Slater, Ronnie v. ADECCO USA, Inc. , 2023 TN WC 15 ( 2023 )


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  •                                                                                       FILED
    Mar 14, 2023
    02:50 PM(ET)
    TENNESSEE COURT OF
    WORKERS' COMPENSATION
    CLAIMS
    TENNESSE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION
    IN THE COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS
    AT CHATTANOOGA
    Ronnie Slater,                                   )   Docket No.: 2020-01-0512
    Employee,                            )
    v.                                               )
    ADECCO USA, Inc.,                                )   State File No.: 49580-2020
    Employer,                            )
    And                                              )
    New Hampshire Insurance Company,                 )   Judge Thomas Wyatt
    Carrier.                            )
    )
    EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER
    On March 8, 2023, the Court heard an Expedited Hearing in which Ronnie Slater
    sought physical therapy and unpaid temporary disability benefits for a left-knee injury.
    ADECCO USA contended it owed no benefits because Mr. Slater did not prove that his
    left-knee injury, or need for its treatment, arose primarily out of and in the course and scope
    of employment. ADECCO also claimed that it owes no temporary disability benefits
    because Mr. Slater failed to prove disability from his alleged knee injury during the period
    in which he sought benefits.
    For the reasons below, the Court orders ADECCO to provide ongoing medical
    treatment for Mr. Slater’s left-knee injury, including immediate authorization of the
    physical therapy ordered by the treating physician. The Court denies Mr. Slater’s claim
    for temporary disability benefits for insufficient proof.
    History of Claim
    In January 2020, Mr. Slater sustained a compensable spinal injury and had lumbar
    surgery eight months later. Six weeks after surgery, Mr. Slater’s low-back pain had
    improved, but he continued to have pain in the left leg.
    Mr. Slater testified that, after surgery, he experienced numbness and weakness in
    his left leg that caused him to fall two or three times. Around this time, ADECCO, a
    1
    temporary employment agency, assigned him transitional work at a food bank. While
    working at the food bank on January 26, 2021, his left leg gave way when he stepped over
    pallets while carrying empty boxes. He went down, and his left foot wedged between two
    pallets. He then fell backward, twisting his back and left knee.
    Mr. Slater reported this injury and saw a doctor at an urgent care clinic that same
    day. He told the doctor he had back pain and tingling down both legs.
    Three weeks later, Mr. Slater saw his spine surgeon, who noted, “At the end of
    01/2021 . . . he was reaching and lifting some empty boxes and tripped over a pallet and
    fell backwards landing on his back.” Mr. Slater also reported “more soreness in his lower
    and upper back” with “some discomfort in his left leg” but no more weakness. The surgeon
    placed restrictions of no lifting over ten pounds, bending, or twisting.
    When he saw the surgeon again in May, Mr. Slater reported left-knee complaints
    but, according to the medical records, was not working. His “inability to work” contributed
    to depression. On the next visit, September 9, Mr. Slater had ongoing back symptoms,
    including tingling in his left leg and weakness in his left foot, as well as “[k]nee pain with
    patellar crepitus on the left.” During this visit, the spinal surgeon placed Mr. Slater at
    maximum medical improvement for his back, gave an impairment rating for the spinal
    injury, and referred him for a functional capacity evaluation as well as more treatment for
    his knee. The surgeon stated that the functional capacity evaluation restrictions would be
    permanent.
    During the functional evaluation on September 29, Mr. Slater reported ongoing “low
    back pain with symptoms radiating down the left leg, with reported numbness and tingling,
    occasional weakness[.]” He also reported left-knee pain while standing, walking on a
    treadmill, stair climbing, and squatting. The examiner determined the evaluation findings
    were valid and placed Mr. Slater in a light-to-medium category of industrial exertion based
    on restrictions on his capacity to lift, walk, climb stairs, and bend.
    On February 9, 2022, Mr. Slater requested an Expedited Hearing seeking several
    benefits, including authorization of the knee referral made by the spinal surgeon five
    months earlier. He supported this request with an affidavit stating that his spine surgeon
    referred him for treatment of “left knee pain that had developed after one of several falls
    where my leg goes numb and weak[.]” The affidavit also stated that he could not work
    “due to the pain from the injury and the surgery[.]” In March 2022, a week before a
    scheduled Expedited Hearing, ADECCO gave Mr. Slater a panel, from which he selected
    Dr. Jason Rogers for knee treatment.
