Kathryn Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Services, Inc. ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                 FILED
    OCTOBER 6, 2020
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    KATHRYN TAYLOR,                               )         No. 36920-0-III
    )
    Respondent,              )
    )
    v.                              )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    MAXIM HEALTHCARE SERVICES,                    )
    INC.,                                         )
    )
    Appellant.               )
    LAWRENCE-BERREY, J. — Maxim Healthcare Services, Inc. (Maxim) appeals the
    trial court’s determination that Kathryn Taylor’s November 2011 injury aggravated her
    preexisting asymptomatic right hip osteoarthritis and was a proximate cause of her much
    later right hip replacement surgery.
    Maxim argues (1) the trial court failed to apply the correct legal standard for an
    injury being “lit up,” (2) the osteoarthritis was naturally progressing and does not qualify
    under the lighting up doctrine, (3) the trial court erred by placing too much weight on Ms.
    Taylor’s attending physician, and (4) a later injury Ms. Taylor suffered broke the chain of
    causation. We conclude the trial court did not err and affirm.
    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    FACTS
    Kathryn Taylor is a licensed practical nurse. In 2011, Ms. Taylor was employed by
    Maxim Healthcare Services. Ms. Taylor’s duties while working for Maxim included
    providing home care for medically fragile children and adults. Prior to November 15,
    2011, Ms. Taylor worked for Maxim without restriction for almost 10 years, starting in
    2002.
    On November 15, 2011, Ms. Taylor was helping one of her clients when she
    injured herself. Ms. Taylor had just finished helping the client into the shower when she
    turned and felt “immediate excruciating pain” around her groin from front to back.
    Administrative Board Record (ABR) at 161. Ms. Taylor had never felt this type of pain
    before. Ms. Taylor informed her employer about the injury that same day and filed a
    workers’ compensation claim the following day. This claim was accepted by the
    Department of Labor and Industries on August 5, 2013. Because her symptoms did not
    improve, on November 19, 2011, Ms. Taylor was treated at the emergency room.
    Prior to this injury, Ms. Taylor had been seeing a chiropractor for several years in
    order to help with various issues. Among these issues were her hands, shoulders, bilateral
    hips, and her cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spine. Her right hip was one of the issues she
    saw her chiropractor for.
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    After her injury, Ms. Taylor underwent physical therapy. In addition, she had
    medical management and light work duty. Ms. Taylor began experiencing difficulty
    walking and performing household duties. On May 25, 2012, Ms. Taylor received a
    magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of her right hip. The MRI revealed chondromalacia
    and tearing of the labrum with reactionary bursitis.
    Dr. Patrick Lynch was Ms. Taylor’s attending physician for her orthopedic
    surgery. Dr. Lynch first saw Ms. Taylor in April 2013, recommended a hip arthroscopy,
    and performed the arthroscopy on May 8, 2013. He testified her hip pain was due to
    arthritis and the labral tear. In his opinion, the November 2011 injury permanently
    aggravated and accelerated Ms. Taylor’s underlying arthritis, which had been
    asymptomatic until then. Dr. Lynch likened her labral tear injury to “putting gasoline on
    a fire” and testified that in the case of osteoarthritis, a body normally has the ability to
    repair itself, but regarding a traumatic injury like the one Ms. Taylor suffered, those
    reparative processes are diminished. ABR at 452. Dr. Lynch based this opinion on the
    MRI, Ms. Taylor’s description of her medical history, and his arthroscopic and operative
    findings.
    Following the surgery, Dr. Lynch met with Ms. Taylor for three office visits from
    September 2013 through May 2014. She continued to experience visible discomfort with
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    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    a limp and Dr. Lynch advised Ms. Taylor a right hip replacement would ultimately have
    to be performed.
    In 2014, Ms. Taylor went to work for another employer. While working for this
    employer, she received another injury in October 2014. Dr. Daniel Schmidt was Ms.
    Taylor’s attending physician for the October 30, 2014 injury. After learning about Ms.
    Taylor’s previous injury, Dr. Schmidt supervised a course of conservative treatments. Dr.
