Jordan v. Home Depot Inc. , 2013 Ark. App. 572 ( 2013 )


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  • Susan
    Williams                        Cite as 
    2013 Ark. App. 572
    2019.01.         ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    03
    14:51:16                              DIVISION IV
    -06'00'                               No. CV-13-401
    JONATHAN JORDAN                                  Opinion Delivered   October 9, 2013
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS
    V.                                               WORKERS’ COMPENSATION
    COMMISSION
    [NO. F504518]
    HOME DEPOT, INC., and AMERICAN
    HOME ASSURANCE COMPANY
    APPELLEES
    AFFIRMED
    RITA W. GRUBER, Judge
    In Jordan v. Home Depot, Inc., CA 07-1031,(Ark. Ct. App. March 19, 2008)
    (unpublished), Jonathan Jordan appealed a 2007 decision of the Arkansas Workers’
    Compensation Commission that denied his claim for additional medical treatment and
    additional temporary total-disability benefits related to his 2003 compensable back injury. We
    reversed and remanded the denial of additional medical benefits, and reversed and remanded
    for reconsideration of disability benefits. In a subsequent decision of September 2008, the
    Commission found that medical services provided and recommended by Dr. Cyril
    Raben—including possible surgical intervention—were reasonably necessary medical services
    for Mr. Jordan’s compensable lumbar injury, and that Mr. Jordan was entitled to additional
    temporary total-disability benefits from the cessation of his employment in mid-2004 but not
    prior to July 15, 2004, and continuing through a date yet to be determined. That decision
    was not appealed.
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    2013 Ark. App. 572
    The present appeal involves Mr. Jordan’s claims for an additional period of temporary
    total-disability benefits from February 2011 until a date to be determined and for additional
    medical treatment recommended by Dr. James Blankenship. In a 2012 opinion, the
    Commission found that Mr. Jordan did not prove entitlement to additional temporary total-
    disability benefits but did prove entitlement to medical services recommended by Dr.
    Blankenship. Mr. Jordan appeals the denial of additional temporary total-disability benefits,
    contending that substantial evidence instead supports a finding that he was entitled to benefits
    from February 2011 to a date yet to be determined.1 Home Depot cross-appeals, contending
    that no substantial evidence supports the finding that additional medical treatment is
    reasonably necessary in connection with the 2003 compensable injury. We affirm on appeal
    and cross-appeal.
    Where the sufficiency of the evidence is challenged on appeal, we review the evidence
    in the light most favorable to the findings of the Commission and will affirm if those findings
    are supported by substantial evidence. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Brown, 
    82 Ark. App. 600
    , 602–
    603, 
    120 S.W.3d 153
    , 155 (2003). Where the Commission denies benefits because the
    claimant failed to meet his burden of proof, the substantial-evidence standard of review
    requires that we affirm if the Commission’s decision displays a substantial basis for the denial
    of relief. Woodmancy v. Framco, Inc., 
    2011 Ark. App. 785
    , 
    387 S.W.3d 286
    .
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    Appellant misstates the substantial-evidence standard of review for the denial of a
    claim. On the issue of additional temporary total-disability benefits, our role is limited to
    determining whether substantial evidence supports the Commission’s denial of the claim.
    Foster v. Gilster Mary Lee Corp., 
    2011 Ark. App. 735
    , 
    387 S.W.3d 212
    .
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    Temporary Total-Disability Benefits
    On direct appeal, Mr. Jordan challenges the Commission’s finding that he was not
    entitled to temporary total-disability benefits. The healing period is that period for healing
    of an injury resulting from an accident. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-102(12) (Repl. 2012). An
    injured employee is entitled to temporary total-disability benefits when he is totally
    incapacitated from earning wages and remains in his healing period. Hickman v. Kellogg, Brown
    & Root, 
    372 Ark. 501
    , 
    277 S.W.3d 591
    (2008). The healing period ends when the employee
    is as far restored as the permanent nature of his injury will permit, and if the underlying
    condition causing the disability has become stable and if nothing in the way of treatment will
    improve that condition, the healing period has ended. 
    Id. The determination
    of when the
    healing period has ended is a factual determination for the Commission. 
    Id. Evidence before
    the Commission included Mr. Jordan’s medical records, his testimony
    before the law judge at an April 2012 hearing, and the deposition testimony of Dr.
    Blankenship. The 2009 medical records reveal that Dr. Raben performed a caudal epidural
    steroid injection in February, a bilateral neural forminal block at L5-S1 in May, and surgery
    at L4-5 and L5-S1 in June or July. Dr. Raben referred Mr. Jordan to pain-management
    physician Dr. D. Wayne Brooks, who in March 2010 planned to continue physical therapy
    for strengthening and lumbar stabilization. Dr. Brooks referred Mr. Jordan to Dr. James B.
