Bluelinx v. Estate of David Williams ( 2023 )


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  •                   RENDERED: MAY 26, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2022-CA-1027-WC
    BLUELINX                                                        APPELLANT
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION
    v.             OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    ACTION NO. WC-19-64871
    ESTATE OF DAVID WILLIAMS;
    TRACEY BURNS, EXECUTRIX;
    ELIJAH WILLIAMS, MINOR CHILD;
    HONORABLE W. GREG HARVEY,
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE;
    AND THE KENTUCKY WORKERS’
    COMPENSATION BOARD                                               APPELLEES
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: CALDWELL, DIXON, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
    DIXON, JUDGE: Bluelinx petitions for review of a Workers’ Compensation
    Board (Board) decision affirming and remanding the Opinion, Award, and Order
    rendered January 18, 2022, by the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). After careful
    review of the briefs, record, and law, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    On February 18, 2021, Tracey Burns, Executrix, filed the underlying
    Application for Resolution of a Claim – Injury seeking workers’ compensation
    benefits, pursuant to KRS1 342.750, from Bluelinx on behalf of the Estate of David
    Williams and his minor son.
    The following facts are undisputed. Williams, an employee of
    Bluelinx, suffered a work-related injury to his left ankle that necessitated surgery.
    His pre-operative cardiac exam was normal, and out-patient surgery was performed
    on October 25, 2019, without complications. Unfortunately, on October 27, 2019,2
    he returned to the hospital by ambulance and subsequently died. The death
    certificate cited complications of congestive heart failure (CHF) as the immediate
    cause of death. At the time of his death, Williams was 50 years old with an
    extensive medical history, including diagnoses of diabetes, obesity, CHF,
    hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and deep venous thrombosis (DVT).
    1
    Kentucky Revised Statutes.
    2
    We note that Bluelinx’s brief records Williams’ date of death as October 28, 2019; however,
    this appears to be in error as it is refuted by the medical records, both experts’ statements, the
    testimony of Burns, and Bluelinx’s pleadings before the ALJ.
    -2-
    On the issue of causation, Dr. Steven S. Wunder, a physiatrist retained
    by the estate, initially opined that “Williams’ cardiac condition did not pose an
    immediate threat of death prior to [surgery and, g]iven the well-documented stable
    condition of [Williams’ CHF], it is unlikely he would have succumbed to [CHF]
    on October 27, 2019, or a reasonable time thereafter, if he had not undergone the
    work-related surgery[.]” Dr. Wunder also noted that “[t]he rate of death doubles in
    the perioperative time frame in those with a history of [CHF] and subsequent
    noncardiac surgery.”
    Bluelinx’s medical expert, Dr. John D. Corl, a practicing
    interventional cardiologist, disputed that Williams had CHF, though he
    acknowledged that Williams had been diagnosed with the condition during a 2014
    hospitalization. Dr. Corl’s objection was based on his review of the
    echocardiogram performed in 2014, the lack of confirmation by means of
    catheterization following Williams’ subsequent diagnosis of liver abscesses, and
    the fact that Williams, who was not being treated for the condition, had no
    recurrent symptoms in the ensuing five years. Instead, concluding that there was
    no direct causal relationship between the death and the surgery, Dr. Corl opined
    that Williams suffered a sudden cardiac death caused by his known and
    uncontrolled comorbid conditions – diabetes, hypertension, and obesity – as well
    as probable sleep apnea.
    -3-
    In response, Dr. Wunder submitted the following rebuttal opinion:
    I am surprised by the statements of Dr. Corl, as it is
    irrefutable that cardiac complications occur in those
    undergoing major, noncardiac surgery. In fact, cardiac
    complications are common after noncardiac surgery, and
    include sudden cardiac death. The single largest cause of
    perioperative patients death, I would agree with Dr. Corl,
    would be major adverse cardiac events. The number of
    patients undergoing noncardiac surgery is wide and is
    growing, and annually, 500,000 to 900,000 of these
    patients experience perioperative cardiac death, nonfatal
    myocardial infarction, or nonfatal cardiac arrest.