    Schmidt concluded the need for a right total hip replacement was not proximately caused
    by the October 30, 2014 injury.
    Dr. Eric Hofmeister examined Ms. Taylor on June 26, 2015, at the request of
    Maxim. Dr. Hofmeister concluded that the need for a right total hip replacement was not
    proximately caused by the October 30, 2014 injury. He further concluded the need for a
    right total hip replacement was not proximately caused by the November 15, 2011 injury
    and was the result of natural progression.
    Dr. Schmidt disagreed with Dr. Hofmeister. Dr. Schmidt opined that Ms. Taylor’s
    right hip had been permanently aggravated by the November 15, 2011 industrial injury
    and required surgical replacement. We note that Dr. Lynch performs 7 to 10 hip
    replacement surgeries per week and 5 to 7 hip arthroscopies per week whereas Dr.
    Hofmeister’s practice emphasizes hand and upper extremity care.
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    At the request of Maxim, Dr. Douglas Porter examined Ms. Taylor on June 16,
    2016. Based on this examination, Dr. Porter concluded the November 15, 2011 injury did
    not injure Ms. Taylor’s right hip in any way but only injured her back. Dr. Schmidt
    disagreed with Dr. Porter.
    Finally, on September 10, 2016, Maxim asked Dr. Scott Shawen to examine Ms.
    Taylor. Dr. Shawen concluded Ms. Taylor had preexisting degenerative joint disease in
    the right hip that was permanently aggravated or lit up by the November 2011 injury. Dr.
    Shawen also testified medical research confirms a patient undergoing hip arthroscopy has
    a greater chance of needing a hip replacement. However, he was not able to testify on a
    more probable than not basis that Ms. Taylor’s hip arthroscopy caused her need for a hip
    replacement.
    On March 17, 2017, Dr. Lynch noted Ms. Taylor’s right hip had lost nearly all
    internal rotation. On March 28, 2017, Dr. Lynch performed a total right hip replacement.
    On January 26, 2017, the Department of Labor and Industries issued an “Order and
    Notice” finding Maxim responsible for permanent aggravation of the degenerative joint
    disease of the right hip and directing Maxim to authorize and pay for the total right hip
    replacement surgery. ABR at 98. On April 17, 2017, the Department affirmed the
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    January 26, 2017 order. Maxim timely filed an appeal of the Department’s Order and
    Notice on May 15, 2017.
    The Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (BIIA) granted Maxim’s appeal and a
    hearing was held on June 6, 2018. On September 28, 2018, the Industrial Appeals judge
    issued a “Proposed Decision and Order” reversing the Department’s Order and Notice,
    finding and concluding the November 2011 industrial injury did not aggravate Ms.
    Taylor’s preexisting degenerative joint disease of the right hip and was not the proximate
    cause of the need for a right hip replacement surgery. ABR at 64. Ms. Taylor filed a
    “Petition for Review” with the BIIA. ABR at 22-46. The BIIA denied Ms. Taylor’s
    petition and adopted the Proposed Decision and Order as the “Final Order” of the BIIA.
    ABR at 4.
    Ms. Taylor appealed the BIIA’s order to Spokane County Superior Court. A bench
    trial was held and the trial court issued a written decision, reversing the BIIA and
    remanding the matter to the Department to issue an order directing Maxim to accept
    responsibility for the acceleration of Ms. Taylor’s preexisting asymptomatic right hip
    degenerative joint disease and the total right hip replacement surgery. The trial court
    issued a “Judgment & Order” with “Findings of Fact” and “Conclusions of Law”
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    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    consistent with its written decision and awarding attorney costs and fees to Ms. Taylor.
    Clerk’s Papers at 71-75.
    Maxim timely filed this appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    SUPERIOR COURT AND APPELLATE COURT STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    The superior court reviews the BIIA’s decision de novo. RCW 51.52.115. The
    BIIA’s factual findings and decision are prima facie correct, and the burden of proof is on
    the party attacking the same.