    Blankenship, a neurosurgeon certified in pain management, in November 2010.
    Mr. Jordan underwent a lumbar MRI on June 1, 2011, and first saw Dr. Blankenship
    on June 6, 2011. Dr. Blankenship recommended a sacroiliac (SI) joint injection, active
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    physical therapy, and after two months, “If he is not any better, . . . a CT scan with
    reconstructions—to evaluate the construct, and I will see him back. If he is doing better, we
    will proceed on with exercise as appropriate for his SI joint pain and his post laminectomy
    syndrome.”
    Regarding Mr. Jordan’s healing and treatment for pain, Dr. Blankenship testified:
    He had some intermittent right posterior buttock pain for the past three
    months. . . . Essentially Jordan had a fusion at L4-5 and L5-S1. I am intimately familiar
    with those procedures. The length of time a patient remains in their healing period is
    extremely variable. The fusion itself is not the critical issue. The fusion can take up to
    six months to a year to be solid, but . . . how quickly you get to fusion doesn’t really
    have anything to do with how well you do. I will have some patients that undergo
    a 4-5, 5-1 fusion, and four weeks postoperatively, they are back doing their regular
    job. Then I will have some that never get any better. . . .
    Mr. Jordan indicated that his back and leg pain were better after that surgery.
    If he continued to treat with Dr. Brooks for pain management, it is not necessarily part
    of the healing period. It is just that some patients that are still having problems or still
    having some degree of pain will still need some type of either pain management from
    a medication standpoint or physical therapy or a combination of both postoperatively
    and can need that even long-term. It doesn’t state one way or the other as to whether
    he is still healing or is in the recuperative period because . . . although not the typical
    outcome, it is not infrequent that I will have patients that we will still be following for
    long term after having surgery. My interpretation of the MRI was that there was no
    gross complication in his implants. It appeared, both with the MRI and his plain films
    that he had a solid fusion, although you cannot absolutely state that with either of
    those tests. That requires a CT scan.
    Dr. Blankenship testified that Mr. Jordan’s clinical examination was consistent with his
    complaints of SI joint pain, which was not uncommon after a fusion, and that it was not
    uncommon for patients “to experience some level of symptomatology indefinitely” after the
    fusion. Reiterating that Mr. Jordan’s pain was in an adjacent segment well known to have
    problems after lumbar fusion, Dr. Blankenship stated, “I didn’t really think that he had a
    problem with his lumbar spine. I thought it was his SI joint.” He further testified:
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    Whether Jonathan has reentered a healing period it is just from the standpoint that he
    is having a new pain, if we are doctoring on it, then he has entered a new healing
    period. I am not sure that terminology is that germane. He is not entering a healing
    period from his lumbar fusion. That is healed up, and he is solid. The new pain, at least
    as far as I know, he never did get his SI joint injections, so it is still a diagnosis of
    examination and clinical history. It is a new problem in a new area. I still think it is
    related to the fact that he had a lumbar fusion. So he is in a new healing period for that
    that is indirectly related to his original injury. As far as a permanent impairment for
    that fusion that he had at those two levels, . . . subjective complaints [really don’t
    matter] when you are dealing with workers’ compensation. The Fourth Edition of the
    AMA Guides is ten percent. . . . So it is a ten-percent impairment rating to the body
    as a whole, based on the guidelines.
    Dr. Blankenship stated that a functional-capacity exam (FCE) was always helpful at the end
    of treatment and would be beneficial in determining whether any type of activity could be
    tolerated. He stated that Mr. Jordan had not received physical therapy in more than a year,
    that patients “get significantly de-conditioned,” and that Mr. Jordan’s underlying condition
    “no doubt” was affected by the delay in his not seeing Dr. Blankenship until June 2011,
    despite the November 2010 referral.
    Mr. Jordan notes that he received pain management from February 2011 until June
    2011 but did not see a neurosurgeon during that time despite requests by his counsel after Dr.
    Raben left practice and Dr. Brooks’s 2010 recommendation. He asserts that in February 2011
    he was not even to the point that an FCE should be performed and that his back was in all
    probability de-conditioned due to the lack of treatment. He notes that neither Dr. Raben nor
    Dr. Brooks released him to work or opined that he was at maximum medical improvement.
    He asserts that the Commission misused Dr. Blankenship’s deposition testimony regarding an
    impairment rating, which was based only on the type of surgery and not on Mr. Jordan’s
    individual condition. He contends that his healing period did not end, entitling him to
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    benefits from February 2011 to a date to be determined.