    Noncardiac surgery is associated with significant cardiac
    morbidity, mortality, and cost.
    []
    Patients undergoing noncardiac surgery are at risk for
    major perioperative cardiac events. Perioperative
    myocardial infarction occurs primarily during the first
    three days after surgery, as was noted here. Some
    theorize that patients are receiving narcotic therapy and
    may not experience cardiac symptoms during a
    myocardial infarction. On studies which have examined
    perioperative cardiac death, authors attributed the cause
    to myocardial infarction in 66[%] of the cases and to
    arrhythmia or heart failure in 34[%] of the cases. It is felt
    that surgery with associated trauma, anesthesia,
    analgesia, intubation, extubation, pain, bleeding, and
    anemia all initiate inflammatory, hypercoagulable stress
    and hypoxic states, that are associated with perioperative
    elevations in troponin levels and mortality.
    []
    It is irrefutable that general anesthesia can initiate
    inflammatory and hypercoagulable states, and a sudden
    cardiac death syndrome. The stress of surgery also
    involves increased levels of catecholamines and
    -4-
    increased stress hormone levels. Perioperative hypoxia
    can also lead to myocardial ischemia. It is felt that 75[%]
    of deaths after noncardiac surgery are due to
    cardiovascular complications, as outlined by Dr. Corl,
    and I am certain he must be aware of this. I have
    enclosed a review article from the New England Journal
    of Medicine [entitled Cardiac Complications in Patients
    undergoing Major Noncardiac Surgery (hereinafter “the
    Journal article”)] supporting that noncardiac surgery can
    precipitate complications such as death from cardiac
    causes, myocardial infarction or injury, cardiac arrest, or
    [CHF]. The number of patients receiving noncardiac
    surgery is increasing worldwide. More than 10 million
    adults worldwide have a major cardiac complication in
    the first 30 days after noncardiac surgery. As the
    [Journal] article points out, if perioperative death were
    considered as a separate category, it would rank as the
    third leading cause of death in the United States. I am
    surprised that Dr. Corl was not aware of that. Surgery
    initiates an inflammatory response, stress,
    hypercoagulability, activation of sympathetic nervous
    system, and hemodynamic compromise, all of which can
    trigger cardiac complications.
    I am really confused as to what point Dr. Corl is trying to
    make. He seems to be arguing that [Williams] did not
    have [CHF]. He points out that no autopsy was done,
    and the cause of death was speculation. In addition to
    cardiac complications, sudden death can also be
    associated with [DVT] and pulmonary emboli, and
    [Williams] had a history of DVT already. Whichever
    complication his cause of death is attributed to, ([CHF]
    or pulmonary embolism), they occur at an increased
    frequency in the perioperative state. There is no way that
    Dr. Corl can make the statement that there was no direct
    causal relationship between [Williams’] noncardiac, left
    ankle surgery on October 25, 2019, and his death on
    October 27, 2019. Sudden cardiac death is a known
    complication of noncardiac surgery.
    -5-
    On January 18, 2022, the ALJ returned an opinion examining the
    merits of the experts’ competing opinions.
    A reading of the totality of the evidence is
    important. The [ALJ] interprets Dr. Wunder’s opinion to
    be that Williams’ surgery resulted in a cardiac event that
    caused his death. Dr. Corl also opines a cardiac event
    occurred that caused Williams[’] death. However, he is
    of the opinion that the surgery did not result in or cause
    the cardiac event. Dr. Corl reasoned that events occur to
    all persons who die from sudden cardiac death but that
    does not mean that those events are causative.
    Here, the ALJ acknowledges Dr. Corl’s superior
    qualifications on cardiac issues. However, Dr. Wunder
    has responded to Dr. Corl’s opinion and cited evidence
    from the [Journal article]. The question is whether the
    surgery proximately caused the sudden cardiac death.
