Gary Sowder v. CBS Corporation ( 2020 )


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  •                   RENDERED: AUGUST 21, 2020; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2019-CA-001760-WC
    GARY SOWDER                                                         APPELLANT
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION
    v.              OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    ACTION NO. WC-06-89465
    CBS CORPORATION; NORTON
    LEATHERMAN SPINE CENTER;
    HONORABLE JANE RICE WILLIAMS,
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE; AND
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD                                          APPELLEES
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: JONES, MAZE, AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES.
    MAZE, JUDGE: The single issue for our review is whether a medical opinion
    stating that a 2006 work injury “could have contributed” to the early development
    of degenerative disc disease constituted substantial evidence to support a finding
    that a 2019 surgery was causally connected to the prior work injury. In vacating
    the decision of the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), the Workers’ Compensation
    Board concluded that the expert’s use of the word “could” did not constitute an
    opinion as to causation within reasonable medical certainty and remanded the
    claim to the ALJ for re-examination of the medical evidence as to causation.
    Finding no error in the opinion of the Board, we affirm.
    Gary Sowder sustained a work-related back injury in 2006 for which
    he received a lump-sum settlement which included amounts for waiving his right
    to reopen and the right to vocational rehabilitation payments. Sowder did not,
    however, waive his right to past and future medical benefits. This appeal stems
    from a dispute which arose when the employer, CBS, moved to reopen the
    proceeding to contest the reasonableness, necessity, and work-relatedness of a
    proposed 2019 fusion surgery at L4-5 and L5-S1. CBS also moved to join appellee
    Norton Leatherman Spine Center and Sowder’s treating physician, Dr. Rolando
    Puno, as parties to the fee dispute proceeding. CBS supported its motion to reopen
    with the physician advisor report of Dr. Mukund Gundanna who opined that the
    records submitted for review would not support the conclusion that the proposed
    procedure was either reasonable or necessary.
    -2-
    After Sowder filed the records of Norton Leatherman and Dr. Puno,
    CBS submitted a lengthy medical records review report of Dr. Russell Travis who
    ultimately concluded:
    I see no indication for any treatment specifically related
    to the work accident of 2006. As I have noted above, Mr.
    Sowder’s current complaints and the surgery by Dr. Puno
    have no relationship whatsoever to the distant injury of
    4/18/2006.
    Sowder then filed a letter from Dr. Puno to Sowder’s counsel. Dr. Puno’s letter
    forms the core of the issue presented for our review:
    I am writing this letter on behalf of Mr. Gary Sowder
    concerning the medical fee dispute/motion to reopen. As
    you well know, the above patient sustained a work-
    related injury on April 18, 2006. His injury included an
    L3 burst fracture for which he underwent surgical
    treatment that included an L3 vertebrectomy and spinal
    fusion from L2-L4. The patient did really well following
    the surgery and has achieved a solid fusion at L2-L4. In
    the course of time the patient started to develop adjacent
    level degeneration disc disease at the level of L4-5 and
    L5-S1 below his spinal fusion which did not respond to
    conservative treatment. He eventually underwent surgery
    that included anterior inter-body fusion of L4-5 and L5-
    S1 on January 25, 2019. Based on the history it appears
    that the surgery in 2006 was related to the work-related
    injury of April 18, 2006. The successful solid fusion
    achieved for the treatment of his burst fracture could
    have contributed to early development of degenerative
    disc disease L4-L5 and L5-S1 for which additional
    surgical intervention had to be performed.
    (Emphasis added.)
    -3-
    In response to this letter, CBS filed a letter from Dr. Travis in which
    he reaffirmed the opinions he had previously expressed regarding the
    reasonableness and necessity of the 2019 surgery and offered the following
    opinions as to causation:
    The literature on adjacent segment degeneration has
    consistently shown that this is not related to an operative
    procedure but is simply the natural aging process. As I
    noted when I reviewed the x-rays on Mr. Sowder such as
    the MRI of 4/18/2006 there were already degenerative
    changes at L4-5 and L5-S1. The radiology report noted,
    “Degenerative changes at L4-5. Concentric disk bulge
    with facet degenerative changes causing moderate canal
    stenosis. L5-S1 concentric bugle and bilateral neural
    foraminal narrowing.”
    On 4/18/2006 Mr. Sowder already had significant
    degenerative changes at L4-5 and L5-S1. I maintain the
    opinions I expressed on 3/29/2019.
    I will answer the questions posed:
    Q1: Does Dr. Travis agree with Dr. Puno’s statement
    that the current fusion “could” be related to the original
    injury?
    A1: My answer remains no.
    Q2: Does Dr. Puno’s statement constitute a conclusion
    within reasonable medical probability?
    A2: No. In my opinion, Dr. Puno’s statement is not
    backed by evidence-based medical literature on the
    development of adjacent segment degeneration.
    -4-
    The ALJ thereafter entered an order identifying the contested issues as the
    reasonableness and necessity and/or work-relatedness of the surgery at L4-5 and
    L5-S-1; extending proof for ten days and setting a deadline for briefs; and stating
    that the parties waived a hearing. Sowder was not deposed prior to submission of
    the matter for resolution.
