Bishop v. Ingles Mkts., Inc. , 233 N.C. App. 431 ( 2014 )


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  •                                 NO. COA13-1102
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed:    15 April 2014
    DAVITA BISHOP,
    Employee, Plaintiff,
    v.                                  North Carolina Industrial
    Commission
    I.C. No. 884899
    INGLES MARKETS, INC.,
    Employer, SELF-INSURED,
    Defendant.
    Appeal by defendant-employer from Opinion and Award entered
    12 July 2013 by the North Carolina Industrial Commission.            Heard
    in the Court of Appeals 17 March 2014.
    Law Office of Gary A. Dodd, by Gary A. Dodd, for plaintiff-
    appellee.
    Northup, McConnell & Sizemore PLLC, by Steven W. Sizemore,
    for defendant-appellant.
    MARTIN, Chief Judge.
    Defendant-employer    Ingles     Markets,    Inc.   appeals   from    an
    Opinion and Award of the Full Commission of the North Carolina
    Industrial Commission awarding workers’ compensation benefits,
    attorney’s fees, and costs to plaintiff-employee Davita Bishop.
    For the reasons stated herein, we affirm.
    On   30   January   2008,    plaintiff   slipped    and   fell   on   a
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    recently waxed floor while working in the Ingles deli.                            After
    reporting      the    fall      to   the     store   manager,      plaintiff      sought
    medical treatment at OneBeacon Healthcare.                        She explained that
    she    fell    and    hit     her    head,    and    that   she    was   experiencing
    dizziness as well as pain to her head, lower back, and hip.
    Plaintiff was diagnosed as having a lower back sprain and a mild
    concussion.       She was also given a note excusing her from work
    until 5 February 2008.
    However,      plaintiff’s      condition      did    not    improve,    and   she
    went    to    Sisters      of   Mercy      Urgent    Care   on    9   February    2008,
    complaining of pain in her left hip and lower back.                           Plaintiff
    was given a note excusing her from work until 13 February 2008.
    Plaintiff returned to Sisters of Mercy Urgent Care three times
    in    February,      and    results     of   an    MRI   scan    revealed    “a   slight
    anterolisthesis at L4-5, degenerative disc disease, spondylosis,
    facet arthrosis and annular bulging at L4-5 and L5-S1.”
    After   the     MRI,     it   was     recommended    that      plaintiff    begin
    physical therapy and that she return to work with the following
    restrictions:         working for no more than four hours a day; no
    lifting of anything over ten pounds; and no standing, walking,
    or sitting for more than twenty minutes at a time.                          On 11 March
    2008, plaintiff returned to work pursuant to these restrictions.
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    Plaintiff was referred to Dr. Richard Broadhurst and saw
    him on 29 May 2008 for an evaluation and treatment.                                 On 14 July
    2008, plaintiff saw Dr. Broadhurst again because she felt she
    was    being    asked       to    perform     tasks        at   work   that    she    was   not
    physically capable of performing.                      In response, Dr. Broadhurst
    issued several work restrictions including, “lifting [no] more
    than ten pounds, no ladder climbing, no repetitive bending or
    twisting or forward reaching and to stand and walk to control
    the pain.”       On 28 August 2008, Dr. Broadhurst again issued work
    restrictions      for       plaintiff.          Also       in   August    2008,      plaintiff
    began taking classes, on days she did not have to work, in a
    Masters of Divinity program at Gardner-Webb University.
    On 26 September 2008, plaintiff returned to OneBeacon and
    complained of “blackout spells,” stating that she had fainted at
    work      the         day         before.                  Plaintiff         underwent       an
    electroencephalogram              (“EEG”)      which        suggested        that    plaintiff
    might    have    partial          epilepsy.           As    a   result,       plaintiff     was
    referred to Dr. Duff Rardin, who diagnosed plaintiff as possibly
    having    epilepsy.              On   5    November    2008,      a    coworker      witnessed
    plaintiff      have     a    blackout        spell.          Following       this    incident,
    plaintiff underwent an MRI that showed an abnormal signal.
