Wal-Mart Associates, Inc. v. Armstrong , 2017 Ark. App. LEXIS 177 ( 2017 )


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  •                                  Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 175
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION IV
    No. CV-16-835
    WAL-MART ASSOCIATES, INC., AND                    Opinion Delivered   March 15, 2017
    CLAIMS MANAGEMENT, INC.
    APPELLANTS                      APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION
    COMMISSION [NO. F713233]
    V.
    PATRICIA ARMSTRONG                                REVERSED
    APPELLEE
    PHILLIP T. WHITEAKER, Judge
    Wal-Mart Associates, Inc. (Wal-Mart), appeals a decision of the Arkansas Workers’
    Compensation Commission (“Commission”), which concluded that appellee Patricia
    Armstrong’s claim for additional medical treatment for her admittedly compensable left-
    shoulder injury was reasonable and necessary. We reverse, holding that Armstrong’s claim is
    barred by the statute of limitations.
    Armstrong filed a complaint with the Commission for additional benefits in February
    2014. The statute governing the time for filing claims for additional benefits is section 11-9-
    702(b):
    (b) Time for Filing Additional Compensation.
    (1) In cases in which any compensation, including disability or medical, has
    been paid on account of injury, a claim for additional compensation shall be barred
    unless filed with the commission within one (1) year from the date of the last payment
    of compensation or two (2) years from the date of the injury, whichever is greater.
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    2017 Ark. App. 175
    Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-702(b) (Repl. 2012).
    Thus, the plain language of the statute is clear and sets forth two definitive time periods
    in which a claim must be brought: one year from the date of last payment of compensation
    or two years from the date of injury, whichever is greater. Here, it is undisputed that
    Armstrong’s left-shoulder injury occurred on December 24, 2006, and the last payment of
    compensation for Armstrong’s left-shoulder injury was in August 2012. Therefore, her claim
    for additional benefits, which was filed in February 2014, was unquestionably filed more than
    one year from the date of last payment of compensation and more than two years from the
    date of injury.
    Following a strict construction of the statute, her claim should be deemed untimely.
    However, our courts have previously interpreted the statute to provide that a prior timely,
    but unresolved, claim for benefits may serve to toll the limitations period. Here, Armstrong
    filed a claim for benefits in 2008, within the two-year period after her injury. Therefore, we
    must determine if Armstrong’s 2008 claim for benefits was unresolved and whether the statute
    of limitations was tolled under our case law.
    I. Evidence and Procedural History
    Patricia Armstrong experienced a work-related injury in December 2006 while
    working in the Wal-Mart bakery. The injury occurred when she was hit on her face and left
    shoulder by a twenty-pound box of frozen pies dropped by a coworker who was standing on
    a ladder. Armstrong contended that, as a result of this work-related incident, she received
    injuries to both her left shoulder and her neck.
    2
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    With regard to her shoulder, Armstrong initially received conservative treatment, but
    eventually more aggressive measures were necessary. She underwent three surgeries to her left
    shoulder. Wal-Mart accepted the left-shoulder injury as compensable and paid benefits until
    August 2012.
    With regard to her neck complaints, Armstrong reported these complaints for the first
    time subsequent to her initial shoulder surgery in March 2007. Her complaints were
    evaluated by Dr. James Blankenship. Dr. Blankenship noted a congenital Chiari I
    malformation1 with a rather large upper cervical syrinx. Wal-Mart controverted her neck-
    injury claim, asserting that her neck problems were related to the congenital defect, not a
    workplace injury.
    In early May 2008, Armstrong was terminated from Wal-Mart for excessive absences
    and for “being unfriendly.” Shortly thereafter, on May 27, 2008, she filed a Form AR-C
    with the Commission. In completing this Form AR-C, Armstrong listed the date of the
    accident as December 24, 2006. She described the cause of the injury: “I was handing a box
    to someone else. The box slipped from their hands and fell on me.” Although the Form
    AR-C requests a brief description of the part of the body injured, Armstrong did not specify
    which area of the body had been injured in the incident. She then selected both “initial” and
    “additional” benefits as the type of benefits being claimed and checked all the boxes available
    therein.
    1
    This is a condition in which brain tissue extends into the spinal canal and occurs when
    the skull is abnormally small or misshapen; this abnormality presses on the brain and forces it
    downward. Two symptoms of this condition are headaches and neck pain.
    3
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    2017 Ark. App. 175
    A hearing was held on her claim for benefits related to the neck on June 18, 2012.
    The parties agreed that the issues to be litigated at that hearing were whether Armstrong had
    sustained a compensable neck injury in December 2006 and whether she was entitled to
    medical treatment for her complaints of headaches and chronic neck pain. The parties agreed
    that the left-shoulder injury had been accepted and that benefits had been paid.
    In September 2012, the administrative law judge (ALJ) denied Armstrong’s claim