    Id. This prima facie
    presumption controls the superior
    court’s decision unless it finds, from a fair preponderance of credible evidence, the
    BIIA’s findings and decision are incorrect. City of Bellevue v. Raum, 
    171 Wash. App. 124
    ,
    139, 
    286 P.3d 695
    (2012). If the trier of fact, be it judge or jury, reaches a conclusion
    different than the BIIA, then the prima facie presumption of correctness has been
    overcome. Groff v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 
    65 Wash. 2d 35
    , 43, 
    395 P.2d 633
    (1964).
    When reviewing the superior court’s decision after an appeal from the BIIA’s
    decision, this court reviews the record in the light most favorable to the party who
    prevailed in superior court. Robinson v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 
    181 Wash. App. 415
    ,
    425, 
    326 P.3d 744
    (2014). “We review only ‘whether substantial evidence supports the
    trial court’s factual findings and then review, de novo, whether the trial court’s
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    conclusions of law flow from the findings.’”
    Id. (internal quotation marks
    omitted)
    (quoting Rogers v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 
    151 Wash. App. 174
    , 180, 
    210 P.3d 355
    (2009)). Substantial evidence is evidence sufficient to persuade a fair-minded, rational
    trier of fact.
    Id. 1.
         “LIGHTING UP” STANDARD
    Maxim contends the trial court skipped the correct legal analysis and simply found
    that Ms. Taylor’s right hip arthritic condition was asymptomatic before her November
    2011 injury. It further argues the trial court ignored compelling evidence that Ms.
    Taylor’s right hip arthritis was symptomatic before her injury. We disagree with both
    arguments.
    “The worker is to be taken as he or she is, with all his or her preexisting frailties
    and bodily infirmities.” Dennis v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 
    109 Wash. 2d 467
    , 471, 
    745 P.2d 1295
    (1987). “[W]here a sudden injury ‘lights up’ a quiescent[1] infirmity or
    weakened physical condition occasioned by disease, the resulting disability is attributable
    to the injury and compensation is awarded.”
    Id. at 472.
    We first must examine the trial court’s finding that Maxim contends was not
    supported by substantial evidence. The trial court found that the November 2011 injury
    1
    Without symptoms.
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    Ms. Taylor suffered caused her preexisting right hip osteoarthritis to become
    symptomatic. Implied, is the finding that Ms. Taylor’s right hip arthritis was
    asymptomatic at the time of her injury.
    The trial court based its finding on Dr. Lynch’s testimony. He testified Ms.
    Taylor’s right hip arthritis was asymptomatic and, more likely than not, was aggravated
    by the November 2011 injury. The trial court also found Dr. Lynch to be the most
    qualified of the medical witnesses on hip pathology.
    Maxim urges us to disregard Dr. Lynch’s testimony on the basis that Dr. Lynch
    had not reviewed Ms. Taylor’s chiropractic records that showed she received chiropractic
    care a number of times before November 2011 for hip pain. Its argument would be
    stronger if the chiropractic records were compelling. But they are not. Maxim showed
    these chiropractic records to Dr. Schmidt during its cross-examination of him. Dr.
    Schmidt conceded these records showed Ms. Taylor had hip pain before her November
    2011 injury but disagreed that the hip pain described in these records was arthritic hip
    pain. These chiropractic records did not alter Dr. Schmidt’s opinion that Ms. Taylor’s
    right hip arthritis was asymptomatic prior to her November 2011 injury.
    Ultimately, the question of whether Ms. Taylor’s November 2011 injury caused
    her hip osteoarthritis to become symptomatic is a question of medically disputed fact.
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    Some, like Dr. Hofmeister, testified the osteoarthritis was symptomatic before the injury.
    Some, like Dr. Lynch and Dr. Schmidt, testified it was not.
    This court will not reweigh the weight given by the trial court to disputed
    evidence. The trial court’s finding that Ms. Taylor’s right hip arthritis was asymptomatic
    before her November 2011 injury is supported by substantial evidence. As a
    consequence, we conclude the trial court’s legal conclusion that the injury lit up a
    preexisting condition is correct.