    Dr. Corl testified about statistical probability based on
    the comorbid factors. Williams had the same comorbid
    factors for years prior to the surgical procedure. Two
    days after being placed under general anesthesia he was
    found unresponsive and died.
    []
    The ALJ agrees with Dr. Corl that Williams did not have
    [CHF] and that he suffered sudden cardiac death.
    However, the ALJ finds Dr. Wunder’s opinion that
    surgery caused the sudden cardiac event persuasive. This
    is true in light of the facts that Williams was not treating
    for [CHF], did not have pre-operative cardiac concerns or
    red flags. It is possible Williams might have had a
    sudden cardiac event on October 27, 2019, if he had not
    had surgery. It is also possible he could have had sudden
    cardiac [death] at any point for the years he carried the
    same comorbidities described by Dr. Corl. However,
    Williams did not have a sudden cardiac death until two
    days after surgery. Dr. Wunder has offered sufficient
    -6-
    evidence that noncardiac surgery is a known cause of
    sudden cardiac death. The facts coupled with Dr.
    Wunder’s opinion are persuasive to the ALJ and cause
    the ALJ to conclude Williams’ death by a sudden cardiac
    event was proximately caused by the work-related
    surgical procedure.
    Accordingly, the ALJ awarded death, dependent, and total disability
    benefits. After its Petition for Reconsideration was denied, Bluelinx appealed; the
    Board affirmed, though it remanded for an additional award of medical benefits;
    and this action followed. We will introduce further facts as they become relevant.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Workers’ compensation is governed by KRS Chapter 342. Disputes
    over benefits are resolved by ALJs and reviewed on appeal by the Board. KRS
    342.275; KRS 342.285. Our review of the Board’s opinion is limited. “When
    reviewing the Board’s decision, we reverse only where it has overlooked or
    misconstrued controlling law or so flagrantly erred in evaluating the evidence that
    it has caused gross injustice.” GSI Commerce v. 
    Thompson, 409
     S.W.3d 361, 364
    (Ky. App. 2012) (citing W. Baptist Hosp. v. Kelly, 
    827 S.W.2d 685
     (Ky. 1992)).
    LEGAL ANALYSIS
    Bluelinx argues the Board erroneously concluded the ALJ’s judgment
    was supported by substantial evidence when the basis thereof – Dr. Wunder’s
    causation opinion and the Journal article upon which he relied – are devoid of any
    probative value. In support, Bluelinx asserts that the facts espoused by Dr.
    -7-
    Wunder are unsupported, and thus unreliable, or are gleaned from the Journal
    article which Bluelinx contends is wholly irrelevant to the matter at hand. We are
    not convinced the Board erred.
    To the extent Bluelinx claims that the ALJ was not permitted to rely
    on Dr. Wunder’s rebuttal opinion or the Journal article, it is notable that Bluelinx
    neither challenged the admissibility of this evidence in the proceedings before the
    ALJ nor raised the Board’s refusal to rule on the unpreserved claim in the matter at
    bar. As a general rule, “when the question is one properly within the province of
    medical experts, the [ALJ] is not justified in disregarding the medical evidence.”
    Kingery v. Sumitomo Elec. Wiring, 
    481 S.W.3d 492
    , 496 (Ky. 2015) (quoting
    Mengel v. Hawaiian-Tropic N.W. and Cent. Distribs., Inc., 
    618 S.W.2d 184
    , 187
    (Ky. App. 1981)). Exceptions exist in cases involving observable causation, or if
    the medical opinion is the result of the claimant providing an inaccurate or
    misleading medical history. Id.; Cepero v Fabricated Metals Corp., 
    132 S.W.3d 839
     (Ky. 2004). This Court is unaware of a similar exception based solely on the
    expert’s failure to source his opinion, and Bluelinx has cited no relevant authority
    in support. Here, whether the surgery was the proximate cause of Williams’ death
    two days later is clearly an issue to be resolved by medical experts, and there is no
    contention that Dr. Wunder was not aware of the precise surgical procedure
    Williams underwent or his relevant medical history. Accordingly, the ALJ was
    -8-
    not, as Bluelinx asserts would be proper, permitted to wholly disregard Dr.
