Batey, Christopher v. Deliver This, Inc. , 2017 TN WC 156 ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                                            FILED
    A11gust 18~20 17
    TN
    Id. at 61.
    
    Dr. Law also responded to an April11, 2016 letter by stating that Mr. Batey could
    not return to his usual duties at DTI, which included lifting items weighing up to sixty
    pounds. In his deposition, Dr. Law explained this restriction by stating that lifting sixty
    pounds would present a significant difficulty for anyone who had undergone back
    surgery. ld. at 25, 69. Dr. Law further elaborated that he placed restrictions on Mr.
    Batey's activities because he "did not respond well enough [to surgery]-did not have
    enough recovery in his nerve function, to return to active employment."
    Id. at 9.
    Dr. Law initially rated Mr. Batey's impairment at 10% to the whole body but later
    changed the rating to a 14% whole-body impairment. (Ex. 3 at 60.) Dr. Law testified
    that he likely increased the rating because of "[Mr. Batey's] residual symptoms and
    residual nerve problem that did not respond to surgery." ld. at 23. DTI stipulated to the
    correctness of the 14% rating. (Ex. 1 at 2-i
    2
    DTI paid Mr. Batey a sixty-day advancement ofPPD benefits totaling $3,697.89, based on a stipulated
    compensation rate of $431.33 per week. Mr. Batey agreed that DTI overpaid him $739.11 in temporary
    disability benefits, thus entitling DTI to a total credit of $4,43 7.00 against his permanent disability award.
    Neither counsel explained why DTI did not pay Mr. Batey's original award of PPD benefits as required
    by law. The parties stipulated the initial compensation period ended November 4, 2016.
    2
    Mr. Batey filed a Petition for Benefit Determination seeking permanent disability
    benefits on July 13, 2016. The Court scheduled this hearing after a mediator certified the
    extent of Mr. Batey's award of permanent disability benefits for the Court's
    determination.
    On the subject of his efforts to return to work, Mr. Batey testified without rebuttal
    that DTI had no available jobs when he sought to return to work there after Dr. Law
    released him. Mr. Batey then obtained unemployment benefits. He filed three job
    applications per week while receiving unemployment, none of which gained him a
    position. Mr. Batey did not again apply for work after his unemployment terminated
    until he contacted a temporary agency and the Tennessee Career Center shortly before the
    hearing to enquire about employment and retraining opportunities. Mr. Batey has not
    worked anywhere since the date of injury.
    Mr. Batey testified that his back pain significantly restricts his activities. He
    stated he cannot perform his past work, including his job at DTI, because activities such
    as lifting, twisting, and getting in and out of trucks increase his pain to disabling levels.
    Mr. Batey asserted he has good and bad days each week with his back pain, and on bad
    days, he must lie down to obtain relief. He sleeps only five hours per night and is not as
    sharp as he once was due to lack of sleep.
    Both parties introduced expert testimony regarding the vocational impact of Mr.
    Batey's spinal injury. Mr. Batey presented Certified Rehabilitation Counselor John W.
    McKinney, III, whose methodology included intellectual and educational achievement
    testing, assessment of Mr. Batey's work history, and consideration of his functional
    limitations as indicated by his self-reports and the restrictions assigned by Dr. Law. Mr.
    McKinney testified that Mr. Batey tested at a fifth-grade math level and a ninth-grade
    reading level. He concluded that the restrictions listed on the C-32 limited Mr. Batey to
    jobs in the "limited light exertional category."
    Based on the above fmdings, Mr. McKinney indicated the physical limitations set
    by Dr. Law deprived Mr. Batey of access to 82% of the jobs for which he was qualified
    before his injury. Mr. McKinney placed Mr. Batey's loss of earning capacity at 50%.
    Taking both the above factors into account, Mr. McKinney assigned Mr. Batey a 66%
    vocational disability. Mr. McKinney also testified that Mr. Batey is 100% disabled from
    performing work for which he was qualified before his injury if his chronic pain were of
    such severity and persistence that it consistently precludes him from working full weeks
    or eight hours per day.
    DTI presented the testimony of Certified Rehabilitation Counselor Michelle
    McBroom Weiss, whose assessment methodology was similar to Mr. McKinney's. She
    placed Mr. Batey in the below-average to average range in reading, spelling, math, and
    learning ability. While Ms. Weiss placed Mr. Batey's past work in the medium
    3
    exertional category, she also stated many of the jobs for which he now qualifies are entry-
    level. Ms. Weiss evaluated the vocational impact of Mr. Batey's injury in view of three
    scenarios. She testified Mr. Batey retained no vocational disability if Dr. Law released
    him to return to work without restrictions. She assigned a 21% vocational disability if
    Mr. Batey's only restriction were a fifty-pound lifting restriction. Finally, she assessed a
    69% vocational disability based on the restrictions Dr. Law indicated in the C-32.