    The Commission found that Mr. Jordan’s healing period for the compensable injury
    ended before February 2011 and, thus, that he was not entitled to additional temporary total-
    disability benefits beginning on that date. The Commission reasoned as follows:
    An MRI on June 1, 2011 showed “no gross complication” from the claimant’s 2009
    surgery. Dr. Blankenship testified in May 2012 regarding the claimant, “He’s not
    entering a healing period from his lumbar fusion. That’s healed up. He’s solid.” Dr.
    Blankenship also testified that the claimant had sustained a 10% permanent anatomical
    impairment to his lumbar spine. . . . The evidence in the present matter demonstrates
    that the claimant has sustained a permanent anatomical impairment for his 2003
    compensable injury and surgery, and the claimant has reached the end of the healing
    period for same.
    The Commission noted Dr. Blankenship’s testimony that a new healing period for new pain
    would be related to the SI joint rather than the fusion. Based upon his assessment of a ten-
    percent impairment, the Commission found that the lumbar condition had stabilized and
    become permanent. Finally, the Commission found that even if the healing period continued,
    Mr. Jordan did not prove a total incapacity to earn wages. It pointed to his testimony that he
    was able to drive a motor vehicle and to participate in physical activities such as hunting and
    camping.
    It is the Commission’s duty to make determinations of credibility, to weigh the
    evidence, and to resolve conflicts in medical testimony and evidence. Martin Charcoal, Inc. v.
    Britt, 
    102 Ark. App. 252
    , 
    284 S.W.3d 91
    (2008).            In reviewing decisions from the
    Commission, we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences deducible therefrom in the
    light most favorable to the Commission’s findings. Cedar Chem. Co. v. Knight, 
    372 Ark. 233
    ,
    
    273 S.W.3d 473
    (2008). The issue is not whether the appellate court might have reached a
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    different result from the Commission, but whether reasonable minds could reach the result
    found by the Commission: if so, the appellate court must affirm. Parker v. Comcast Cable
    Corp., 
    100 Ark. App. 400
    , 
    269 S.W.3d 391
    (2007).
    Here, the Commission exercised its duty to assess the weight and credibility of
    evidence regarding whether Mr. Jordan’s healing period had ended and whether he was totally
    incapacitated from earning wages. We hold that substantial evidence supports the factual
    findings that the healing period ended by February 2011 and that Mr. Jordan was not totally
    incapacitated from earning wages. Therefore, the Commission’s opinion displays a substantial
    basis for the denial of his claim for an additional period of temporary total-disability benefits.
    Additional Medical Services
    An employer must provide for an injured employee such medical services “as may be
    reasonably necessary in connection with the injury received by the employee.” Ark. Code
    Ann. § 11-9-508(a) (Repl. 2012). What constitutes reasonably necessary treatment is a
    question of fact for the Commission, which has the duty to use its expertise to determine the
    soundness of medical evidence and to translate it into findings of fact. Hamilton v. Gregory
    Trucking, 
    90 Ark. App. 248
    , 
    205 S.W.3d 181
    (2005).
    Cross-appellant Home Depot contends that substantial evidence does not support the
    Commission’s award of additional medical services recommended by Dr. Blankenship.
    Pointing to Dr. Blankenship’s opinion that Mr. Jordan’s lumbar fusion was solid and that his
    pain complaints were related to SI joint pain, Home Depot argues that there is no causal
    relation between the proposed treatment for Mr. Jordan’s lumbosacral problems and his
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    original injury. We disagree.
    The Commission found Dr. Blankenship’s testimony that Mr. Jordan’s SI joint pain
    was “related to the fact that he had a lumbar fusion” to be probative evidence demonstrating
    that his need for additional medical treatment was related to the reasonably necessary surgery
    by Dr. Raben in 2009.         The Commission noted that no medical reports of record
    contradicted Dr. Blankenship’s opinion. The determination of the need for additional
    medical treatment turned on the interpretation of Dr. Blankenship’s opinion.             The
    Commission has the authority to accept or reject a medical opinion and the authority to
    determine its probative value. Poulan Weed Eater v. Marshall, 
    79 Ark. App. 129
    , 
    84 S.W.3d 878
    (2002). We are unable to say that reasonable minds could not come to the decision of
    the Commission that the medical services recommended by Dr. Blankenship were not
    reasonably related to the 2009 fusion surgery, which itself was reasonably necessary surgery
    for the 2003 lumbar injury.
    Affirmed.
    HIXSON and WOOD, JJ., agree.
    Tolley & Brooks, P.A., by: Evelyn E. Brooks, for appellant.
    Roberts Law Firm, P.A., by: Jeremy Swearingen and Emily A. Neal, for appellees.
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