    Wunder’s opinion and accept Dr. Corl’s by default. Rather, the ALJ was required
    to weigh the evidence.
    As the Kentucky Supreme Court explained in Whittaker v. Rowland,
    
    998 S.W.2d 479
    , 481-82 (Ky. 1999):
    [T]his Court has construed KRS 342.285 to mean that the
    fact-finder, rather than the reviewing court, has the sole
    discretion to determine the quality, character, and
    substance of evidence[;] that an ALJ, as fact-finder, may
    reject any testimony and believe or disbelieve various
    parts of the evidence, regardless of whether it came from
    the same witness or the same adversary party’s total
    proof[;] and that where the party with the burden of proof
    was successful before the ALJ, the issue on appeal is
    whether substantial evidence supported the ALJ’s
    conclusion[.] Substantial evidence has been defined as
    some evidence of substance and relevant consequence,
    having the fitness to induce conviction in the minds of
    reasonable men.
    (Citations omitted.)
    In its opinion affirming, the Board concluded that Dr. Wunder’s
    opinion, which was given in terms of reasonable medical probability, satisfied this
    requirement. In so deciding, the Board noted consistent testimony from Dr. Corl’s
    deposition that no surgical procedure using anesthesia is without risk; that a fatality
    could occur even from a low-risk ankle surgery; and that survival following
    surgery does not eliminate surgery as the potential cause of a patient’s death
    occurring in the subsequent 24 to 48 hours (though Dr. Corl stated that this risk is
    -9-
    lower in an elective outpatient procedure than a more taxing procedure, such as a
    bypass). The Board additionally rejected Bluelinx’s claim that the Journal article
    was irrelevant, concluding its applicability was an issue reserved for a medical
    expert, and held that the ALJ was free to conclude that it was germane to the case.
    We perceive no error. Bluelinx’s issue with the sourcing of Dr.
    Wunder’s opinion is a matter of weight and credibility reserved for the ALJ, and it
    is not this Court’s function to reweigh the evidence on a question of fact. See 
    id. at 482
    . As for Bluelinx’s challenges to the Journal article’s relevance, Dr. Wunder’s
    citation thereto, as well as his repeated quotation of its salient points, demonstrates
    his conclusion as an expert that it was relevant to his medical opinion regarding
    Williams’ death. We also note that “ALJs are not permitted to rely on lay
    testimony, personal experience, [or] inference to make findings that directly
    conflict with the medical evidence[.]” Kingery, 481 S.W.3d at 496 (quoting
    Mengel, 
    618 S.W.2d at 187
    ). Additionally, while Bluelinx would have this Court
    evaluate the applicability of the source material cited by the Journal article and
    then, without affording Williams the opportunity to explain or respond, conclude
    it – and by extension Dr. Wunder’s opinion – did not constitute sufficient evidence,
    we are not permitted to consider matters not disclosed by the record. Montgomery
    v. Koch, 
    251 S.W.2d 235
    , 237 (Ky. 1952). Finally, we are unconvinced the
    evidence is insufficient to support the judgment merely because in one section of
    -10-
    the Journal article, which is a review of several different studies on the topic of
    cardiac complications following noncardiac surgery, the scope of a particular study
    is defined to the exclusion of the procedure at issue herein. Having reviewed the
    evidence, we cannot say that the Board’s assessment is patently unreasonable or
    flagrantly implausible.
    CONCLUSION
    Therefore, and for the foregoing reasons, the decision of the Board is
    AFFIRMED.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEES:
    Mark R. Bush                              Haley S. Stamm
    Samantha Steelman                         Ft. Mitchell, Kentucky
    Ft. Mitchell, Kentucky
    -11-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2022 CA 001027

Filed Date: 5/25/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/2/2023