FILED
November 24, 2014
T:\'COURTOF
COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS WORKERS' COMPE:\'SATIO'\
CLAI:VIS
DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION
Time: 7:15 A.VI
EMPLOYEE: Sean Vance East DOCKET#: 2014-01-0009
STATE FILE#: 71607-2014
EMPLOYER: Heritage Hosiery Mill DATE OF INJURY: September 4, 2014
CARRIER: Employer's Preferred Ins. Co.
EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER FOR MEDICAL BENEFITS
THIS CAUSE came before the undersigned Workers' Compensation Judge upon the
Request for Expedited Hearing filed by Sean Vance East (Employee). On October 24, 2014,
Employee filed a Request for Expedited Hearing with the Tennessee Court of Workers'
Compensation Claims, Division of Workers' Compensation, pursuant to Tennessee Code
Annotated section 50-6-239(d), to determine ifthe provision of medical and temporary disability
benefits is appropriate.
A telephonic Expedited Hearing was conducted by the undersigned Workers'
Compensation Judge on November 13, 2014. Employee was unrepresented at the Expedited
Hearing, while Employer (Heritage Hosiery Mill) was represented by its attorney, Charles Poss.
Considering the positions of the parties, the applicable law, all evidence submitted at the
Expedited Hearing, and the entire record in this claim, the Court hereby finds that Employee is
entitled to the medical benefits requested. The Court further finds that Employee is not entitled
to the temporary disability benefits requested.
ANALYSIS
Issues
1. Whether Employee suffered an injury by accident which arose primarily out of and in
the course and scope of his employment.
2. Whether Employee is entitled to medical benefits.
3. Whether Employee is entitled to temporary partial disability benefits.
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Evidence Submitted
The following witnesses testified at the Expedited Hearing:
• Employee; and
• Forrest Martin, Employer's plant manager.
The following exhibits were admitted into evidence at the Expedited Hearing:
• Exhibit 1 Certified records ofPhysician's Care (8 pages);
• Exhibit 2 Affidavit ofF orrest Martin;
• Exhibit 3 Recorded statement of Employee (24 pages);
• Exhibit 4 Personnel records maintained by Employer;
• Exhibit 5 Job description;
• Exhibit 6 Wage Statement documenting wages earned by Employee; and
• Exhibit 7 Wage Statement documenting wages earned by similarly-situated
employee.
The Court designated the following as the technical record in this claim:
• Petition for Benefit Determination filed September 29, 2014;
• Dispute Certification Notice filed October 20, 2014;
• Request for Expedited Hearing filed October 24, 2014;
• Employee's position statement dated October 24, 2014; and
• Employer's position statement dated October 13, 2014.
The Court did not consider attachments to the above filings unless admitted into evidence at the
Expedited Hearing. Additionally, the Court considered factual statements in the above filings as
allegations unless proven by the admitted evidence.
History of Claim
This claim arises from a neck, left shoulder, and left arm injury which allegedly occurred
September 4, 2014, the last date Employee worked for Employer. Employee alleges he was
injured while lifting boxes of yarn in the course and scope of his employment at Employer's
hosiery mill. On September 16, 2014, Employer was provided a panel of providers from which
he selected Physician's Care, a walk-in clinic near his home in East Ridge, Tennessee.
Employee saw a physician's assistant at Physician's Care on September 16, 2014. Employee
was referred to Dr. Peter Lund, an orthopedic surgeon, who is currently providing authorized
treatment of his alleged work injury.
Employer has not paid temporary disability benefits because it contends Employee
voluntarily quit. Employee asserts that he did not quit, but was sent home by Employer's plant
manager when he raised concerns that the lifting required to perform his job might reinjure his
pre-existing hernias. Employee filed a Petition for Benefit Determination seeking the medical
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and temporary disability benefits to which he alleges entitlement under the Tennessee Workers'
Compensation Act.
Employer also challenges whether Employee was injured primarily in the course and
scope of his employment with Employer because he did not report his alleged injury until four
(4) days after he quit his job. It additionally contends that the Physician's Care records establish
that Employee admits his left arm pain began after he last worked for Employer.
Employee's Contentions
Employee contends he injured his neck and left upper extremity on September 4, 2014
while lifting boxes of yam in the course and scope of his employment with Employer.
Employee asserts he gave Employer notice of his injury to Employer's plant manager, Forrest
Martin, on September 4, 2014. Employee argues that he is entitled to temporary disability
benefits because the authorized treating physician's assistant has restricted his activities due to
his work-related injury.