    While    plaintiff’s               seizure     condition        was    ongoing,      Dr.
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    Broadhurst, on 15 December 2008, determined that plaintiff had
    reached      maximum    medical     improvement      and   assigned      plaintiff
    permanent work restrictions.             On 30 December 2008, however, Dr.
    Broadhurst asked Dr. Rardin if plaintiff’s 30 January 2008 fall
    caused plaintiff’s seizures.              Dr. Rardin responded that he did
    not think that the fall caused plaintiff’s seizures.
    Plaintiff continued to suffer from seizures, so Dr. Rardin
    completed     the   medical      section     of   plaintiff’s    Family    Medical
    Leave   (“FMAL”)       application,      noting   that   plaintiff      should    not
    work due to her seizure activity.                 Dr. Rardin also recommended
    that plaintiff stop taking classes at Gardner-Webb due to her
    seizures.      Plaintiff stopped working on 15 July 2009 when her
    FMAL application was approved.
    On 29 July 2009, plaintiff was admitted to Mission Hospital
    for epilepsy monitoring, and the staff was able to observe one
    of plaintiff’s seizures.              It was determined that plaintiff’s
    seizures were nonepileptic.              Plaintiff, nonetheless, continued
    to have seizures.          Dr. Rardin testified that stressors in a
    person’s life can cause nonepileptic seizures, but he did not
    state   an    opinion    about     whether     plaintiff   suffered     from     such
    stressors.       Also,     while    at    Mission    Hospital,    Dr.    C.    Britt
    Peterson, a psychiatrist, saw plaintiff and diagnosed her with
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    “a major depressive disorder or a possible adjustment disorder
    with depressed mood and possible conversion disorder.”
    Eventually, Dr. Rardin recommended that plaintiff see Karen
    Katz a licensed clinical social worker with a master’s degree in
    social work and psychology from Syracuse University.                           During the
    first   meeting,    Ms.    Katz     took     plaintiff’s         family    history     and
    conducted a clinical assessment.                   Ms. Katz        used anxiety and
    depression screening tools to diagnose plaintiff with an anxiety
    disorder and chronic depression that Ms. Katz believed began
    early in plaintiff’s life.             Ms. Katz opined that plaintiff’s 30
    January    2008    fall    exacerbated           her    preexisting        anxiety     and
    depression.
    The forgoing evidence was presented to the Full Commission
    at a hearing on 15 November 2011.                  After the hearing, the Full
    Commission    issued      an   order    on    5    January       2012    reopening     the
    record for receipt of “additional evidence to consist of an
    orthopedic    evaluation        and    a     neuropsychological            evaluation.”
    Pursuant     to   this     order,      Dr.       Stephen       David      conducted    an
    orthopedic    evaluation       of     plaintiff,         and     Dr.    John    Barkenbus
    conducted a neuropsychological evaluation of plaintiff.                               Both
    doctors    also    reviewed     plaintiff’s            medical    records       and   were
    deposed.
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    Dr. Barkenbus, a neuropsychiatry expert, testified that the
    medical      records     he    reviewed   did       not    indicate    that       plaintiff
    suffered from seizures prior to her fall.                          He also testified
    that    plaintiff’s       anxiety      and     depression        contributed        to   her
    seizure disorder, but that her fall was the initiating event
    that caused her resulting medical and psychological conditions.
    Dr.    David,    an    expert     in    orthopedic        surgery,     testified         that
    plaintiff’s          current      medical       problems         prevent      her        from
    consistently sustaining gainful employment.
    Based     on    this      evidence,         the    Full    Commission       awarded
    plaintiff       weekly    compensation,         medical         compensation       for    her
    seizures,      and    attorney’s       fees.        Commissioner      Nance       dissented
    from the Full Commission’s Opinion and Award because she did not
    find Ms. Katz’s testimony credible.                  Defendant appeals.
