Yarbrough, James v. Protective Services Co., Inc.

2016 TN WC App. 24
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedMay 27, 2016
Docket2015-08-0574
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 TN WC App. 24 (Yarbrough, James v. Protective Services Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yarbrough, James v. Protective Services Co., Inc., 2016 TN WC App. 24 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

James Yarbrough ) Docket No. 2015-08-0574 ) v. ) State File No. 48061-2015 ) Protective Services Company, Inc., et al. ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Compensation Claims ) Jim Umsted, Judge )

Affirmed in Part, Vacated in Part, and Remanded - Filed May 27, 2016

In this second interlocutory appeal of this case, the employee alleges suffering an injury to his shoulder after striking his shoulder on a cabinet. The parties dispute whether the employee provided timely notice of the injury and whether surgery recommended by an authorized treating physician is causally related to the work incident. Following an expedited hearing, the trial court found that the employee’s injury was compensable and ordered medical benefits, including the recommended surgery, and temporary disability benefits. The employer has appealed. We affirm the trial court’s decision to the extent it orders medical and temporary disability benefits, but vacate the trial court’s finding regarding compensability of the claim. We also deny the employee’s request that this appeal be deemed frivolous and that he be awarded sanctions in the form of attorneys’ fees.

Judge Marshall L. Davidson, III, delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board, in which Judge David F. Hensley and Judge Timothy W. Conner joined.

Catherine Dugan, Mt. Juliet, Tennessee, for the employer-appellant, Protective Services Company, Inc.

Andrew Clarke, Memphis, Tennessee, for the employee-appellee, James Yarbrough

1 Factual and Procedural Background

James Yarbrough (“Employee”) was employed as a flooring installer by Protective Services Company, Inc. (“Employer”). On April 16, 2015, Employee was moving a stove into place after installing flooring when he stood up and struck his right shoulder on the bottom of a cabinet. Although he was able to finish his work for the day, he alleges the blow resulted in an injury to his shoulder and caused immediate pain. He maintains that he reported the incident to his supervisor, Parker Moore, on April 17, 2015, and that Mr. Moore assigned him less strenuous work. Employee sought treatment on his own on May 1, 2015. According to Employee, he reported the injury to Mr. Moore again on May 2, 2015, but was not offered a panel of physicians.

Employee testified that he worked fairly regularly from the date of the injury through mid-July 2015, although he asserts there were days shoulder pain prevented him from working. On those days, Employee testified that he contacted Mr. Moore to let him know he was unable to work due to his injury. He denied having any problem with his shoulder before striking the cabinet at work on April 16, 2015.

Mr. Moore disputed having been told about Employee’s shoulder injury prior to late May or June 2015. According to Mr. Moore, Employee, on June 19, 2015, gave him medical bills associated with the May 1, 2015 treatment. At that time, Mr. Moore instructed Employee to report his injury to Leslie Hays, Employer’s office manager. Upon being informed of the injury, Ms. Hays completed a first report of injury and provided Employee with a panel of physicians from which he chose Dr. Riley Jones, an orthopedic surgeon.

Employee first saw Dr. Jones on June 26, 2015, with complaints of shoulder pain as a result of hitting his shoulder on the cabinet. Dr. Jones diagnosed Employee with tendinitis and obtained x-rays, which revealed mild acromioclavicular changes. He administered a steroid injection and returned Employee to work with no restrictions. Employee returned to Dr. Jones with complaints consistent with those reported at his initial visit. Dr. Jones administered another steroid injection in Employee’s shoulder and returned him to work.

Over the ensuing weeks, Employee continued to complain of pain in his shoulder and, on September 4, 2015, Dr. Jones ordered an MRI and took him off work. The MRI showed no evidence of a rotator cuff tear, but did reveal “narrowing of the subacromial space with impression [in] the supraspinatus musculotendinous junction by degenerative changes of the acromioclavicular joint.” Dr. Jones recommended surgery and continued Employee’s restriction from work. Employer declined to authorize the surgery based upon its belief that it was not causally related to the incident on April 16, 2015.

2 Employee returned to Dr. Jones on October 19, 2015, and Dr. Jones continued to keep him off work. Dr. Jones opined that the “injury arose primarily out of and in the course and scope of employment. The diagnosis is consistent with the mechanism of injury. The employment contributed more than 50.1% in causing the injury considering all causes.” He went on to clarify that Employee “probably did have some pre-existing problems,” but “when he injured the shoulder he primarily injured the acromioclavicular joint and also caused an impingement causing pain in the biceps tendon. If he had not had this injury, then he would not have had any problems. Based on my best medical judgment this is greater than 50.1% related to his on-the-job injury.” In response to an inquiry from Employer, Dr. Jones indicated the injury arose primarily out of the employment and was the result of “[d]irect trauma to [r]ight AC joint—[c]ontinued pain [and] popping.”

Thereafter, Dr. Jones was deposed and articulated medical opinions regarding causation consistent with those in his records. Specifically, he testified as follows:

A: Well, what it is is he’s got some degenerative changes in his acromioclavicular joint and when he hit this thing it aggravated it and started a process of swelling in that area and, as it says, there’s an indention on the rotator cuff. He didn’t tear the rotator cuff, but there’s an indentation, so that is what gives you this impingement that you’re talking about and it continues to give him his pain, plus it irritated the joint itself, which was arthritic. I’m sure there was some pre-existing arthritis in there, but he hadn’t had any problems with that, and the direct blow, that’s how you separate shoulders. . . . He didn’t have any real tears, but that’s where the irritation started.

Q: And there was some type of indentation that was caused by the trauma?

A: That was secondary to the swelling of the acromioclavicular joint.

Q: But these are actual–

A: These are objective findings.

Q: Objective findings of a change in his shoulder as a result from a blow, correct?

A: That’s correct.

Employer obtained a causation opinion from Dr. Claiborne Christian, also an orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Christian did not examine Employee but reviewed the medical

3 records associated with Employee’s treatment, including the deposition of Dr. Jones. He acknowledged Dr. Jones’ opinion that Employee would not have needed surgery if he had not sustained the blow to his shoulder. However, he opined that the employment was not the primary cause of the need for surgery, observing that patients with degenerative shoulder conditions often need surgery without having suffered trauma and that the pre- existing bone spurs in Employee’s shoulder were the primary cause of the need for surgery. He acknowledged Employee’s work-related condition was a contusion to the shoulder that “probably resulted in some irritation to his rotator cuff.” He also acknowledged that suffering trauma to a joint can accelerate the need for surgery in a patient with a degenerative condition.

Employee filed a petition for benefit determination and a request for an expedited hearing asking the trial court to render a decision based upon a review of the record. Employer responded by filing a motion for an evidentiary hearing, which the trial court granted.

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Bluebook (online)
2016 TN WC App. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarbrough-james-v-protective-services-co-inc-tennworkcompapp-2016.