Danny Hinegardner v. Imon Communications and Acuity ( 2014 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 14-0030
    Filed October 15, 2014
    DANNY HINEGARDNER,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    vs.
    IMON COMMUNICATIONS and
    ACUITY,
    Respondents-Appellees.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Marsha Bergan,
    Judge.
    Danny Hinegardner appeals the district court’s judicial review ruling, which
    affirmed the workers’ compensation commissioner’s denial of his petition for
    workers’ compensation benefits. AFFIRMED.
    David A. O’Brien and Teresa L. Vercande of Willey, O’Brien, L.C., Cedar
    Rapids, for appellant.
    Coreen K. Sweeney and Stephanie L. Marett of Nyemaster Goode, P.C.,
    Des Moines, for appellees.
    Considered by Potterfield, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ.
    2
    MULLINS, J.
    Danny Hinegardner appeals the district court’s judicial review ruling, which
    affirmed the workers’ compensation commissioner’s denial of his petition for
    workers’ compensation benefits.      He contends substantial evidence does not
    support the agency’s credibility determination or its finding regarding medical
    causation.    Because there is substantial evidence to support the findings
    reached, we affirm.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Hinegardner began working for IMON Communications on July 14, 2008.
    On July 28, 2008, he was attempting to pick up a reel of cable weighing an
    estimated eighty pounds. Hinegardner bent over at the waist to pick it up, lifted
    the reel approximately five or six inches, and felt a sharp pain in his back.
    Hinegardner reported the incident to his supervisor at approximately 10:00
    or 10:30 a.m. that day. He did not complete his shift, but made the 240-mile
    drive home.    The following day, Hinegardner went to the emergency room,
    complaining of pain in his mid and low back, which radiated into his left buttock.
    He was given an injection of Toradol and was removed from work.
    On July 30, 2008, Hinegardner agreed to a recorded interview with Linda
    Horn, a workers’ compensation insurance adjuster for IMON Communication’s
    insurance carrier. Hinegardner reported he ruptured a disc in his back in 1976
    and as a result, had surgery on his lower back. When asked if he had any other
    treatment for his lower back, Hinegardner replied, “Ah I don’t know if I want to
    answer these questions,—any longer, um what else do you have to ask?” The
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    interview continued, with Horn asking about any prior workers’ compensation
    claims Hinegardner had filed.
    During the interview, Hinegardner denied taking any medication “for any
    health related condition like high blood pressure, diabetes, thyroid . . . .” He also
    stated, “I don’t have a regular doctor, because I never have anything wrong with
    me. I lived in Michigan for 20 years and I, when I moved back I just never—ah
    went to a local doctor.” The question regarding his prior treatment for his lower
    back was never raised again.
    Hinegardner claims that shortly after this conversation, he provided Horn
    with a list of doctors who had treated him since his 1976 surgery. While Horn
    concedes she did receive an executed medical waiver from Hinegardner, she
    denies ever receiving a list of treating doctors from him. Instead, Horn claims
    she located Hinegardner’s doctors by searching the internet for medical providers
    who treated back injuries in the areas Hinegardner had lived and sending those
    providers medical waivers.
    Hinegardner has a lengthy history of treatment for lower-back pain,
    beginning with his 1976 laminectomy.         He received epidural steroid injection
    treatments for residual disc fragments in his back during the 1980s. From 1987
    until 2004, Hinegardner saw Dr. Lamont Okey for low back pain that radiated
    down his legs, and was diagnosed with sciatica. Hinegardner treated his pain
    with prescription pain relievers and anti-inflammatory medications, as well as
    Valium. He continued to do so even though a consultation with the Michigan
    Pain Institute in January 1998 recommended he detoxify from all narcotic pain
    4
    medication.   A September 2000 MRI revealed advanced degenerative disc
    disease at the L5-S1. Hinegardner refused surgery and failed to follow through
    with recommended diagnostic testing.
    During the first half of 2008, Hinegardner continued to seek prescription
    medication to treat his back pain but failed to complete MRI testing as ordered.
    However, at his February 2011 deposition, Hinegardner testified that once he
    stopped working ten-to-twelve-hour days, six days per week in April of 2008, his
    pain “[g]ot better.” When asked if he was “treatment-free and prescription drug-
    free between April of ’08 and July 28 of ’08,” Hinegardner stated, “I believe so,”
    although he refilled a prescription for Hydrocodone four times in that time frame,
    including one refill two days before the claimed injury.