    2.     OSTEOARTHRITIS IS NATURALLY PROGRESSING
    Maxim contends even if Ms. Taylor’s condition was asymptomatic, the trial court
    still erred in concluding the November 2011 injury lit up her condition because it was a
    naturally progressing condition. We disagree.
    An underlying condition need not be work related to be compensable. 
    Dennis, 109 Wash. 2d at 475
    . Dennis quoted the basic aggravation rule: “‘[p]reexisting disease or
    infirmity of the employee does not disqualify a claim under the arising out of employment
    requirement if the employment aggravated, accelerated, or combined with the disease or
    infirmity to produce the death or disability for which compensation is sought.’”
    Id. at 475
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    Here, Dr. Lynch testified that the 2011 injury accelerated Ms. Taylor’s underlying
    osteoarthritis. Specifically, Dr. Lynch noted that without the injury, osteoarthritis has the
    potential to recover on its own, but the 2011 labrum tear was like “putting gasoline on a
    fire.” ABR at 452. As noted above, the trial court found Dr. Lynch to be the most
    credible of the medical experts on the subject of hip pathology. We defer to this
    credibility finding.
    3.     SPECIAL CONSIDERATION OF DR. LYNCH
    Maxim contends the trial court erred by applying the wrong legal standard to the
    rule requiring special consideration to the attending physician. It argues that Dr. Lynch’s
    testimony was not reliable and the trial court overly relied on it. We disagree.
    In Washington, the trier of fact for workers’ compensation cases should give
    special consideration to the opinions of the claimant’s attending physician. Hamilton v.
    Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 
    111 Wash. 2d 569
    , 571, 
    761 P.2d 618
    (1988). However, this does
    not mean the trier of fact must give more weight or credibility to the attending physician’s
    testimony, only that it should give the testimony careful thought.
    Id. at 572.
    Maxim argues the trial court erred by giving more weight and credibility to Dr.
    Lynch, Ms. Taylor’s attending physician. We disagree.
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    While the special consideration rule does not require the trial court to give more
    weight to the attending physician, it does not prevent the trial court from giving the
    attending physician more weight. For instance, here Dr. Lynch had substantially more
    medical experience with hip pathology than Maxim’s central expert witness, Dr.
    Hofmeister. We conclude the trial court did not misapply the special consideration rule.
    4.     PROXIMATE CAUSE
    Maxim contends the trial court erred by finding that the November 2011 injury
    was the proximate cause of Ms. Taylor’s right hip surgery.2 It argues substantial evidence
    shows that Ms. Taylor’s October 2014 injury broke the causation chain between her
    November 2011 injury and her right hip replacement surgery. We disagree.
    We review challenged findings to determine if they are supported by substantial
    evidence. 
    Robinson, 181 Wash. App. at 425
    . Substantial evidence is evidence sufficient to
    persuade a fair-minded, rational trier of fact.
    Id. The trial court
    is not required to believe
    one set of substantial evidence over another and, if substantial evidence supports two
    different arguments, it can decide which it finds more persuasive. 
    Raum, 171 Wash. App. at 139
    .
    2
    This finding is contained in conclusion of law 4. Where a finding is mislabeled a
    conclusion, we review it as if it was a finding of fact. State v. Baker, 
    136 Wash. App. 878
    ,
    883, 
    151 P.3d 237
    (2007).
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    No. 36920-0-III
    Taylor v. Maxim Healthcare Servs.
    Here, two medical experts testified that the October 2014 injury was not a cause of
    the total hip replacement. One of these was Maxim's medical expert, Dr. Hofmeister,
    who examined Ms. Taylor for the October 2014 injury. The other was Dr. Schmidt, Ms.
    Taylor's attending physician for the injury. While Maxim cites evidence that might be
    substantial evidence in support of the idea that there was a break in causation, it is not the
    review we conduct. We only review whether there was substantial evidence supporting
    the trial court's challenged finding. We conclude that the two medical experts noted
    above sufficiently support the trial court's challenged finding.
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
    RCW 2.06.040.
    Lawrence-Berrey, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    Q.                 ' c._:s:
    Pennell, C .J.
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