    In addition to permanent disability benefits, Mr. Batey requested future medical
    benefits under section 50-6-204. Specifically, Mr. Batey asked for a new panel from
    which to select an authorized treating orthopedist, since Dr. Law moved. DTI agreed to
    provide the requested panel and future medical benefits.
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
    Applicable Legal Principles
    When applying the law to the facts set forth above, the Court must determine
    whether Mr. Batey satisfied his burden of proof. "[A]t a compensation hearing where the
    injured employee has arrived at a trial on the merits, the employee must establish by a
    preponderance of the evidence that he or she is, in fact, entitled to the requested benefits."
    Willis v. All Staff, 2015 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 42, at *18 (Nov. 9, 2015); see
    also Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(c)(6) (2016).
    Permanent Total Disability Benefits
    Here, Mr. Batey seeks PTD benefits under Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-
    6-207(4)(B), which provides: "When an injury ... totally incapacitates the employee
    from working at an occupation that brings the employee an income, the employee shall
    be considered totally disabled[.]"
    The threshold consideration on all of Mr. Batey's claims to increased permanent
    disability benefits is whether he established by a preponderance of the evidence that Dr.
    Law placed permanent restrictions on his activities due to his work injury. While it is
    true that Dr. Law initially released Mr. Batey to return to work without restrictions, with
    the advantage of hindsight, Dr. Law later completed a C-32 in which he placed extensive
    restrictions on Mr. Batey's activities. Dr. Law also testified that Mr. Batey could not
    return to his usual duties at DTI due to his work injury. Dr. Law explained he restricted
    Mr. Batey's activities after he initially released him without restrictions because it
    became clear that Mr. Batey's spinal surgery did not provide the hoped-for restoration of
    neurological function to enable him to return to active employment. When taken in its
    totality, the Court finds the preponderance of the evidence established that Dr. Law
    permanently restricted Mr. Batey's activities due to his work-related injury.
    4
    The Court holds that Dr. Law's assessment in the C-32 provides the best evidence
    of Mr. Batey's work restrictions. Neither vocational expert concluded that those
    restrictions totally precluded Mr. Batey from working jobs within his past skillset and
    training. Ms. Weiss and Mr. McKinney concluded, respectively, that Mr. Batey could
    still perform between 31% or 34% of the jobs for which he qualified before his injury
    despite the limitations placed by Dr. Law.
    In view of the above, the Court holds Mr. Batey did not establish by a
    preponderance of the evidence that his spinal injury totally incapacitated him from
    working at any occupation that brings him an income. The Court thus denies Mr. Batey's
    claim for PTD benefits.
    Permanent Partial Disability Benefits
    Given that Mr. Batey is not entitled to PTD benefits, the Court must determine the
    extent of PPD benefits to which he is entitled. The assessment of the extent of PPD to
    which an injured employee is entitled occurs at two different times. The first assessment
    takes place once the treating physician places the injured employee at maximum medical
    improvement and assigns an impairment rating. At that time, the employee is entitled to
    an award, called the original award, calculated by multiplying the assigned rating by 450
    weeks and, further, by the injured employee's weekly compensation rate. The injured
    employee is entitled to the original award whether or not he or she returns to work. See
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207(3)(A).
    Here, Dr. Law rated Mr. Batey's work injury at 14% whole-body impairment.
    Based on that rating, Mr. Batey is entitled to an original award of PPD benefits totaling
    $27,173.79 (14% x 450 x $431.33). After application ofthe stipulated credit, DTI owes
    Mr. Law $22,736.79 to compensate him for his original award of PPD benefits. The
    parties stipulated that the period covered by Mr. Batey's original award (also known as
    the initial compensation period) ended November 4, 2016; thus, DTI shall pay Mr.
    Batey's original award in a lump sum.
    The second assessment of PPD benefits occurs at the expiration of the initial
    compensation period. Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-207(3)(B) provides,
    If at the time the [initial compensation period] ends the employee has not
    returned to work with any employer or has returned to work and is
    receiving wages or a salary that is less than one hundred percent (100%) of
    the wages or salary the employee received from the employee's pre-injury
    employer on the date of injury, the employee may file a claim for increased
    benefits.
    The award provided by section 50-6-207(3)(B) is known as the resulting award.