    On September 5, 2008, Hinegardner began treatment with Dr. Timothy
    VanFleet at the Orthopedic Center of Illinois. Hinegardner underwent x-rays, an
    MRI, and a discogram.       Dr. VanFleet diagnosed Hinegardner with “Lumbar
    radiculopathy” and performed a L5-S1 minimally invasive transforaminal lumbar
    interbody fusion with bone morphogenic protein.
    As to the question of causation, Dr. VanFleet testified
    that this was a condition that was a chronic condition prior to
    picking up of the cable. So he obviously had an exacerbation of his
    injury. Whether or not that exacerbation was the cause of his
    injury, I didn’t think that it was the cause of the reason for the
    operation.
    I think the reason that he had the operation was because he
    had a long-standing history of degenerative disk disease with
    radicular symptomatology that was going to require surgical
    intervention at some point. The guy was on medication, he had
    had previous surgery, he had had previous epidurals.
    That natural history is not such that [if] he goes out and
    pick[s] something up you’re going to need to—I mean, certainly
    5
    most people they can have an exacerbation. But in his situation I
    felt like, after I reviewed all of his records, I felt that it was probably
    not the sole cause for his injury.
    His opinion was based upon Hinegardner’s “fairly extensive” and “lengthy”
    medical history.
    Hinegardner was referred to Dr. Robert Gordon for an impairment rating.
    Dr. Gordon testified that Hinegardner was in need of surgery before July 28,
    2008, and that it would be “very difficult” to substantiate that his back injury was
    aggravated by the incident on July 28 “given that he had continued symptoms
    throughout.” With regard to the question of whether the July 28, 2008 incident
    caused Hinegardner’s condition, Dr. Gordon opined: “To say something was
    aggravated from a pathological standpoint would really be hypothetical
    conjecture.”
    Hinegardner filed a petition with the Iowa Workers’ Compensation
    Commissioner on September 9, 2010. An arbitration hearing was held on July 6,
    2011. The deputy workers’ compensation commissioner filed a ruling on August
    15, 2011, denying Hinegardner’s claim because he failed to prove a causal
    connection between the events of July 28, 2008, and a worsening of his
    condition.
    In the arbitration decision, the deputy made the following findings
    regarding Hinegardner’s credibility:
    This deputy did not find claimant to be an especially credible
    witness. While the incident in question was not witnessed, it still
    could have occurred, as immediately reported by claimant on July
    28, 2008 to his supervisor, Kirk Hauskins. However, in the
    recorded statement claimant made to the insurance adjuster, Linda
    Horn, just two days after the alleged incident occurred, claimant
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    was minimizing his prior and protracted history of back pain and
    radiculopathy. He also declined to answer additional questions
    about his prior back treatment. Claimant even denied having a
    regular doctor where he lived in Michigan for 20 years, despite the
    fact he had been treating with Dr. Okey for numerous years. It was
    Dr. Okey who managed claimant’s pain medication. Claimant
    reported to the insurance adjuster, “I never have anything wrong
    with me.” The statement was misleading at the very least.
    Claimant was less than forthcoming about his medical
    condition when he testified during his deposition.         Claimant
    admitted to seeing Dr. Murray in April 2008 but he denied he was
    taking any narcotic medication. Additionally, claimant testified he
    was symptom free when he commenced his employment with the
    present defendant-employer.           Nevertheless, despite being
    symptom free, claimant filled prescriptions for Hydrocodone on April
    30, 2008, June 7, 2008, July 4, 2008, and July 26, 2008. Someone
    who was purportedly symptom free would hardly need to take
    prescribed narcotic medication.          Claimant’s behavior was
    inconsistent with his deposition testimony.
    Claimant was not candid with the insurance adjuster, Dr.
    VanFleet or with Robert Gordon, M.D., concerning the length and
    extent of claimant’s low back condition. Claimant minimized the
    prior treatment he had received for his low back pain.
    Hinegardner appealed the arbitration ruling. He also filed a motion for
    sanctions challenging what he alleges are false statements made by IMON
    Communications in its appeal brief. That motion was denied without a hearing,
    and Hinegardner’s appeal of the motion was denied because it was interlocutory
    in nature. The appeal of the arbitration ruling was affirmed, and Hinegardner’s
    application for rehearing was denied.
