Wright v. Golf Drive Residence, Inc.
This text of 412 So. 2d 884 (Wright v. Golf Drive Residence, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Emily WRIGHT, Appellant,
v.
GOLF DRIVE RESIDENCE, INC., and Insurance Company of North America, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*886 L. Barry Keyfetz, Keyfetz & Poses, Miami, for appellant.
Gerald W. Pierce, Henderson, Franklin, Starnes & Holt, Fort Myers, for appellees.
LARRY G. SMITH, Judge.
Appellant, claimant in a workers' compensation proceeding, asserts that several errors were made in the deputy commissioner's order awarding compensation. She challenges the provisions of the order: (1) requiring her to travel from her home in Naples to Fort Myers for further treatment; (2) finding that her disability is restricted to her 50% body as a whole anatomical rating, with no award for wage earning capacity loss; (3) finding that she is in need of psychiatric treatment, but failing to order the employer/carrier to provide it; and (4) allowing the employer/carrier a set-off for previous permanent partial disability and social security benefits paid without determining the manner and method by which this should be done. We agree reversible error has been shown.
Claimant is a 39-year old woman with a twelfth grade education who has worked as a nurse's aide during her adult life. In 1973, she injured her back, underwent surgery, and was later discharged with a 10% permanent partial disability of the body as a whole for which she was paid settlement benefits. Subsequent to this injury, she was able to continue her work, although she did suffer back pain. She injured her back again in April, 1978, while working for the appellee-employer when she slipped and fell while pulling a patient out of a tub.
Claimant now suffers severe headaches in the back of the head, pain in both buttocks, her kneecap and shoulders, and pressure in her back. Medical treatment has been limited to bed rest and flexiril, claimant being unable to take any more medication than this due to gastrointestinal troubles. She suffers severe depression because of her pain. At the hearing she indicated a willingness to work if she could get relief from her pain. Her treating physician, Dr. Hussey, ruled out surgery as useless and has given her a 50% anatomical impairment rating of the body as a whole.
Dr. Hussey has restricted claimant from lifting, bending or stooping. He initially felt claimant was totally disabled since she is unable to do any laboring type of job, but later testified that claimant might be able to do some part-time work, but not a "standard job." He elaborated that claimant needed a job where she could work for three hours and then rest for three hours, or at least lie down for a half an hour. He ruled out such jobs as a receptionist or medical records file clerk as too demanding for claimant's physical capabilities. He described claimant' injury as one which aggravated a pre-existing weak spot in her back, but he was unable to apportion claimant's present disability,[1] noting that claimant was previously clinically asymptomatic. When asked to assume that the claimant had a 10% impairment rating from her earlier compensable accident, the doctor stated that he would say there was a "40% add on" from the new accident. However, he also testified that he did not know how the earlier 10% had been arrived at, and assuming the further facts that she could return to work and was asymptomatic and without pain, 10% was more than adequate, or may have been actually high. He also stated that "[I]f she were asymptomatic and working, I don't think I would have given her a 10% rating before."
The E/C deauthorized Dr. Hussey on September 1, 1979, and authorized two doctors in the Fort Myers area. The claimant took the position below that authorizing medical treatment in Fort Myers was improper, since she resides in Naples, contending that to require medical care and treatment in the Fort Myers area would impose a hardship upon her. She testified that she would have to use a taxi, and the trip would take about an hour. Dr. Hussey testified there *887 would be nothing wrong with sending claimant to Fort Myers for further opinions and evaluations; however, he felt it was appropriate medically for her to be treated in the Naples area because with pain problems of claimant's type, traveling in a car for any distance only aggravates the problem.
Because claimant suffered such severe depression and anxiety as a result of her injury, Dr. Hussey felt a psychological component was involved and he sent claimant to see Dr. Love, a clinical psychologist. Dr. Love felt that claimant's psychological condition had deteriorated as a result of the depression she suffered from her unremitting pain. He related this psychogenic problem to claimant's accident within a reasonable degree of medical probability. With respect to employment, he felt jobs might exist that claimant would be physically capable of doing; but until her depression is brought under control, she would be unable to perform them. It was his view that claimant is not a candidate for individual psychotherapy but might benefit from treatment at a pain clinic. He felt nothing much could be done for claimant on an out-patient basis because of the depth of her depression. Claimant is unable to take antidepressive drugs because of her stomach problems. Both doctors felt there was absolutely no evidence that claimant is malingering.
The E/C paid temporary disability benefits from the date of the accident to January 11, 1980, and the parties stipulated claimant reached MMI on January 30, 1980. At the hearing claimant sought permanent total disability benefits from the date of MMI or, in the alternative, permanent partial disability benefits.
After a hearing, the deputy commissioner found that claimant is in need of further psychiatric treatment, although he expressed doubts that there was evidence claimant would experience any profound improvement in her physical or psychiatric condition. At the same time, he ordered further remedial and/or palliative orthopedic treatment for claimant by the authorized physicians in the Fort Myers area. Since no psychiatric disability had been given and no opinion rendered as to temporary disability on a psychiatric basis, the deputy concluded there was no related disability on that basis. He accepted Dr. Hussey's 50% rating and the stipulated MMI date. Because the claimant had made no job search, however, he declined to award benefits based on loss of wage earning capacity, limiting her to 50% anatomical disability of the body as a whole. He ordered the bills of Dr. Hussey to be paid up to July 31, 1979 together with interest and penalties. Finally, he ordered the E/C to pay benefits equal to 50% permanent partial disability of the body as a whole with an appropriate set-off for the previous (1973) settlement, social security benefits as may be appropriate, and any permanent partial disability paid since the stipulated date of MMI.
In City of Jacksonville Fire Division v. McDaniel, 388 So.2d 1336 (Fla. 1st DCA 1980), we reversed an award of permanent partial disability benefits as premature, since the deputy simultaneously found claimant to be in need of further psychiatric care. The facts of this case are quite similar, in that the deputy found that the claimant is in need of psychiatric (as well as orthopedic) care, and the evidence is not conclusive that claimant cannot respond to further psychiatric treatment.
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412 So. 2d 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-golf-drive-residence-inc-fladistctapp-1982.