    At the initial visit on July 12, Dr. Rogers noted, “This is a workers’ compensation
    injury that occurred several months ago when he experienced left lower extremity
    instability at work which caused him to fall.” He ordered x-rays that showed no
    2
    osteoarthritis but revealed a tilt of the left patella. Dr. Rogers diagnosed “pain in the left
    knee,” injected cortisone, and made a referral for physical therapy.
    Mr. Slater returned to Dr. Rogers on August 30 and October 11. On both occasions,
    he diagnosed left knee pain and noted that Mr. Slater had not undergone physical therapy.
    On the latter date, Mr. Slater said nobody ever called to schedule the therapy.
    Dr. Rogers’s records contain signed Referral Orders for physical therapy dated July
    12 and August 30, 2022, and February 17, 2023. The two earlier-dated forms list a third-
    party administrator for ADECCO’s carrier as the primary payment source. The forms list
    ADECCO as the policy holder and state that “Eligibility” was “Verified.” 1 To date, Mr.
    Slater has not had physical therapy.2
    In December 2022, Mr. Slater requested this Expedited Hearing. On January 31,
    2023, Dr. Rogers signed responses to questions posed by Mr. Slater’s counsel. On
    causation, he was asked to consider the following:
    Mr. Slater reports the knee pain began when he was attempting to step
    over some pallets in the floor when his left leg went numb and dropped down
    causing his left foot to become stuck between two pallets on the floor,
    causing him to fall backwards, twisting and extending his leg and knee. The
    FCE was performed on 09/29/21 with multiple restrictions recommended.
    However, it appears that Mr. Slater may not have received any clear
    instructions or review regarding the recommended restrictions.
    The letter posed the following question to Dr. Rogers: “More likely than not, did the work-
    related accident contribute greater than 50% to result in Mr. Slater’s fall and left knee
    injury?” Dr. Rogers checked “Yes.” Dr. Rogers also wrote that Mr. Slater had not reached
    maximum medical improvement for his knee and should remain “out of work until further
    knee treatment is completed.”3
    Mr. Slater sought temporary disability benefits from September 29, 2021, until
    September 20, 2022, when ADECCO resumed payment. Counsel for ADECCO asked Mr.
    Slater if he would agree with records showing he received temporary disability benefits
    1
    Since Mr. Slater first saw Dr. Rogers on July 12, 2022, the Court assumes that the reference to “7/10/20”
    on the referral forms should actually be “7/10/22.”
    2
    Counsel for ADECCO stated she did not know if ADECCO’s carrier ever got copies of the Referral
    Orders. Mr. Slater’s counsel pointed out that Dr. Rogers’s records include a fax cover sheet showing five
    pages were received by ADECCO’s adjuster Kelly Piturski on July 18, 2022. ADECCO’s counsel stated
    that Ms. Piturski adjusted Mr. Slater’s claim earlier but was no longer the adjuster.
    3
    Dr. Rogers wrote on August 30, 2021, that Mr. Slater was at maximum medical improvement on his left
    knee. However, in his October 2021 note, he suggested that he would not then perform an impairment
    rating because a rating usually occurs after the attainment om maximum medical improvement.
    3
    through October 15, 2021, and he stated he would agree. 4 Mr. Slater offered little
    testimony about whether he worked during the period for which he sought benefits, other
    than to say that he is currently on Social Security disability.
    ADECCO objected to admission of some medical records and Dr. Rogers’s
    questionnaire because Mr. Slater filed them two weeks before the hearing instead of
    contemporaneously with his Request for Expedited Hearing. It claimed this prejudiced its
    ability to schedule Dr. Rogers’s deposition. Mr. Slater countered that ADECCO gave him
    copies of Dr. Rogers’s records, thus it could not claim surprise by the admission of the
    records into evidence. He asserted that ADECCO’s receipt of the records before it gave
    them to him showed that ADECCO had more than sufficient time to schedule Dr. Rogers’s
    deposition.5
    The Court overruled ADECCO’s objection based on Tennessee Compilation Rules
    and Regulations 0800-02-21-.15(1)(b), which permits the Court to admit documents not
    timely filed under the rules upon a showing of good cause. Here, ADECCO gave the
    records to Mr. Slater; thus, it suffered no surprise or disadvantage by Mr. Slater’s reliance
    on the records at the hearing. Also, Dr. Rogers did not sign the questionnaire responses
    until after Mr. Slater filed his Request for Expedited Hearing. The Court held the above
    facts constitute good cause for admitting the records over ADECCO’s objection.