    5
    The resulting award is calculated by applying certain multipliers to the original award
    based upon the injured employee's inability to return to work (1.35) and whether the
    injured employee lacks a high school diploma or GED (1.45), is over 40 years old (1.2),
    and the unemployment rate in the county in which the injured employee worked (1.3).
    The parties stipulated that two of the above factors-Mr. Batey's failure to successfully
    return to work and his age-apply here. The parties thus stipulated that Mr. Batey's PPD
    resulting award would total $44,021.54 ($22,736.79 x 1.35 x 1.2). The resulting award
    represents 22.68% disability to the whole body (14% x 1.35 x 1.2) if the Court holds he is
    entitled to a resulting award.
    However, in lieu of an entitlement to a resulting award, Mr. Batey claims
    entitlement to extraordinary relief under Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-242(a),
    which allows the Court to increase an employee's award of PPD benefits above those
    provided in section 50-6-207(3) if the employee establishes the following by clear and
    convincing evidence:
    1. the employee is eligible for a resulting award of PPD benefits;
    2. the authorized treating physician rated the employee for impairment
    under the Sixth Edition of the AMA Guides to the Evaluation of
    Impairment at or above a 10% whole body rating;
    3. "the authorized treating physician has certified on a form provided by
    the bureau that due to the permanent restrictions on activity the
    employee has suffered as a result of the injury the employee no longer
    has the ability to perform the employee's pre-injury occupation." See
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-242(a)(2)(B);
    4. the employee is not earning an average weekly wage or salary that is
    greater than 70% of his pre-injury wage;
    5. the limitation of the employee's PPD benefits to those awarded under
    section 50-6-207(3)(B) would be inequitable; and
    6. the employee's need for additional benefits is extraordinary.
    As to the first factor, DTI contended Mr. Batey is not entitled to a resulting award
    because Dr. Law returned him to work without restrictions. The Court rejects DTI's
    argument because Dr. Law clearly and convincingly testified that he permanently
    restricted Mr. Batey's activities and increased his impairment rating when, after the
    passage of several months, he concluded that Mr. Batey did not regain sufficient nerve
    function following surgery to return to active work. The Court further supports its
    decision on this point with the fact that DTI did not have available positions for Mr.
    Batey even when Dr. Law originally released him without restrictions.
    DTI also argued the Court should deny Mr. Batey a resulting award because he
    failed to make a reasonable attempt to return to work before the end of his original
    compensation period. In response, the Court first notes section 50-6-207(D) lists three
    6
    circumstances under which an employee who does not make a successful return to work
    does not receive a resulting award: (1) voluntary resignation or retirement not related to
    the employee's work-related disability; (2) work-related misconduct; and (3) a reduction
    in income that affects at least 50% of hourly employees at the same location. None of
    these circumstances apply.
    Here, clear and convincing evidence established that Mr. Batey attempted to return
    to work at DTI when Dr. Law released him without restrictions. DTI had no jobs
    available, thus leading to a termination by which Mr. Batey applied for and received
    unemployment benefits. While on unemployment, Mr. Batey applied for thr e jobs per
    week, but those applications earned him no offers of employment. 3 By the time the
    initial compensation period expired on November 4, 2016, Dr. Law had placed
    significant restrictions on Mr. Batey's activities because he concluded Mr. Batey did not
    recover sufficient nerve function following surgery to resume active employment. In
    view of the above, the Court holds Mr. Batey's attempts to return to work during the
    initial compensation period were sufficiently reasonable to entitle him to a resulting
    award of PPD benefits.
    As to the second factor listed above, Dr. Law's deposition established that he rated
    the impairment due to Mr. Batey's compensable spinal injury at 14% to the whole body.
    The parties stipulated to this rating as well. Accordingly, Mr. Batey proved by clear and
    convincing evidence that the authorized treating physician rated his compensable injury
    for impairment at a rating greater than 10% to the whole body.
    DTI contended Mr. Batey did not establish the third statutory factor because Dr.
    Law limited his certification of Mr. Batey's disability to whether Mr. Batey could return
    to work at DTI. It contends section 50-6-242(a)(1)(B) requires that Mr. Batey present a
    signed certification from Dr. Law establishing his inability ''to perform [his] pre-injury
    occupation," meaning Dr. Law must certify that Mr. Batey's work injury rendered him
    unable to perform any delivery-driver job before he can recover increased benefits.
    (Emphasis added.) Hence, DTI claimed Mr. Batey's proof failed on this point.
