joint disease (“DJD”)] and considerable weight load in the knee.” Dr. Bohlman diagnosed Employee with primary osteoarthritis of the right knee, stating it was due to “probable overuse with knee DJD flare” and prescribed an anti- inflammatory.

Employee returned to Dr. Bohlman on November 2, 2020, stating she still had “right knee swelling with sharp pain located behind the right knee” and “now her left knee is swollen.” She indicated her knee pain “has not improved much” but was better with rest, ice, and elevation. Employee also stated the pain “reoccurred at work” and noted the pain was now in both knees. Dr. Bohlman reiterated his diagnosis of osteoarthritis in the right knee, prescribed a steroid, and referred Employee to an orthopedist. He did not assign work restrictions at either appointment.

On November 9, 2020, Employee saw Physician’s Assistant Sarah Hill at OrthoSouth. 1 At that time, Employee reported a long history of knee pain in the left knee and pain in the right knee for “about a month.” She stated she had been “doing a lot of walking and thinks that this probably flared it up.” Ms. Hill obtained X-rays of both knees, which indicated “extensive medial and patellofemoral compartment arthritis with bone on bone contact” in the left knee and “mild patellofemoral arthritis” in the right knee. Ms. Hill diagnosed unilateral primary osteoarthritis in the left knee and joint effusion in the right knee, stating, “We have gone over the natural history of arthritis of the knee and have explained to them that this is not a systemic disease and is typically related to overuse and just advanced age. . . .” Ms. Hill went on to state there “are many causes of effusion of the knee. Some of the more common causes include osteoarthritis, bursitis, or infection.” She noted that the history of the joint effusion depends on the underlying cause of fluid

1 In its compensation order, the trial court inadvertently stated it was Dr. Bohlman who “detailed [Employee’s] cumulative issues” and “ordered x-rays” on November 9 rather than Ms. Hill at OrthoSouth. 2 accumulation, observing that for some, “effusions can be recurrent whereas for others an effusion may occur once in response to an isolated trauma.” Ms. Hill discussed treatment options, including medications, injections, physical therapy and, in the case of the left knee, a possible total knee replacement. She also noted that “[f]or those with advanced arthritic disease causing the effusion, surgery may be required to correct the problem.” Employee elected to receive an injection in the left knee and aspiration of and an injection in the right knee, and Ms. Hill released Employee with instructions to “rest” for a week and return if there was no improvement in a few weeks.

On November 23, 2020, Employee returned to OrthoSouth with continued complaints of knee pain and saw Dr. Timothy Krahn. Dr. Krahn agreed with Ms. Hill that Employee suffered from primary osteoarthritis of the left knee, but, in the impression portion of the medical note, he listed an “acute meniscal tear in the right knee” and stated, “[t]he meniscus can become torn through sporting activities or can be associated with the degenerative aging process.” Dr. Krahn provided numerous possible treatment options including medications, injections, and a possible knee replacement for the left knee and referred Employee for an MRI of the right knee to confirm the presence of a meniscal tear. Employee opted for a series of injections in the left knee.

The right knee MRI took place on November 30, 2020. Employee attended a telehealth visit with her primary care physician, Dr. Bohlman, on December 7, 2020, at which she told him that she had an appointment at OrthoSouth to go over her MRI results the following week and that the injections had provided minimal relief. Employee indicated she “continue[d] to have swelling and pain with limited [range of motion] of the knees and [an] inability to stand for hours at a time.” Dr. Bohlman diagnosed Employee with primary osteoarthritis of both knees and wrote a work restriction of “limited ability to stand for more than [two] hours the next [two] months.”

On December 14, 2020, Employee saw Ms. Hill to review her MRI results. Ms. Hill advised the MRI did reveal a complex tear of the right medial meniscus. On December 18, 2020, four days later, Employee sent an email to her supervisor, Londell Owens, stating:

This is an official notification of injury . . . Approximate date of injury is 11/02/2020.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 TN WC App. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-shalanda-v-federal-express-corp-tennworkcompapp-2025.