Employee denies that he voluntarily quit his job with Employer. Employee contends
that, after he told the plant manager that he was concerned the lifting required by the job might
reinjure his surgically-repaired hernias, the plant manager told him to go home. He asserts he
clocked out in compliance with the plant manager's instructions, but never stated he was
resigning his position with Employer.
Employer's Contentions
Employer's plant manager denies Employee told him on September 4, 2014 that he
injured his arm on the job. Employer argues that, had Employee been injured as he alleges, he
would have given notice of his injury in the conversation with its plant manager on September 4,
2014. As additional support for its position that Employee was not injured on the job, Employer
claims Employee told the authorized treating physician's assistant that his left arm did not begin
hurting until the day after he last worked for Employer.
Employer argues that, if this claim is found to be compensable, Employee is not entitled
to temporary disability benefits because he voluntarily resigned. Employer's plant manager
contends that, on September 4, 2014, Employee quit because he was concerned that the lifting
the job required might reinjure his surgically-repaired hernias. The plant manager claims
Employee asked him what he should do and was told to do what was best for him. At that point,
Employee allegedly clocked out, left the premises, and did not return.
Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
Standard Applied
When determining whether to award benefits, a workers' compensation judge must
decide whether, based on the evidence introduced at the Expedited Hearing, the moving party is
likely to succeed on the merits at the Compensation Hearing. See generally, McCall v. Nat 'I
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Health Care Corp., 100 S.W. 3d 209, 214 (Tenn. 2003). In a workers' compensation action,
Employee shall bear the burden of proving each and every element of the claim by a
preponderance of the evidence. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(c)(6). Employee must show the
injury arose primarily out of and in the course and scope of employment. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-
6-102(13).
Factual Findings
Upon consideration of the witness testimony, the exhibits introduced by the parties, the
argument of counsel, and the entire record in this claim, the Court makes the following factual
findings:
• Employee sustained an injury to his neck and left upper extremity on September
4, 2014 while lifting boxes of yam in the course and scope ofhis employment;
• Employee voluntarily resigned his employment with Employer on September 4,
2014 because he was concerned that he might reinjure surgically-repaired hernias
while performing the lifting required to execute the duties assigned by Employer;
and
• Employee has not been totally disabled as a result of the neck and left upper
extremity injury he sustained September 4, 2014 in the course and scope of his
employment with Employer.
Application ofLaw to Facts
Causation
Under Tennessee law, the injured worker must prove his injury arose primarily out of and
in the course and scope of employment. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-102(13). In Hill v. Eagle Bend
Mfg.. Inc., 942 S. W. 2d 483 (Tenn. 1997), the Tennessee Supreme Court held an injury arises
out of and in the course and scope of employment if it has a rational connection to the work and
occurs while the employee is engaged in the duties of employment.
The evidence admitted in this claim establishes that Employee has consistently reported
that he injured his left shoulder and arm while lifting boxes of yam in the course and scope of his
employment. Employer's plant manager testified that, on September 8, 2014, Employee called
him and told him he hurt his shoulder or arm while lifting on his job with Employer. (Exhibit 2,
page 2). When he completed the in-take sheet at Physician's Care on September 16, 2014,
Employee wrote that he was injured "while lifting boxes of yam 80-100 lbs." (Exhibit 1, page 1).
Later on September 16, Employee gave a recorded statement to a representative of Employer's
workers' compensation carrier. In that statement, Employee asserted that he had to seek help
from a supervisor while lifting and stacking boxes of rubber yam "cause I had, you know, I felt a
little tenderness, like if you pull a muscle or something in your arm, ah, get that little Jell-0
feeling." (Exhibit 3, page 9).
In considering whether Employee has established his alleged injury is compensable,
Employer asks the Court to consider what it contends are discrepancies in Employee's conduct
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and statements on this issue. Employer first argues that, if Employer had injured his shoulder
and arm on the job, he would have reported the injury to Employer's plant manager in the
conversation they had about work conditions the last day Employee worked. Employer contends
that, when Employee's alleged omission to report his injury the last day he worked is combined
with the notation in the Physician's Care records that Employee "started having the [arm and
shoulder] pain the night after his last day ofwork." (Exhibit 1, page 3), the preponderance ofthe
evidence supports a finding that Employee· is fabricating his claim that he was injured in the
course and scope of employment.