    regarding the compensability of her neck injury. Armstrong appealed, and the Commission
    affirmed and adopted the ALJ’s decision. The decision of the Commission was then affirmed
    by this court in October 2013. Armstrong v. Walmart Assocs., Inc., 
    2013 Ark. App. 596
    .
    Armstrong filed another Form AR-C in February 2014. In completing this Form AR-
    C, Armstrong listed an accident date of December 24, 2006. She described the injury and
    body part injured, stating, “I was handing a box to someone when it slipped from that
    person’s hands and fell on me injuring my left shoulder.” As with the 2008 AR-C form,
    Armstrong selected both “initial” and “additional” benefits and checked all the boxes therein.
    Wal-Mart controverted the claim.
    In August 2014, Armstrong sought treatment for her left shoulder from Dr.
    Christopher Arnold.     He performed another surgery on Armstrong’s left shoulder in
    November 2014 to repair a recurrent partial rotator cuff tear – eighty percent thickness. Dr.
    Arnold opined that the need for surgery was directly related to her prior work injury. Wal-
    Mart declined to pay for these services.
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    A hearing was held before the ALJ on June 15, 2015. After the hearing, the ALJ held
    in its September 11, 2015 opinion that Armstrong’s claim for benefits was time-barred,
    finding that there was a clear, almost two-year gap in treatment for her left shoulder from
    August 2012 through July 2014. Armstrong appealed to the Commission. The Commission
    reversed the findings of the ALJ and granted Armstrong benefits. The Commission found that
    Armstrong’s filing of Form AR-C in May 2008 tolled the statute of limitations, and it
    awarded her benefits.
    Wal-Mart appeals, arguing that (1) the Commission erred as a matter of law in finding
    Armstrong’s claim was not barred by the statute of limitations; (2) there was insufficient
    evidence to support the Commission’s decision that her claim was not barred by the statute
    of limitations; (3) the Commission erred as a matter of law in finding that she was entitled to
    additional benefits; and (4) there was insufficient evidence to support the Commission’s award
    of benefits.
    II. Are Armstrong’s Claims Time-barred?
    Our caselaw supports the notion that a timely, unresolved claim for benefits stops the
    limitations period from running against it. In Jones Truck Lines v. Pendergrass, 
    90 Ark. App. 402
    , 
    206 S.W.3d 272
    (2005), the claimant had a compensable knee injury in 1971 and filed
    a timely claim for additional benefits in 1974. In 2003, the claimant had surgery on the
    injured knee and filed a claim for additional benefits. Because the 1974 claim was neither
    decided nor dismissed, but inactive, we held that the 2003 additional claim was not time-
    barred. Our supreme court affirmed this principle in VanWagner v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 368
    5
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    Ark. 606, 
    249 S.W.3d 123
    (2007), recalling that the claimant’s additional-benefits claim was
    not time-barred because (1) a hearing was never held on the claim; (2) the claim was placed
    on inactive status; and (3) a final order was never entered on his case. 
    Id. In Nabholz
    Constr.
    Corp. v. White, 
    2015 Ark. App. 102
    , we affirmed the Commission’s reasoning that a timely
    filing of a Form AR-C in 1998 tolled the application of the statute, even though there was
    more than a two-year gap in the payment of benefits and despite the filing of a Form AR-4
    closing the claim, because White’s claim for additional benefits was neither dismissed nor
    decided until 2013.
    We must answer the question of whether the Commission erred as a matter of law in
    concluding that the 2008 Form AR-C filed in this case tolled the statute of limitations. To
    phrase the question another way, was the 2008 Form AR-C an unresolved claim for benefits
    pertaining to Armstrong’s left-shoulder injury? Under the circumstances of this case, we hold
    that the Commission did err as a matter of law. Here, Armstrong failed to provide sufficient
    information in the 2008 Form AR-C to toll the statute of limitations. In completing the
    2008 Form AR-C, Armstrong did not specifically list that she suffered neck and shoulder
    injuries. In fact, she listed no specific injury to any part of her body, choosing to leave her
    claim for injuries open-ended. Additionally, with regard to the type of benefits being sought,
    Armstrong checked all the boxes available on the 2008 Form AR-C. Such a generic filing is
    the equivalent to no filing at all. It simply provides no information about the type of claim
    being asserted by the claimant. To allow such a generic filing to toll the limitations period
    indefinitely for some unspecified injury is contrary to the plain language of the statute and to
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    2017 Ark. App. 175
    the rationale of our prior caselaw. As such, we hold, as a matter of law, the generic Form
    AR-C filed in this case was not sufficient to toll the statute of limitations.
    Because we reverse on this issue, we need not address the other issues raised on appeal.
    Reversed.
    VAUGHT and MURPHY, JJ., agree.
    Bassett Law Firm LLP, by: Curtis L. Nebben, for appellants.
    Tolley & Brooks, P.A., by: Evelyn E. Brooks, for appellee.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CV-16-385

Citation Numbers: 2017 Ark. App. 175, 516 S.W.3d 310, 2017 WL 1014347, 2017 Ark. App. LEXIS 177

Judges: Phillip T. Whiteaker

Filed Date: 3/15/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024