    In considering this issue, the Court must determine the scope of Dr. Law's
    certification regarding the extent of Mr. Batey's disability. In addition to the printed text
    on the form he signed, Dr. Law inserted the following language: "This is per my
    testimony by deposition and the job description in the deposition." (Ex. 1 at 13.) The
    referenced job description Dr. Law was contained in a letter from Mr. Batey's counsel
    that described only Mr. Batey's job at DTI. A review of Dr. Law's testimony revealed he
    limited his disability opinion to the DTI job description. In view of the above, the Court
    3
    Mr. Batey ftrst testifted that he did not apply for any jobs between the date of injury and November
    2016, other than attempting to return to work at DTI. When reminded about the applications he placed
    while on unemployment, Mr. Batey testifted his contrary testimony was "mistaken."
    7
    fmds Dr. Law limited his written certification to the issue of whether Mr. Batey's back
    injury prohibits him from returning to his job at DTI. (Ex. 3 at 69.)
    The above finding, however, does not resolve the statutory interpretation issue
    raised by DTI. The Court must determine whether, in enacting section 50-6-242, the
    general assembly intended to require the employee to medically certify he no longer has
    the ability to perform the specific job on which he suffered his injury, or, instead, to
    certify that the employee cannot perform any job within the class of employment in
    which the employee worked at the time of injury.
    The Workers' Compensation Law does not specifically define the term "the
    employee's pre-injury occupation." When statutory language is subject to multiple
    interpretations, a court looks to the plain meaning of the language in its statutory context.
    In other words, a court enforces the law "impartially as written." Berdnick v. Fairfield
    Glade Comm. Club, 2017 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 32, at *17 (May 18, 20 17).
    To determine the plain meaning of the term ''the employee's pre-injury
    occupation," the Court first looks at a dictionary definition of "occupation." Webster's
    New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition, (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 201 0), defmes
    "occupation" as ''that which chiefly engages one's time; one's trade, profession or
    business." While the dictionary defmition arguably supports both interpretations of
    "occupation" urged here, the Court fmds that the plain meaning of "the employee's pre-
    injury occupation" in the context of section 50-6-242 refers to the job held by the
    employee at the time of injury. A broadening of the term as DTI advocated would
    require an employee to establish the physical requirements of hundreds of positions in
    order to obtain the written certification required by section 50-6-242. Such an onerous
    burden would be unfair to the employee and adverse to the general legislative intent
    favoring the administration of workers' compensation claims in a "fair, equitable,
    expeditious, and efficient" manner. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-3-1409(b)(2)(A).
    In view of the above, the Court holds that Mr. Batey's submission of the
    certification signed by Dr. Law established the third factor listed above by clear and
    convincing evidence. (Ex. 1 at 13.)
    DTI did not rebut Mr. Batey's testimony that he has not worked anywhere since
    the date of injury. Thus, he established by clear and convincing evidence the fourth
    factor listed above-that he is not earning 70% of his pre-injury rate of pay.
    Lastly, the Court considers factors five and six together-whether Mr. Batey
    established by clear and convincing evidence that the limitation of his PPD benefits to
    those set forth in sections 50-6-207(3)(A) and (B) would be extraordinary and
    inequitable. If the Court so limits Mr. Batey's award, he will receive benefits based on a
    22.68% to the whole body. This percentage of disability is approximately one-third of
    8
    the disability ratings set by both vocational experts who testified during the hearing. In
    view of the above, the Court fmds Mr. Batey established by clear and convincing
    evidence that a limitation of his PPD benefits to those based on a disability of 22.68% is
    inequitable.
    The Court likewise finds Mr. Batey showed by clear and convincing evidence that
    his need for increased benefits is extraordinary. Dr. Law testified Mr. Batey did not
    receive the hoped-for surgical restoration of nerve function to allow for return to active
    employment. For that reason, he significantly limited Mr. Batey from engaging in much
    of the physical activity required by the jobs he performed before he was injured. The
    Court finds that Dr. Law's statement that Mr. Batey retains permanent nerve damage due
    to his back injury supports Mr. Batey's testimony that he routinely experiences "bad
    days" which require him to lie down in order to obtain relief from back pain.
    The vocational experts agreed that the restrictions assigned by Dr. Law deprive
    Mr. Batey of the ability to obtain and maintain approximately two-thirds of the jobs for
    which he qualified before he was injured. Mr. McKinney testified Mr. Batey's injury
    reduces his earning capacity by 50%, and Ms. Weiss concluded many of the jobs Mr.