    The ALJ ultimately entered an order finding the surgery compensable
    on the basis that the opinions of Drs. Travis and Gundanna were not as persuasive
    as the opinion of Dr. Puno. With respect to this finding, the ALJ specifically
    noted that an argument could be made that Dr. Puno’s use of the words “could
    have contributed” was weak in addressing causation, but she nevertheless
    interpreted his opinion as indicating that the second surgery was causally related to
    the original injury. CBS thereafter filed a petition for reconsideration alleging that
    Dr. Puno had merely stated that the second surgery “could” be related to the
    original injury and that this statement was insufficient medical proof to support a
    finding of compensability. The ALJ denied the petition to reconsider citing
    Sowder’s argument that “[e]ven a cursory review of [Dr. Puno’s] letter stands for
    the proposition that the doctor felt the surgery was reasonable, necessary and
    related to the work injury . . . .”
    In its appeal to the Board, CBS again challenged the quality of the
    evidence upon which the ALJ relied in ordering the surgery compensable. CBS
    -5-
    argued that Dr. Puno’s statement addressed causation in terms of possibility, not
    probability, and as such comprised insufficient proof that the 2019 surgery was
    causally related to the work injury of 2006. The Board agreed and vacated the
    decision of the ALJ, remanding the matter for a determination of whether
    substantial evidence supported the finding that the 2019 surgery was causally
    related to the 2006 work injury. This appeal followed.1
    In Crawford & Company v. Wright, 
    284 S.W.3d 136
    (Ky. 2009), the
    Supreme Court reiterated the burden of proof applicable to medical fee disputes:
    The party responsible for paying post-award medical
    expenses has the burden of contesting a particular
    expense by filing a timely motion to reopen and proving
    it to be non-compensable.
    Id. at 140
    (citing Mitee Enterprises v. Yates, 
    865 S.W.2d 654
    (Ky. 1993) (the
    burden of contesting a post-award medical expense in a timely manner and proving
    that it is non-compensable is on the employer). Further, the former Court of
    Appeals addressed the nature of proof required to meet that burden – if a finding is
    not substantiated by evidence of probative value, the finding and the award based
    upon that finding must be set aside and the cause remanded to the factfinder for a
    proper determination. Lexington Cartage Co. v. Williams, 
    407 S.W.2d 395
    , 396
    1
    The holding in Hampton v. Flav-O-Rich Dairies, 
    489 S.W.3d 230
    , 234 (Ky. 2016), clarified
    that a Board opinion is final for purposes of review “if it divests a party of a vested right by
    setting aside an ALJ’s award or by authorizing or requiring the entry of a different award on
    remand.”
    -6-
    (Ky. 1966). Here, the employer CBS offered medical evidence to support its claim
    that the 2019 surgery was not causally related to Sowder’s 2006 injury. Sowder
    countered this evidence with Dr. Puno’s letter.
    Sowder complains that the Board impermissibly substituted its view
    of the evidence for that of the ALJ. However, the true question before us is
    whether there was substantial evidence supporting the ALJ’s finding that Dr.
    Puno’s opinion was the most persuasive evidence as to causation. We concur in
    the Board’s analysis that, standing alone, there was not.
    Turning again to Lexington Cartage, our predecessor Court
    “recognized that expert medical witnesses often find it impossible to state a
    medical cause of a disability with absolute 
    certainty.” 407 S.W.2d at 396
    .
    However, the Lexington Cartage Court also confirmed that “‘[t]he facts or
    hypothesis on which the professional witness testifies need not be conclusive. They
    are sufficient if in his opinion they indicate the cause within reasonable
    probability.’”
    Id. (emphasis added) (quoting
    Grimes v. Goodlett & Adams, 
    345 S.W.2d 47
    , 49 (Ky. 1961)).
    The opinion of this Court in Combs v. Stortz, 
    276 S.W.3d 282
    (Ky.
    App. 2009), is also persuasive. One of Combs’ treating physicians testified as to
    his opinion that she “might possibly require neck and/or shoulder surgery.”
    Id. at 296.
    The trial court excluded that testimony on the basis that it was too speculative
    -7-
    to be admitted in support of Combs’ claim. In affirming the decision of the trial
    court, we set out the following analysis:
    In Seaton v. Rosenberg, 
    573 S.W.2d 333
    (Ky.
    1978), an issue arose as to the admissibility of physician
    testimony. Ultimately, the Court decided to admit the
    testimony, finding it important to note, “[o]ne last
    caution, the expert expresses his opinion as a probability
    or certainty, not a possibility, ‘could have,’ or the like.”
    Id. at 338.
    Likewise, in the workers’ compensation
    matter of Young v. L.A. Davidson Inc., 
    463 S.W.2d 924
                 (Ky. 1971), the Kentucky Supreme Court held that in a
    workers’ compensation proceeding, “medical-opinion
    evidence [must] be founded on probability and not on
    mere possibility or speculation . . . .”
    Id. at 926.
    In the
    instant matter, Dr. Grefer couched his opinion not in
    terms of probability or certainty, but indeed as
    possibility.
    Id. (emphasis added). Like
    the medical testimony in Combs, Dr. Puno’s testimony
    was couched in terms of possibility, rather than probability or certainty, and, thus,
    cannot be construed to be substantial evidence sufficient to support the ALJ’s
    finding with respect to causation. Further, contrary to Sowder’s contention that the
    Board usurped the factfinding function of the ALJ, the Board merely remanded the
    case to the ALJ for reconsideration of the evidence in light of the caselaw
    concerning the quality of medical opinions and other evidence of record which
    might support the finding that the 2019 surgery was reasonable, necessary, and
    causally connected to the 2006 injury.
    -8-
    Accordingly, because we discern no error in the decision of the
    Workers’ Compensation Board, we affirm its opinion in all respects.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:                     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE CBS
    CORPORATION:
    Wayne C. Daub
    Louisville, Kentucky                     Stanley S. Dawson
    Louisville, Kentucky
    -9-