    ADECCO also objected to the admission of the questionnaire responses because
    they were based on an inaccurate hypothetical description of the mechanism of Mr. Slater’s
    injury and the restrictions placed on his activities. The Court overrules the objection and
    holds that the questionnaire sufficiently tracks the facts in the record to justify admitting it.
    Any discrepancies go to the weight of the evidence. For those reasons, the Court overruled
    ADECCO’s objection.
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
    In an Expedited Hearing, the employee must prove that he will prevail at a hearing
    on the merits in showing entitlement to benefits. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239
    (d)(1)
    (2022).
    To recover for his alleged work-related left-knee injury, Mr. Slater must show that
    the injury “arises primarily out of and in the course and scope of employment, considering
    all causes.” To show this, he needs testimony of a physician, based on a reasonable degree
    of medical certainty, that the “employment contributed more than fifty percent (50%) in
    4
    The Court assumes that ADECCO paid temporary disability benefits through September 29 or October
    15 because it did not return him to work after the spinal surgeon placed restrictions after Mr. Slater’s fall at
    the food bank.
    5
    Earlier in the hearing, counsel for ADECCO stated that she attempted to schedule Dr. Rogers’s deposition
    even before she knew Mr. Slater would attempt to introduce his records at the hearing.
    4
    causing the injury.” The employee must also show by medical expert testimony that the
    work injury “contributed more than fifty percent (50%) in causing the . . . disablement or
    need for medical treatment [for which the employee seeks benefits,] considering all
    causes.” The Court gives a rebuttable presumption of correctness to the causation opinion
    of a treating physician selected from a panel provided by the employer. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-102
    (12)(B)-(E).
    Here, the only medical opinion on causation is that of Dr. Rogers, whom Mr. Slater
    selected from a panel. Dr. Rogers responded “Yes” as to whether the work injury described
    in the questionnaire “contribute[d] greater than fifty percent to result in Mr. Slater’s fall
    and left-knee injury.” ADECCO argued that Dr. Rogers’s opinion is unreliable because he
    based it on hypothetical facts that were not proven during the hearing. The Court disagrees
    and finds the description of the mechanism of Mr. Slater’s knee injury in the questionnaire
    sufficiently tracks Mr. Slater’s testimony, as well as statements in the medical records, to
    justify Dr. Rogers’s reliance on those facts in giving his opinion.
    ADECCO also argued that Mr. Slater’s left-knee injury is not compensable because
    the providers who saw him after he fell at the food bank did not specifically record reports
    of left-knee pain. While that is true, those providers did note Mr. Slater’s report of left-leg
    symptoms, including discomfort. Also, the providers recorded that Mr. Slater reported
    increased back pain from the fall.
    Upon considering all the causation evidence, the Court holds that ADECCO did not
    rebut the statutory presumption of correctness afforded Dr. Rogers’s causation opinion.
    Further, the Court places importance on the fact that x-rays showed that Mr. Slater had no
    pre-existing arthritis in his left knee. Thus, this record contains no evidence that Mr.
    Slater’s left-knee pain comes from anything other than his fall at the food bank. On this
    record, the Court holds that Mr. Slater will likely prevail at trial in showing that his left-
    knee injury arose primarily out of and in the course and scope of his employment at
    ADECCO.
    For the same reasons, the Court holds that Mr. Slater will likely prevail at trial in
    showing his entitlement to physical therapy. ADECCO has failed to authorize treatment
    that Dr. Rogers ordered three times over a period of approximately eight months. If the
    failure to authorize treatment could be explained by a lack of communication between the
    physician and the carrier, as ADECCO suggested, it would have produced evidence of that
    fact, which it did not do.
    ADECCO shall promptly authorize and arrange for the physical therapy ordered by
    Dr. Rogers and inform Mr. Slater of the date of the first visit. ADECCO shall promptly
    file a notice with the Court Clerk documenting its compliance with this part of the order.
