White v. HB & G Building Products, Inc.

68 So. 3d 155, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 240, 2010 WL 3290979
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedAugust 20, 2010
Docket2090323
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 So. 3d 155 (White v. HB & G Building Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. HB & G Building Products, Inc., 68 So. 3d 155, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 240, 2010 WL 3290979 (Ala. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

THOMPSON, Presiding Judge.

Jeff White appeals from a judgment finding that White’s former employer, HB & G Building Products, Inc. (“HB & G”), was no longer obligated to pay workers’ compensation benefits for a knee injury White had suffered while working for HB & G. The basis for the trial court’s judgment was its finding that, while working for a subsequent employer, White aggravated his knee injury rather than having a recurrence of that preexisting injury.

The record indicates the following. White was employed by HB & G as a work-release inmate. On January 22, 2007, he slipped and fell while at work, dislocating his right knee. HB & G authorized Dr. Tai Q. Chung to treat White’s knee and paid the attendant medical expenses. It also paid White workers’ compensation benefits.

Dr. Chung, who testified by deposition, said he first treated White’s right-knee injury on January 31, 2007, at which time he diagnosed White with patella dislocation. He noted that White had been able to push his patella back into place himself. An MRI was performed on White’s right knee on February 7, 2007. Dr. Chung said that the MRI indicated that White’s right kneecap had “come out or was half coming out” and that there was a probable tear in the soft tissue around the kneecap. Based upon the results of the MRI, Dr. Chung asked White to wear a brace to protect the kneecap and to do exercises to build up the muscles surrounding the kneecap.

[157]*157White continued to see Dr. Chung for treatment throughout the spring of 2007. At White’s April 9 visit, Dr. Chung determined that the right kneecap was no longer moving and that there was no knot on the medial side, or inside, of the knee. Dr. Chung said that White’s knee had healed to the point where White could return to regular duty at work, without restriction. White returned to regular duty for HB & G on April 10.

White next saw Dr. Chung on May 7, 2007. At that time, Dr. Chung said, White’s knee was no longer coming out of place, there was no laxity in the kneecap, and White had full range of motion in his right knee. However, White told Dr. Chung that his knee was still “swollen, aching, and popping.” Dr. Chung told White that the knee was healing and refused to operate on it. White was not satisfied with Dr. Chung’s treatment and requested a second opinion, which Dr. Chung said he encouraged. May 7, 2007, was the last time Dr. Chung saw White. In July 2007, White selected Dr. Dexter Walcott, pursuant to the procedure set forth in § 25-5-77(a), Ala. Code 1975, to replace Dr. Chung. White’s first appointment with Dr. Walcott was not until October 2, 2007.

In the midst of seeking a second opinion regarding the treatment of his knee injury, White asked Sgt. Ward, one of his correctional officers, if he could change jobs. He did not say what prompted his desire to change jobs. Regardless, White said that he left HB & G in May or June 2007 and began a new job at Cutt’s Restaurant (“Cutt’s”). White worked at Cutt’s part time from June 2007 until January 2008; he worked there full time from January 2008 to June 2008. His duties at Cutt’s included washing dishes, emptying the trash, cleaning the kitchen at the end of the day, mopping, and sweeping. Much of his job at Cutt’s required him to stand on a concrete floor. While working at Cutt’s, White said, his knee would swell and ache “every day,” and he developed leg cramps from standing. He also said that his knee hurt worse after standing for long periods.

When White first saw Dr. Walcott in October 2007, he complained that his right knee “felt loose” and that he felt something “slipping around inside his knee.” When providing his history to Dr. Walcott, White attributed his knee problems to the January 22, 2007, fall that occurred while he was working for HB & G, and he said that he had not had any other accidents since that fall. During Dr. Walcott’s initial examination of White, he discovered a knot in the medial part of White’s knee; however, Dr. Walcott said, he did not believe that the knee felt mobile. White was “apprehensive” when Dr. Walcott pushed his kneecap laterally, which, Dr. Walcott testified, is the way a kneecap will usually dislocate, and White’s kneecap tilted slightly to one side, which is typical for someone who has a kneecap problem, Dr. Walcott said, but he did not find that White had any laxity in the ligaments in the sides of his right knee. Dr. Walcott also noted that White had a small amount of swelling in his right knee.

As part of his initial examination, Dr. Walcott also reviewed the February 7, 2007, MRI and X-rays taken of White’s knee. He said White’s X-rays showed a tilting of the patella and an “irregular appearance on the medial, or inside, part of his patella, or kneecap, which sometimes can be where a piece of bone could be chipped off or ligament pulled off of your patella.” The MRI indicated that White had swelling in his soft tissue around the right knee. Dr. Walcott said that he also saw what he “thought might be a loose body, loose piece of cartilage or bone, floating around in [the] suprapatellar [158]*158pouch just above [White’s] kneecap.” Based upon his examination, and the fact that White’s problems had persisted since January 2007, Dr. Walcott suggested that White was a good candidate for surgery.

In his deposition, Dr. Walcott testified that, after his October 2, 2007, examination of White, White’s case manager at HB & G’s workers’ compensation carrier provided him with paperwork asking whether he had an opinion as to whether White had reinjured his right knee, had aggravated his right-knee injury, or had sustained a new injury since leaving his job at HB & G. Dr. Walcott said that, although he circled the word “aggravated” on the form, he did not think the question was well worded, so he included a paragraph in which he stated that it was possible that White had aggravated his knee injury but that it was also possible that White had reinjured his knee. He noted that, at the time he was asked to make that determination, he had seen White only once and he could not say whether White’s knee problem was a reinjury or an aggravation; Dr. Walcott said, “I think it could have been a continuation of his symptoms from his original injury.” During his deposition, Dr. Walcott also testified, however, that White’s knee problems could have been aggravated by the physical requirements of his job at Cutt’s. Dr. Walcott candidly testified that he “really [did not] know” whether White’s right-knee problem was an old injury, a new injury, an aggravation, or a recurrence.

After considering the evidence and the arguments of the parties, the trial court determined that the medial knot and patella apprehension in White’s right knee were new findings and that, according to Dr. Chung’s records on White, they had not been present when White left HB & G’s employment. Accordingly, citing the “last-injurious-exposure rule,” the trial court found that the activities in which White had engaged in the course of his employment with Cutt’s had aggravated a preexisting condition and that, therefore, HB & G was no longer responsible for White’s workers’ compensation benefits. White appeals.

White asserts that the material facts in this case were not in dispute; thus, he says, the trial court’s judgment is essentially a summary judgment entered in favor of HB & G. White urges this court to use the standard of review applicable to an appeal from a summary judgment rather than the standard used to review a judgment entered in a workers’ compensation action.

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Bluebook (online)
68 So. 3d 155, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 240, 2010 WL 3290979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-hb-g-building-products-inc-alacivapp-2010.