Wiedel v. Lucile Duerr Hair Styling

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 14, 2017
DocketA-17-304
StatusPublished

This text of Wiedel v. Lucile Duerr Hair Styling (Wiedel v. Lucile Duerr Hair Styling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiedel v. Lucile Duerr Hair Styling, (Neb. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

WIEDEL V. LUCILE DUERR HAIR STYLING

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

CATHERINE WIEDEL, APPELLANT, V.

LUCILE DUERR HAIR STYLING, INC., AND ITS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION INSURER, THE PHOENIX INSURANCE COMPANY, APPELLEES.

Filed November 14, 2017. No. A-17-304.

Appeal from the Workers’ Compensation Court: J. JOHN R. HOFFERT, Judge. Affirmed. Christa Binstock Israel, of Atwood, Holsten, Brown, Deaver & Spier Law Firm, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant. Dennis R. Riekenberg and Patrick B. Donahue, of Cassem, Tierney, Adams, Gotch & Douglas, for appellees.

PIRTLE, RIEDMANN, and ARTERBURN, Judges. RIEDMANN, Judge. INTRODUCTION Catherine Wiedel appeals the award of the Workers’ Compensation Court which concluded, relevant to this appeal, that she sustained a 25-percent loss of earning capacity. Wiedel argues that the compensation court erred in using the incorrect hub community from which to determine her loss of earning capacity, failed to accept the parties’ stipulation with respect to her permanent physical restrictions, and erroneously determined that the applicable statutory presumption of correctness had not been overcome. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

-1- BACKGROUND Wiedel was an employee of Lucile Duerr Hair Styling, Inc. (Lucile Duerr) when she sustained a work-related injury in April 2009. She filed a petition in the compensation court in July 2014, and trial on the relevant issues was held in August 2016. Wiedel was born in 1943 and became a licensed cosmetologist in 1962. She spent her entire career working as a hair stylist. At the time of injury, she was working full-time as a hair stylist and occasionally as a receptionist for Lucile Duerr in Lincoln, Nebraska. Following the accident, Wiedel was unable to work until approximately September 2009 at which time she returned for 4 hours per day and gradually increased her time until she regained full-time status. According to Wiedel, she initially had some difficulty physically performing her job duties upon her return to work, but ultimately she was able to return to a full-time schedule earning the same wage and could perform her usual and customary job tasks with minimal difficulties. In July 2013, Wiedel elected to retire from Lucile Duerr and move to Hebron, Nebraska in order to be closer to her family. Between September 2009 and July 2013, there were never days where she was physically unable to perform her job duties at Lucile Duerr. After moving to Hebron, Wiedel accepted a job as a hair stylist at an assisted living facility working approximately 28 hours per week. Wiedel testified at trial that she is happy working fewer hours and wanted to do so because she wanted to “take it easy.” She looked for other jobs in Hebron, but at those jobs, she also planned to work just 28 to 30 hours per week. The parties stipulated that Wiedel suffered numerous injuries as a result of the April 2009 work accident and sustained the permanent physical restrictions set forth in a March 2010 functional capacity evaluation (FCE) report. According to the FCE report, Wiedel is employable at the sedentary-light physical demand classification on a full-time basis. She is not qualified for up to constant standing or walking but is qualified for up to constant sitting. Kneeling and crawling were not recommended. The parties agreed to allow vocational counselor, Michelle Holtz, conduct a loss of earning capacity analysis on Wiedel. Holtz authored her initial report in December 2011, when Wiedel was still residing in Lincoln. Holtz noted that Wiedel had returned to full-time employment following the accident and had reported to Holtz that for the most part she was able to perform her usual and customary job duties with minimal difficulties. Wiedel informed Holtz at that time that she planned to continue working for Lucile Duerr, and Holtz found that if Wiedel was capable of maintaining her employment at Lucile Duerr, she would have no loss of wage. Holtz determined that the restrictions set forth in the March 2010 FCE alone would preclude Wiedel from returning to all cosmetology jobs unless an employer was willing to make accommodations, and as a result, Wiedel had lost access to a number of jobs that were previously available to her and some prospective employers may view her as a less competitive job candidate due to her disability and restrictions. Holtz concluded, however, that when considering the restrictions in the FCE and Wiedel’s actual capabilities, Wiedel sustained a 25-percent loss of earning capacity based on jobs in the Lincoln labor market. After Wiedel relocated to Hebron, Holtz was asked for an updated analysis based on the Hebron labor market. Holtz concluded in a report dated September 2014 that her calculation of a 25-percent loss of earning capacity remained unchanged based on the southeastern Nebraska labor

-2- market. In January and April 2016, she reiterated her opinion that as a result of the work-related accident, Wiedel was employable but suffered a 25-percent loss of earning capacity regardless of whether the Lincoln, Nebraska or southeastern Nebraska labor market area was utilized. Wiedel asked Helen Long to perform a rebuttal loss of earning capacity analysis in May 2016. Long’s report noted that as a result of Wiedel’s reduced physical ability, she was no longer able to perform her chosen career as it is customarily performed in a competitive workplace. The report also stated that Wiedel has identified a position at a small, rural long-term care facility that allows her the opportunity to practice her profession and to accommodate her occasional frequent standing restriction, and Long concluded that were it not for this unique, one-of-a-kind situation, Wiedel would be unable to utilize her cosmetology skills. Long therefore opined that Wiedel sustained a 100-percent loss of earning power as a result of her April 2009 injury. In response to Long’s opinion, Holtz authored a final report in June 2016. Therein, she observed that Wiedel had returned to work at Lucile Duerr in her usual and customary position after her injury. Holtz recognized that Wiedel was implementing some self-modifications in her work setting, but noted that Wiedel had advised her that she was capable of performing her usual and customary job with minimal difficulties and she had no plans to seek alternate employment. Holtz noted that Wiedel was physically capable of working on a full-time basis in a commercial hair styling environment following her work injury and could have continued to do so had she not elected to retire from her position and relocate to Hebron to be closer to her family. Therefore, Holtz’s opinion of a 25-percent loss of earning capacity remained the same. Following trial, the compensation court issued an award in favor of Wiedel. The award specifically stated that the court had carefully and critically analyzed all of the reports by Holtz and Long and concluded that the statutory presumption of correctness attached to Holtz’s opinion had not been overcome. The court observed that the principle points of contention between Holtz and Long concerned Wiedel’s capacity to perform the physical duties associated with her occupation as a hair stylist and whether Lincoln or Hebron was the appropriate hub community for loss of earning power purposes. As to the first issue, the court noted and accepted the parties’ stipulation regarding the FCE findings but also found noteworthy Wiedel’s admission that she was essentially physically capable of performing the job she held prior to her injury. The court found Wiedel to be very credible and found her testimony highly relevant in assessing her physical capabilities.

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Wiedel v. Lucile Duerr Hair Styling, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiedel-v-lucile-duerr-hair-styling-nebctapp-2017.