    Batey could perform would pay him an entry-level wage. For these reasons, the Court
    awards Mr. Batey 275 weeks ofPPD benefits under section 50-6-242. 4
    Section 50-6-242(a)(2) provides that an award of increased benefits thereunder
    shall not exceed a period of 275 weeks "inclusive of the benefits provided the employee
    under section 50-6-207(3)(A)." Mr. Batey's original award ofPPD benefits covers sixty-
    three weeks. Under the above-quoted statute, DTI owes Mr. Batey 212 weeks of benefits
    after payment of his original award. DTI shall pay Mr. Batey a lump-sum payment of
    PPD benefits from November 4, 2016, until the date of the issuance of this order, to
    compensate him for accrued PPD benefits. It shall pay weekly or bi-weekly benefits
    afterward until it pays him a total of275 weeks of benefits.
    It is, therefore, ORDERED:
    1. DTI and/or its carrier shall pay Mr. Batey a lump sum of sixty-three weeks
    of benefits, totaling $22,736.79 after application of DTI' s stipulated credit,
    in satisfaction of the accrued original award of PPD benefits;
    2. DTI and/or its carrier shall pay Mr. Batey a lump sum of forty-one weeks
    of benefits, totaling $17,684.53, in approximate satisfaction of the PPD
    benefits accruing between November 4, 2016, and the date of the issuance
    of this order;
    4
    An award of275 weeks ofPPD benefits equates to a 61.11% whole-body disability.
    9
    3. DTI and/or its carrier shall pay ongoing PPD benefits on a weekly or bi-
    weekly basis until it pays 171 weeks of unaccrued benefits, for a total
    award of275 weeks ofPPD benefits totaling $118,615.75;
    4. DTI and/or its carrier shall provide medical benefits by promptly
    forwarding Mr. Batey a panel of orthopedists compliant with Tennessee
    Code Annotated section 50-6-204 from which Mr. Batey may select a
    physician for ongoing treatment of his compensable injury;
    5. Counsel for Mr. Batey may file a petition for attorney's fees and expenses;
    6. This Court taxes the filing fee of $150.00 to DTI and/or its carrier under
    Tennessee Compilation Rules and Regulations Rule 0800-02-21-.07
    (2016); and
    7. DTI and/or its carrier shall prepare and submit a Statistical Data Form
    within ten business days of the date of judgment.
    ENTERED this the 18th day of August, 2017.
    Thomas Wyatt, Judge
    Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
    APPENDIX
    Stipulations: The stipulations entered by the parties are set forth in the joint Pre-Hearing
    Compensation Statement they filed. (Ex. 1 at 1-2.)
    Technical record: The Court marked the following documents as the technical record:
    1.   Petition for Benefit Determination;
    2.   Employee Position Statement;
    3.   Dispute Certification Notice;
    4.   Additional Documentation Submitted after DCN;
    5.   Scheduling Order;
    6.   Post-Discovery DCN;
    7.   Additional issues submitted by employee;
    8.   Additional issues submitted by employer;
    10
    9. Notice of Filing Physician Certification Form;
    lO.Employee Pretrial Brief; and
    11. August 3, 2017 letter from employee counsel, with attachments.
    Exhibits: The Court admitted the following exhibits into evidence during the hearing:
    1.   Pre~Compensation   Hearing Statement, including attachments;
    2.   Written Stipulation;
    3.   Deposition Transcript of Dr. Melvin Law, with exhibits; 5
    4.   Notice of Indexed Medical Records; and
    5.   Additional Written Stipulation.
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of this Compensation Hearing Order
    was sent to the following recipients by the following methods of service on this the 18th
    day of August, 2017.
    Name                 Certified      Via Email       Service sent to:
    Mail
    Russell Thomas, Attorney                              X          russthomas@thethomaslawfmn.com
    Claudia@thethomaslawfirm.com
    Michael Haynie, Attorney                              X          mhaynie@manierherod.com
    afountain@manierherod.com
    P nny Sh
    Court of orkers' Compensation Claims
    WC.CourtCierk@tn.gov
    5
    The parties requested the Court take possession of more than 350 pages of records reviewed by Dr. Law
    in preparation for his deposition. After reading Dr. Law's deposition, the Court determined no need to
    consider the voluminous records in making its decision, and the Court will not make the records a part of
    the transcript of Dr. Law's deposition. If a party appeals the claim, the parties may file a motion with the
    Appeals Board to determine if it will accept the subject records as part of the record on appeal.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2016-05-0666

Citation Numbers: 2017 TN WC 156

Judges: Thomas Wyatt

Filed Date: 8/18/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/10/2021