Williams, Christopher v. Dana Holding Corp.

2024 TN WC 89
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedDecember 12, 2024
Docket2022-04-0300
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 TN WC 89 (Williams, Christopher v. Dana Holding Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams, Christopher v. Dana Holding Corp., 2024 TN WC 89 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

FILED Dec 12, 2024 02:43 PM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT COOKEVILLE

CHRISTOPHER WILLIAMS, ) Docket No.: 2022-04-0300 Employee, ) v. ) State File No.: 7785-2021 DANA HOLDING CORP. ) Employer, ) Judge Robert Durham And ) HARTFORD INSURANCE CO., ) Insurer. )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER GRANTING BENEFITS

The Court held an Expedited Hearing on December 3, 2024. Mr. Williams requested an order that Dana authorize medical care for injuries to his right ankle, leg, knee, and shoulder that he asserts are natural and foreseeable consequences of his December 2020 left-shoulder work accident. The Court holds that Dana did not establish that Mr. Williams’s negligence broke the causal connection between these claimed injuries and his work injury. Further, Mr. Williams is likely to prove at trial that he is entitled to reasonable and necessary medical care for any injuries that are natural and foreseeable consequences of his December 2020 accident.

History of Claim

On December 21, 2020, Mr. Williams suffered a left-rotator cuff tear at work. Dana accepted the claim and authorized Dr. James McKinney to treat the shoulder. After conservative care, Dr. McKinney surgically repaired the rotator cuff.

While treating, Mr. Williams returned to work performing duties with only his right hand. He then developed carpal tunnel syndrome in his right arm due to overuse. Dr. McKinney performed a carpal tunnel release and an exploration surgery with decompression in the right-forearm muscle.

The exploration resulted in a hernia at the incision site, causing the muscle to bulge

1 through when Mr. Williams used his arm. He also complained of pain that he described as having several “sweat bees” stinging him along the incision site when he engaged in any type of gripping activity or muscular use of his forearms.

Dana authorized Dr. McKinney to repair the hernia using mesh. Despite the repair, a small bulge remained, and Mr. Williams still complained of pain at the incision site when lifting heavy objects. Dr. McKinney released Mr. Williams at maximum medical improvement on April 12, 2022, with restrictions of “no lifting or gripping greater than 10 lbs. with either arm.” 1

Eight days later, Mr. Williams was at home changing an outdoor lightbulb. He testified the light fixture was approximately seven feet high. He placed a three-step aluminum ladder, which he estimated weighed no more than six pounds, under the light. He climbed the ladder so that his left foot was on the second step and his right on the third. As he reached up with his right hand to change the bulb, he felt an intense, burning sensation in his right forearm. The pain caused him to hurry down the ladder, and as he did so, he lost his balance and fell. He testified that he never gripped the ladder tightly and only used his hands for balance.

Mr. Williams went to the emergency room immediately after the fall, where it was determined that he broke his right leg and injured his right shoulder. 2 Orthopedist Dr. Roy Terry performed emergency surgery on the leg, inserting screws to stabilize the break.

Mr. Williams then developed an infection in his right leg, which required multiple surgeries and a lengthy hospital stay to clear. Afterward, Dr. Terry began treatment for Mr. Williams’s right shoulder, and again after multiple surgeries ultimately performed a partial shoulder replacement.

At the hearing, Mr. Williams asserted that he now has post-traumatic arthritis in his right knee, which Dr. Terry believes may require a total knee replacement. Dr. Terry confirmed that Mr. Williams may need a knee replacement in an October 2023 response to a questionnaire.

Mr. Williams also testified that Dr. Terry feels that a total right-shoulder replacement may be necessary because of his continued motion limitations. He further said that he has foot drop due to nerve damage from his battle with infection, and Dr. Terry recommended a tendon transfer to correct the condition.

1 Dana agreed that Mr. Williams’s December 2020 left-shoulder and right-forearm injuries were compensable. Dr. McKinney retired, and Dana has authorized Drs. John Cornelius and Adam Cochran to treat those injuries. The parties did not introduce records or opinions from either doctor. 2 The parties did not include any medical records from Mr. Williams’s post-fall treatment. Mr. Williams testified without objection to Dr. Terry’s diagnoses, past treatment, and treatment recommendations. 2 As for causation, Mr. Williams relied on a questionnaire completed by Dr. Terry in September 2024. Dr. Terry checked “yes” to a question about whether Mr. Williams’s injuries to his “right leg, right knee, right ankle and right shoulder as a result of [his] fall on or about April 20, 2022” was the “direct and natural consequence” of his December 2020 injury. He also marked “yes” when asked if Mr. Williams’s injuries “as a result of the April 20, 2022 fall primarily arise out of and the course and scope of Mr. Williams’s employment.”

Mr. Williams did not submit any evidence about the reasonableness and necessity for expenses incurred in Dr. Terry’s treatment for his alleged work-related injuries. He is not currently seeking temporary disability benefits.

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

To obtain his requested treatment, Mr. Williams does not have to prove at this stage “every essential element” of his claim by a preponderance of the evidence. Instead, he must show a likelihood of prevailing at a hearing on the merits. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(d)(1) (2024).

Here, the threshold question is whether Mr. Williams’s fall in April 2022 was the “natural and foreseeable consequence” of his December 2020 work injury. The Tennessee Supreme Court recently addressed this principle in Hudgins v. Global Personnel Solutions, Inc., No. E2023-00792-SC-R3-W, 2024 Tenn. LEXIS 86, at *14 (Tenn. Workers’ Comp. Panel Mar. 5, 2024). Hudgins held that:

As long as the subsequent injury that is alleged to be a “natural consequence” flowing from a compensable injury can be shown to have arisen primarily out of and in the course and scope of employment, it, too, will be compensable under the Reform Act. This requires a finding . . . that the employment contributed more than fifty percent in causing an injury subsequent to a compensable injury for it to also be compensable.

Given that the “natural consequence” rule survives, it follows that an employer may still defend against it “by showing that the actions of the employee leading to the subsequent injury constituted negligence, recklessness, or intentional conduct that broke the chain of causation.” Braden v. Mohawk Indus., Inc., 2022 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 11, at *16 (Mar. 1, 2022).

Here, Dana asserted that when he climbed the ladder, Mr. Williams knowingly violated Dr. McKinney’s restrictions against carrying or gripping more than ten pounds with either hand. It argued that this violation led to his fall and was negligent, reckless, or intentional conduct that broke the chain of causation. Thus, the Court should deny Mr. Williams’s claims for injuries resulting from his fall.

3 However, Dana did not provide any evidence that Mr. Williams violated Dr. McKinney’s restrictions. Mr. Williams’s unrefuted evidence was that the stepladder weighed no more than six pounds. Dana argued that simply climbing the ladder required gripping more than ten pounds, but it did not provide any evidence this was the case. Mr. Williams said that he only used his hands for balance, and the Court has no reason to disbelieve his testimony.

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Related

§ 50-6-239
Tennessee § 50-6-239(d)(1)

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2024 TN WC 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-christopher-v-dana-holding-corp-tennworkcompcl-2024.