The compensability of this claim is not determined by whether, on the last day he
worked, Employee mentioned to Employer's plant manager that he injured his arm. Employee
admits the main focus of his conversation with Employer's plant manager on the last day he
worked was his concern that the lifting required by the job would cause him to reinjure his
surgically-repaired hernias. Employee stated in both his direct testimony and the recorded
statement that, when he spoke to Employer's plant manager the last day he worked, he did not
think his injury was serious. Employer's plant manager admits that Employee reported his work
injury within four (4) days after the last date he worked. (Exhibit 2, page 2). On the basis ofthe
above, the Court finds that the issue of whether Employee mentioned his arm injury the last day
he worked is irrelevant to the issue of whether he was injured in the course and scope of
employment.
The Court additionally finds Employer's reliance on the Physician's Care records in its
argument that Employee's injury is not compensable is misplaced. It is true that the type-written
summary of Employee's history contains a statement that Employee's arm pain began after he
last worked for Employer. However, the in-take sheet Employee completed the same day the
physician assistant recorded the subject statement indicates Employee reported he was injured
while lifting boxes of yam. In the recorded statement, Employee stated that his arm was "sore"
when he spoke to the plant manager the last day he worked, but, the next day, he awoke with
"tingling" in the arm. (Exhibit 3, page 12). This statement gives context to the information
recorded in the Physician's Care records and, when the admitted evidence is considered in its
entirety, it is clear that Employee did not tell the physician's assistant at Physician's Care that he
injured his arm the day after he last worked for Employer. On the basis of the above-described
evidence, the Court finds Employee injured his neck, left shoulder, and left arm in the course and
scope ofhis employment.
Medical Benefits
The Tennessee Workers' Compensation Act imposes concurrent rights and obligations on
both an employer and an employee in connection with the medical services to which an
employee is entitled when he reports a work-related injury. Tennessee Code Annotated section
50-6-204(a)(l)(A) requires that "the employer or employer's agent shall furnish, free of charge
to the employee, such [treatment] made reasonably necessary by [a work-related] accident."
Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-204(a)(4)(A) requires that "the employee shall accept
the medical benefits afforded under this section." Tennessee Code Annotated sections 50-6-
204(a)(4)(A) through (E) require that an injured employee submit for treatment of his work-
related injury by a physician selected from a panel composed of physicians compiled by the
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employer.
In Buchanan v. Mission Ins. Co., 713 S. W. 2d 654 (Tenn. 1986), the Tennessee Supreme
Court held that an injured employee's duty to give notice is concomitant with an employer's duty
to provide reasonable and necessary medical care. Accordingly, when Employee gave Employer
timely notice that he sustained an injury in the course and scope of his employment, it was
Employer's statutory obligation to provide Employee a panel of physicians.
In this claim, Employer has complied with its obligations to provide Employer authorized
medical care. The Court finds that Employee is obligated to continue to provide Employee
reasonable, necessary, and related medical care under the terms and provisions of the Tennessee
Workers' Compensation Act.
Temporary Partial Disability Benefits
Employee's claim for temporary disability benefits is determined by whether he resigned
his employment on September 4, 2014, the last day he worked. Under Tennessee law, an injured
worker is not entitled to temporary disability benefits if he voluntarily quits his job. Cotton v.
Epsco, Inc., 1998 Tenn. LEXIS 363 (Tenn. Workers' Comp. Panel 1998). After considering the
testimony of Employee and Employer's plant manager as to the content ofthe conversation they
had just before Employee clocked out on September 4, 2014, the Court finds Employee quit his
job because he was concerned the lifting required by the job would reinjure his surgically-
repaired hernias. As such, Employee is not entitled to an award of temporary partial disability
benefits.
In his direct testimony, Employee admitted that the main reason he approached
Employer's plant manager on September 4, 2014 was concern about the lifting required to
perform his job. Employee complained to the plant manager that he was not told when hired that
he would be required to perform heavy lifting. He also asked ifhe could get help with the lifting
or if jobs were available which did not require heavy lifting. Employee's direct testimony is
consistent with the following description Employee gave in his recorded statement as to what he
told Employer's plant manager before clocking out on September 4, 2014: "Listen, you know, I
can't be, ah, I can't be lifting this kind of stuff on my own. I'll have to have some help."
(Exhibit 3. Page 11). Employee admitted that, in the September 4, 2014 conversation with
Employer's plant manager, he did not go into detail about his arm injury because, at that time, he
thought it was a pulled muscle and "didn't think nothing of it".
Employee and Employer's plant manager testified to slightly different versions of the
conversation of September 4, 2014 which culminated with Employee clocking out and not
returning to work for Employer. Employee testified he clocked out because the plant manager
told him it would be best if he did so in light of his concerns about reinjuring his hernias. The
plant manager testified he told Employee to do what was best for him and, immediately
thereafter, he clocked out. The most concise summary of the essence of the conversation is
found in the recorded statement in which Employee stated that he did not say he quit his job
when he clocked out, but the plant manager did not say "you are fired." (Exhibit 3, page 18).