    _________________________
    On appeal defendant argues that the Full Commission erred
    in     (1)   finding      that     plaintiff’s           fall    caused     her     seizure
    disorder,       (2)    reopening        the    record       to     obtain      additional
    evidence, and (3)             awarding plaintiff disability compensation.
    We disagree.
    The North Carolina Supreme Court has clearly stated that
    “appellate courts reviewing Commission decisions are limited to
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    reviewing      whether      any    competent      evidence       supports       the
    Commission’s findings of fact and whether the findings of fact
    support the Commission’s conclusions of law.”                 Deese v. Champion
    Int’l Corp., 
    352 N.C. 109
    , 116, 
    530 S.E.2d 549
    , 553 (2000).
    However, “[t]he Commission’s conclusions of law are reviewed de
    novo.”      McRae    v.   Toastmaster,   Inc.,    
    358 N.C. 488
    ,    496,    
    597 S.E.2d 695
    , 701 (2004).
    “Unchallenged findings of fact are presumed to be supported
    by competent evidence and are binding on appeal.”                      Allred v.
    Exceptional Landscapes, Inc., __, N.C. App. __, __, 
    743 S.E.2d 48
    , 51 (2013).       However, when we review the challenged findings
    of fact, we do not reweigh the evidence because the Commission
    is the fact finder.        Smith v. First Choice Servs., 
    158 N.C. App. 244
    , 248, 
    580 S.E.2d 743
    , 747, disc. rev. denied, 
    357 N.C. 461
    ,
    
    586 S.E.2d 99
        (2003).       Instead,     we   limit     our    review    to
    determining “whether the record contains any evidence tending to
    support the finding[s].”          Adams v. AVX Corp., 
    349 N.C. 676
    , 681,
    
    509 S.E.2d 411
    , 414 (1998), reh’g denied, 
    350 N.C. 108
    , 
    532 S.E.2d 522
     (1999).        As a result, “‘[t]he findings of fact of the
    Industrial Commission are conclusive on appeal when supported by
    competent evidence, even though there [may] be evidence that
    would support findings to the contrary.’”               
    Id.
     (quoting Jones v.
    -8-
    Myrtle Desk Co., 
    264 N.C. 401
    , 402, 
    141 S.E.2d 632
    , 633 (1965)).
    Also,    we     view   the     evidence       in    the     record   in     a   light   most
    favorable to the plaintiff, and the “plaintiff is entitled to
    the benefit of every reasonable inference to be drawn from the
    evidence.”       
    Id.
    First, defendant argues that the Full Commission erred in
    determining        that        plaintiff’s          work-related           injury     caused
    plaintiff’s seizures.              In making this argument, defendant relies
    on Hawkins v. General Electric Co., 
    199 N.C. App. 245
    , 249, 
    683 S.E.2d 385
    ,     389    (2009),       for     the       proposition      that     when   “a
    particular type of injury involves complicated medical questions
    far   removed      from      the     ordinary       experience       and    knowledge      of
    laymen, only an expert can give competent opinion evidence as to
    the     cause    of    the     injury.”             Thus,      throughout       defendant’s
    argument, it challenges several findings of fact, which we will
    address later, on the basis that the Full Commission could not
    find these facts based on Ms. Katz’s testimony because she is
    not an expert.
    The     proposition       that    only       an   expert     can     give   competent
    opinion     evidence      as    to    causation         when   a   complicated      medical
    question is involved has its basis in Click v. Pilot Freight
    Carriers, Inc., 
    300 N.C. 164
    , 167, 
    256 S.E.2d 389
    , 391 (1980).