    5
    Mr. Slater asked the Court to refer ADECCO for a penalty for failing to authorize
    his physical therapy. Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-118(a)(11) states that the
    Bureau may collect penalties for “[f]ailure of any employer to timely provide medical
    treatment made reasonably necessary by the accident and recommended by the authorized
    treating physician[.]” The Court refers this case to the Bureau’s Compliance Program to
    consider the imposition of a penalty for ADECCO’s long delay in providing Mr. Slater
    physical therapy.6
    Finally, Mr. Slater additionally claimed temporary disability benefits. The record
    here does not contain evidence that a physician took Mr. Slater off work for his left knee
    until Dr. Rogers responded to the causation questionnaire in January 2023. By that time,
    ADECCO had already reinstated temporary disability benefits. However, the record shows
    that Mr. Slater’s spinal surgeon made permanent the restrictions in the September 29, 2021
    functional capacity evaluation. For that reason, Mr. Slater’s claim is for temporary partial
    disability benefits. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207
    (1).
    To recover temporary partial benefits during a week, Mr. Slater must show that, due
    to his partial disability, the wages he was able to earn that week were less than his average
    weekly wage. 
    Id.
     This record contains no evidence on the latter part of the equation. No
    evidence explains why Mr. Slater was out of work during the period in question; whether
    he unsuccessfully attempted to return to work under his restrictions; and in which weeks
    he was paid Social Security benefits. For those reasons, the Court holds that, on this record,
    Mr. Slater did not show he will likely prevail at trial in proving his entitlement to temporary
    partial disability benefits.
    IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED as follows:
    1. ADECCO shall immediately authorize the physical therapy ordered by Dr. Rogers,
    arrange the date of the first visit, and notify Mr. Slater of the date and time. Finally,
    it shall immediately file written notice with the Court Clerk documenting its
    compliance with this order.
    2. This case is set for a Status Hearing on June 30, 2023 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time.
    You must call (615) 741-3061 or toll-free at (855) 747-1721 to participate in the
    Status Hearing. Failure to call in may result in a determination of the issues without
    your further participation.
    3. Unless interlocutory appeal of the Expedited Hearing Order is filed,
    compliance with this Order must occur no later than seven business days from
    6
    Mr. Slater also asked for attorney’s fees for the delay in physical therapy. Since ADECCO continues to
    challenge the causation of his knee injury, the Court defers decision on attorney’s fees until the causation
    issue can be fully resolved at a Compensation Hearing.
    6
    the date of entry of this Order as required by Tennessee Code Annotated
    section 50-6-239(d)(3). The Insurer or Self-Insured Employer must submit
    confirmation of compliance with this Order to the Bureau by email to
    WCCompliance.Program@tn.gov no later than the seventh business day after
    entry of this Order. Failure to submit the necessary confirmation within the
    period of compliance may result in a penalty assessment for non-compliance.
    4. For questions regarding compliance, please contact the Workers’ Compensation
    Compliance Unit via email WCCompliance.Program@tn.gov.
    ENTERED March 14, 2023.
    _____________________________________
    Judge Thomas Wyatt
    Court of Workers’ Compensation Claims
    APPENDIX
    Exhibits:
    1. Rule 72 Declaration of Ronnie Slater
    2. Compilation of medical records
     Workforce Corporate Health
     Dr. L. Shay Richardson
     Dr. Alex Sielatycki
     Functional Capacity Evaluation
     AFC Urgent Care
     Dr. Steven Musick
    3. Records of Dr. Jason Rogers
    4. Affidavit of Ronnie Slater
    5. Panel for knee treatment
    Technical record:
    1.    Petition for Benefit Determination
    2.    Dispute Certification Notice
    3.    Second Request for Expedited Hearing
    4.    First Expedited Hearing Order
    5.    Second Request for Expedited Hearing
    6.    Employer’s Response to Second Expedited Hearing Request
    7
    7. Employee’s Brief Supporting Request for Expedited Hearing
    8. Notice of Filing of Supplemental Table of Contents with Medical Records
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I certify that a copy of the Order was sent as indicated on March 14, 2023.
    Name             Certified   Email     Service sent to:
    Mail
    Carmen Ware                            X       cyware@thewarelawfirm.com
    Employee’s Attorney
    Kristen Stevenson                      X       kcstevenson@mijs.com
    Employer’s Attorney
    ______________________________________
    Penny Shrum, Court Clerk
    Wc.courtclerk@tn.gov
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020-01-0512

Citation Numbers: 2023 TN WC 15

Judges: Thomas Wyatt

Filed Date: 3/14/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/14/2023