Wood v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board

915 A.2d 181, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 8
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 10, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 915 A.2d 181 (Wood v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, 915 A.2d 181, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 8 (Pa. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge COHN JUBELIRER.

Virna Wood (Claimant) petitions for review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board), which affirmed a WCJ’s adjudication granting her Reinstatement Petition, but denied Claimant an award of attorney’s fees. The sole issue before us is whether the Board erred in affirming the WCJ’s determination that Country Care Private Nursing (Employer) reasonably contested Claimant’s Reinstatement Petition.

Claimant worked for Employer as a home health aide, which required her, among other things, to travel to patients’ homes where she would bathe, dress, lift, and generally assist patients in their daily activities. (WCJ 7/27/04 Finding of Fact (FOF) ¶ 6.) On June 29, 1998, Claimant sustained a “lower back strain” in the scope and course of her employment when transferring a patient to-and-from a commode. Claimant first received benefits for the “lower back strain” by Notice of Compensation Payable (NCP) dated August 21, 1998. (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 8.) Claimant and Employer then entered into a Supplemental Agreement for Compensation for Disability or Permanent Injury on November 19, 1998, whereby the parties agreed that Claimant had returned to work on August 18, 1998, which caused the suspension of her benefits. Those benefits were reinstated on October 12, 1998 due to a recurrence of her injury.

Claimant did not, again, return to work for Employer, but she did begin to work in March of 2000 as a part-time cashier for Mary’s Lunch and Grocery. (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 10.) Employer, thereafter, filed a Petition to Terminate, alleging that Claimant had fully recovered from her work injury and was able to return to work without restrictions. (WCJ 6/13/01 FOF ¶ 1.) In the 2001 adjudication on the Petition to Terminate, the WCJ found that, while the NCP described the injury as a lower back strain, “an MRI performed on March 2,1999, revealed a moderately sized herniated disc at L5-S1 ... [and a l]um-bar myelogram and post myelogram CT scan performed in September, 1999, also, revealed a large herniated [disc] at L5-S1.” (WCJ 6/13/01 FOF ¶ 8.) On September 26, 1999, Claimant underwent her initial lumbar disc surgery, where Dr. John Bookwalter performed a L5-S1 discecto-my. (WCJ 6/13/01 FOF ¶ 8.)

Ultimately, the WCJ found Claimant’s medical expert, Julia Mathos, D.O., credible, diagnosing Claimant as suffering from a herniated disc and chronic lumbar strain, which Dr. Mathos attributed to Claimant’s June 29, 1998 injury. (WCJ 6/13/01 FOF ¶ 12.)1 However, the WCJ found Employer’s medical expert not credible, who testified that Claimant had fully recovered from her June 29, 1998 injury. (WCJ 6/13/01 FOF ¶ 13.) Accordingly, the WCJ denied the Petition to Terminate, but modified Claimant’s benefits to reflect her return to work at reduced wages.

Claimant discontinued working for Mary’s Lunch and Grocery in April or May of 2002 because of a hiatal hernia. (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 10.) Claimant then obtained employment as a telemarketer with Xentel, beginning on February 27, 2003, but was discharged on April 28, 2003 for [184]*184unsatisfactory job performance. (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 11.) Employer filed a Notification of Modification on June 23, 2003 to recalculate Claimant’s Partial Compensation Rate to reflect her increased earnings with Xentel. (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 13.)

Claimant filed a Reinstatement Petition, which prompted this current litigation, on July 21, 2003, alleging that, as of June 26, 2003, she was again totally disabled because of her June 29, 1998 work-related injury. Claimant sought total disability benefits and ongoing medical treatment.

Before the WCJ, Claimant produced, in addition to her own testimony, the deposition testimony of her family physician, Dr. Mathos, and the medical records and report of her surgeon, Dr. Ward. Employer introduced no evidence. Employer did lodge and preserve an objection, later overruled by the WCJ (Def.Ex.“A”), to the submission of Dr. Mathos’s deposition testimony, arguing that Dr. Mathos was not qualified to render an opinion on causation because she did not perform Claimant’s surgeries.

The WCJ found credible the deposition testimony of Dr. Mathos, which provided that Claimant had increased back pain beginning in April of 2003, and that her pain did not respond to medication. (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 14.) Dr. Mathos opined, over objection, that the surgeries performed by Dr. Ward were related to Claimant’s original injury because “[i]t’s at the same area and there was no other injuries reported.” (Mathos Dep., 1/13/04 at 30.) Dr. Mathos, however, also testified that her examination of Claimant’s x-ray from April 2003 revealed “[t]he dorsal spine showed arthritis. Her lumbar spine actually showed the disc disease at L5-S1.” (Mathos Dep., 1/13/04 at 32-33.)

Dr. Mathos was not Claimant’s treating surgeon. Rather, after unsuccessfully treating Claimant with muscle relaxants, anti-inflammatory medications, and a unit designed to minimize spasms, a nurse practitioner from Dr. Mathos’ office gave Claimant the option of consulting a pain clinic for chronic back pain or consulting a group of orthopedic surgeons; Claimant chose to consult an orthopedic surgeon. (Mathos Dep., 1/13/04 at 24.) Claimant underwent back surgery in September 2003, which Dr. Mathos characterized as “[fjusion at her L5-S1 interspace.” (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 15; Mathos Dep., 1/13/2004 at 25.) Dr. Ward performed the surgical procedures on September 17 and 18, 2003.2 Dr. Mathos, however, testified that the surgeries performed by Dr. Ward were not for the repair of the disc herniation, and Dr. Mathos could not opine whether Dr. Ward’s surgeries were for the repair of either Claimant’s degenerative disc dis[185]*185ease or the narrowing of her foramen.3 (Mathos Dep., 1/13/2004 at 40-41.)

In her adjudication regarding the Reinstatement Petition, the WCJ concluded that Claimant established that total disability due to the June 29, 1998 work injury had recurred on April 28, 2003. (WCJ 7/27/04 Conclusion of Law (COL) ¶ 2.)4 The WCJ’s finding that Claimant was totally disabled since June 26, 2003, due to her June 29, 1998 work-related injury, was based on the credible testimony of Dr. Mathos. (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 14.) Moreover, the WCJ found, “based on the credible testimony of Dr. Mathos and the claimant and the credible [medical] records, that the claimant’s September 2003 surgeries as well as her problems following these September 2003 surgeries [were] related to the claimant’s June 29, 1998, work injury....” (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 18.)

After finding that Claimant’s total disability, due to the June 29, 1998 injury, recurred on April 28, 2003 (WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 17), the WCJ denied Claimant’s request for attorney’s fees because:

based on the record taken as a whole, [Employer] had a reasonable basis for [the] contest. An issue existed as to whether the claimant’s September 2003 surgeries were related to the claimant’s work injury since the claimant did not produce the testimony of her treating surgeon.

(WCJ 7/27/04 FOF ¶ 21.) Based on this finding of Employer’s reasonable contest, the WCJ concluded that Claimant was ha-ble for her own attorney’s fees. (WCJ 7/27/04 COL ¶ 6.)

Claimant appealed the WCJ’s denial of reasonable attorney’s fees to the Board, which subsequently affirmed the WCJ’s determination that Employer’s contest was reasonable. Claimant then filed the instant Petition for Review with this Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
915 A.2d 181, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-2007.