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The Court finds that the most persuasive evidence on the issue of whether Employee quit
his job or was terminated is found in the recorded statement. Employee was asked if he was
employed and responded as follows: "Well, I'm unemployed. Ah, I actually, ah, don't work for
them [Employer] anymore. Ah, I had left them on September 4, 2014." (Exhibit 3, page 2). On
the basis of the admitted evidence described above, the Court finds that Employee quit his job
with Employer on September 4, 2014 because he was concerned the requisite lifting would
reinjure his hernias.
The records stipulated as evidence above establish that Employee is not totally disabled
from working. On each occasion he was treated at Physician's Care, the authorized treating
physician's assistant returned Employee to work with restrictions. (Exhibit 1, pages 1, 4 and 7).
Accordingly, the Court finds Employee is not entitled to temporary partial disability benefits
because he quit his job with Employer for reasons other than disability due to his work-related
injury and he has not been medically determined to be totally disabled because of his work-
related injury.
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED as follows:
1. Employer or its workers' compensation carrier shall continue to provide Employee with
reasonable, necessary, and related medical treatment for his left arm and shoulder
injuries, as required by Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-204, by Dr. Peter Lund.
Medical bills shall be furnished to Employer or its workers' compensation carrier by
Employee or his medical providers.
2. Employee is not entitled to an award of temporary partial disability benefits.
3. This matter is set for Initial Hearing on December 5, 2014, at 10:00 a.m. Eastern
Standard Time.
4. Unless interlocutory appeal of the Expedited Hearing Order is filed, compliance
with this Order must occur no later than seven (7) business days from 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 Division by email to
WCCompliance.Program@tn.gov no later than the seventh (7th) 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.
5. For questions regarding compliance, please contact the Workers' Compensation
Compliance Unit via email WCCompliance.Program@tn.gov or by calling (615) 253-
1471 or (615) 532-1309.
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Initial Hearing:
An Initial Hearing has been set with Judge Thomas Wyatt, Court of Workers
Compensation Claims, on December 5, 2014, at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Standard Time. You must
call 615-741-2051 or toll free at 855-747-1721 to participate in the Initial Hearing.
Please Note: You must call in on the scheduled date and time to participate. Failure to call in
may result in a determination of the issues without your further participation. All conferences are
set using Eastern Time (ET).
ISSUED AND FILED WITH THE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION
CLAIMS ON THE 24TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 2014.
e~
Tennessee Court of Workers'
Compensation Claims
540 McCallie Avenue, Suite 600
Chattanooga, TN 37402
Right to Appeal:
Tennessee Law allows any party who disagrees with this Expedited Hearing Order to appeal
the decision to the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board. To file a Notice of Appeal, you
must:
1. Complete the enclosed form entitled: "Expedited Hearing Notice of Appeal".
2. File the completed form with the Court Clerk within seven (7) business days of the date
the Expedited Hearing Order was entered by the Workers' Compensation Judge.
3. Serve a copy of the Request for Appeal upon the opposing party.
4. The parties, having the responsibility of ensuring a complete record on appeal, may
request from the Court Clerk the audio recording of the hearing for the purpose of having
a transcript prepared by a licensed court reporter and filing it with the Court Clerk within
ten (1 0) calendar days of the filing of the Expedited Hearing Notice of Appeal.
Alternatively, the parties may file a statement of the evidence within ten (10) calendar
days of the filing of the Expedited Hearing Notice of Appeal. The statement of the
evidence must be approved by the Judge before the record is submitted to the Clerk of the
Appeals Board.
5. If the appellant elects to file a position statement in support of the interlocutory appeal,
the appealing party shall file such position statement with the Court Clerk within three (3)
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business days of the filing of the Expedited Hearing Notice of Appeal, specifying the
issues presented for review and including any argument in support thereof. If the
appellee elects to file a response in opposition to the interlocutory appeal, appellee shall
do so within three (3) business days of the filing of the appellant's position
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the Expedited Hearing Order was sent to
the following recipients by the following methods of service on this the 24th day of November,
2014.
Name Certified First Via Fax Via Email Address
Mail Class Fax Number Email
Mail
Sean Vance East X Seanlottie@comcast.net
Charles Poss, Atty. X Charlie. poss@leitnerfirm.com
Thomas Wyatt
-
Workers' Compensation Judge
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