    On June 14, 2013, Hinegardner filed a petition for judicial review. The
    matter was submitted without oral argument. On January 3, 2014, the district
    court affirmed the commissioner’s ruling. Hinegardner appeals.
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    II. Scope of Review.
    Our review is governed by Iowa Code chapter 17A (2013). See Mike
    Brooks, Inc. v. House, 
    843 N.W.2d 885
    , 888 (Iowa 2014).           In reviewing the
    commissioner’s decision, the district court acts in an appellate capacity to correct
    errors of law.     
    Id.
       On appeal, we apply the standards of chapter 17A to
    determine whether we reach the same conclusions as the district court. 
    Id. at 889
    . If we do, we affirm; if not, we reverse. 
    Id.
    The legislature vested the commissioner with the discretion to determine
    the facts. 
    Id.
     If “substantial evidence in the record before the court when that
    record is viewed as a whole” supports the commissioner’s findings, we are bound
    by them. Iowa Code section 17A.19(10)(f)(1) defines “substantial evidence” as
    “the quantity and quality of evidence that would be deemed sufficient by a
    neutral, detached, and reasonable person, to establish the fact at issue when the
    consequences resulting from the establishment of that fact are understood to be
    serious and of great importance.” It is not enough that different conclusions may
    be drawn from the evidence. Mike Brooks, 843 N.W.2d at 889. Our job is to
    determine whether substantial evidence supports the findings actually made. Id.
    III. Discussion.
    A. Credibility Determination.
    Hinegardner first challenges the agency’s credibility findings. As the trier
    of fact, the commissioner has a duty to determine witness credibility. Arndt v.
    City of Le Claire, 
    728 N.W.2d 389
    , 395 (Iowa 2007).                 Because such
    determinations are necessarily based on facts, we apply the substantial-evidence
    8
    standard on review.     See Finch v. Schneider Specialized Carriers, Inc., 
    700 N.W.2d 328
    , 332 (Iowa 2005). “[W]e give due regard to the commissioner’s
    discretion to accept or reject testimony based on his assessment of witness
    credibility.” Schutjer v. Algona Manor Care Ctr., 
    780 N.W.2d 549
    , 558 (Iowa
    2010).
    Hinegardner contends substantial evidence does not support the deputy
    commissioner’s finding that he was not credible. His argument centers on the
    insurance adjuster’s claim she discovered his medical records by sending record
    requests to medical providers she found when she checked the internet for
    doctors treating back injuries in the areas Hinegardner had lived. He argues it is
    “irrational and illogical” to believe that his medical records were discovered this
    way. Hinegardner claims he provided the names of his treating physicians to
    Horn, which is how the medical records were discovered.          He states: “The
    Deputy’s determination that Hinegardner’s medical history and records were the
    result of an internet search goes against reason and logic.”
    The only finding the agency made concerning Hinegardner’s disclosure of
    information to the insurance adjuster was that Hinegardner “was not candid . . .
    concerning the length and extent of [his] low back condition.” There is no finding
    that the insurance company discovered his medical records through an internet
    search or that Hinegardner never provided the insurance carrier with a list of his
    treating physicians after the recorded interview. There is no discussion of the
    matter in the arbitration decision. Rather, the deputy’s credibility determination
    turns on Hinegardner’s failure to be forthcoming about his medical condition and
    9
    treatment during the initial interview with the insurance adjuster, in his deposition,
    and when providing information to Drs. Gordon and VanFleet. Viewing the entire
    record, we conclude substantial evidence supports the finding that Hinegardner’s
    claims regarding the extent of his injury prior to July 28, 2008, are not credible.
    Hinegardner also argues the commissioner erred in adopting the deputy’s
    credibility findings because they were not based on the deputy’s personal
    observations at the hearing. In the appeal decision, the commissioner gave the
    deputy’s credibility findings “considerable deference,” noting that the deputy “had
    the opportunity to evaluate the demeanor of the persons who testified and was
    able to include witness demeanor when weighing credibility, even if not expressly
    commenting on that demeanor.”
    Hinegardner’s    argument     stems     from   the   language     of   section
    17A.19(10)(f), which provides that we must reverse or modify an agency decision
    when not supported by substantial evidence in the record when that record is
    viewed as a whole. The phrase “when that record is viewed as a whole” means
    that the adequacy of the evidence in the record before the court to
    support a particular finding of fact must be judged in light of all the
    relevant evidence in the record cited by any party that detracts from
    that finding as well as all of the relevant evidence in the record cited
    by any party that supports it, including any determinations of
    veracity by the presiding officer who personally observed the
    demeanor of the witnesses and the agency’s explanation of why
    the relevant evidence in the record supports its material findings of
    fact.
    Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(f)(3) (emphasis added).              Because the deputy’s
    credibility determination was based on statements Hinegardner made outside of
    the arbitration hearing, Hinegardner argues it is not entitled to any deference.
    10
    A credibility determination based on personal observation of a witness’s
    demeanor is only one factor to be considered in determining whether substantial
    evidence supports the decision. See id. (stating “all relevant evidence in the
    record” must be considered).         In affirming the arbitration decision, the
    commissioner noted not only the deputy’s credibility finding, but also the relative
    strength and credibility of the three expert witnesses’ testimony.              The
    commissioner then went on to find that, even setting aside the deputy’s credibility
    findings, “some of claimant’s explanations for his behavior prior to July 28, 2008
    defy common sense,” noting discrepancies in Hinegardner’s claim he was not
    using narcotics for pain relief before the date of his alleged injury despite having
    filled prescriptions for narcotics on multiple occasions leading up to July 28,
    2008—including two days before.           Based on the record evidence, the
    commissioner arrived at the same conclusion as the deputy. Even setting aside
    the “considerable deference” given to the deputy’s credibility finding, the
    commissioner’s independent arrival at the same conclusion shows substantial
    evidence supports the finding.
    B. Causation.
    Hinegardner also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the
    causation finding. He contends there is insubstantial evidence supporting the
    commissioner’s finding that his condition was pre-existing and was not materially
    aggravated, accelerated, or worsened by a work-related incident.
    “Medical causation is a question of fact vested in the commissioner’s
    discretion.” Mike Brooks, 843 N.W.2d at 889. It is “within the domain of expert
    11
    testimony.” Cedar Rapids Cmty. Sch. Dist. v. Pease, 
    807 N.W.2d 839
    , 845 (Iowa
    2011). The weight given to an expert’s testimony depends on the accuracy of
    the facts the expert relied upon and other surrounding circumstances; if it is
    based on an incomplete history, the opinion is not binding upon the
    commissioner. 
    Id.
     Ultimately, the decision to accept or reject an expert’s opinion
    is within the “peculiar province” of the commissioner. 
    Id.
    In the appeal decision, the commissioner states:
    Claimant argues the presiding deputy ignored or did not give
    sufficient weight to independent evaluation physician, Robin Epp,
    M.D., opinion that the differences between the lumbar MRI
    performed in 2000 and that performed in 2008 related to claimant’s
    purported work incident of July 28, 2008. Dr. Epp provided no
    medical rationale supporting that conclusion. In contrast, both Dr.
    Gordon and Dr. VanFleet fully explained their reasons for not
    attributing differences on reports of the MRIs performed eight years
    apart and interpreted by different radiologists to a particular
    incident. Furthermore, Dr. VanFleet has expertise on lumbar spinal
    conditions that Dr. Epp cannot claim.
    The weight and credibility assigned to these experts’ opinions, as well as the
    opinion of Dr. Okey, was for the commissioner to determine. See St. Luke’s
    Hospital v. Gray, 
    604 N.W.2d 646
    , 652 (Iowa 2000) (stating the weight to be
    given to expert testimony is for the finder of fact); Sherman v. Pella Corp., 
    576 N.W.2d 312
    , 321 (Iowa 1998) (“The commissioner, as the fact finder, determines
    the weight to be given to any expert testimony.”).            Our review of the
    commissioner’s finding regarding the conflicting expert witness opinions is limited
    to whether it is supported by substantial evidence in the record made before the
    agency when that record is viewed as a whole. See Dunlavey v. Economy Fire &
    Casualty Co., 
    526 N.W.2d 845
    , 855 (Iowa 1995). When reviewing the expert
    12
    witness testimony, coupled with the claims Hinegardner has made that conflict
    with other evidence in the record, we find substantial evidence supports the
    commissioner’s finding that Hinegardner did not suffer a compensable work
    injury on July 28, 2008.
    Because substantial evidence supports the commissioner’s finding on
    causation, we need not address Hinegardner’s argument regarding the extent of
    his disability.   Having reached the same conclusion as the district court, we
    affirm.
    AFFIRMED.