    -9-
    In Click, the North Carolina Supreme Court stated:
    For an injury to be compensable under the
    terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, it
    must be proximately caused by an accident
    arising out of and suffered in the course of
    employment.      There   must   be  competent
    evidence to support the inference that the
    accident in question resulted in the injury
    complained of, i.e., some evidence that the
    accident at least might have or could have
    produced   the   particular   disability   in
    question.   The quantum and quality of the
    evidence required to establish prima facie
    the causal relationship will of course vary
    with the complexity of the injury itself.
    There will be many instances in which the
    facts in evidence are such that any layman
    of average intelligence and experience would
    know what caused the injuries complained of.
    On the other hand, where the exact nature
    and probable genesis of a particular type of
    injury    involves     complicated    medical
    questions far removed from the ordinary
    experience and knowledge of laymen, only an
    expert can give competent opinion evidence
    as to the cause of the injury.
    
    Id.
          (emphasis     added)       (citations     omitted)      (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    From      this   paragraph     it    is   clear   that   the    Court   was
    concerned about the quality of the evidence relied upon by the
    Industrial    Commission    when    considering       complicated    causation
    issues.      Therefore, the Commission may make findings of fact
    based on the testimony of a person that is not an expert, but
    must rely on competent expert testimony to infer that there is
    -10-
    causation when a complicated medical question is involved.
    We will now address each of defendant’s challenges to the
    Full   Commission’s       findings      of    fact,    as    well     as    defendant’s
    contention that there is no causal connection between the work-
    related injury and plaintiff’s seizures.
    First,    defendant     challenges          finding    of     fact    36,      which
    states:
    On September 18, 2009, Dr. Rardin referred
    Plaintiff to Karen Katz, a licensed clinical
    social worker, for psychological assistance
    regarding Plaintiff’s non-epileptic seizure
    disorder. Ms. Katz has a Masters degree in
    psychology and is providing psychotherapy to
    Plaintiff.     Ms. Katz is qualified and
    competent to state her opinions as to
    Plaintiff’s psychological condition.
    Defendant asserts that the Full Commission erred in finding that
    Ms.    Katz     could     state      her       opinions       as     to     plaintiff’s
    psychological condition because Ms. Katz is not qualified to
    make   a    diagnosis     or   offer    opinions      as     to     causation.         This
    argument fails.
    As   stated     earlier,   the      Commission        must    rely        on   expert
    testimony       when    determining          the    issue     of      causation         when
    complicated medical questions are involved.                       See 
    id.
        Finding of
    fact 36 has nothing to do with causation; it simply recites Ms.
    Katz’s      educational    training,         the   fact     that    she     is    treating
    -11-
    plaintiff with respect to her psychological condition, which is
    within Ms. Katz’s training, and that she could properly offer
    her opinion as to plaintiff’s psychological condition.
    Next,     defendant   challenges      finding   of    fact    37,    which
    states:
    Ms. Katz does not administer psychological
    “testing” but does perform “screening” for
    conditions such as anxiety.    In Plaintiff’s
    case she performed such screening and has
    assessed Plaintiff with generalized anxiety
    disorder,    and   dysthymia,     a   chronic
    depression which began early in her life.
    She also assessed that Plaintiff suffers
    from   an   adjustment    disorder.      This
    assessment by Ms. Katz is consistent with
    that of Dr. Peterson, the psychiatrist.
    Defendant challenges this finding of fact on the basis that the
    Commission   bolstered    Ms.   Katz’s    assessment     by   saying    it   was
    supported by Dr. Peterson.      Again, this argument fails.
    As stated earlier, when we review a record in a workers’
    compensation case, we limit our review to whether the record
    contains any evidence that tends to support the Commission’s
    findings.    See Adams, 349 N.C. at 681, 509 S.E.2d at 414.                   In
    this case, Ms. Katz assessed that plaintiff was depressed.                   Also
    in evidence is a discharge summary from Mission Hospital that
    states that Dr. Peterson diagnosed plaintiff with a depressive
    disorder.    This evidence supports the Commission’s finding that
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    the   “assessment   by   Ms.   Katz   is     consistent    with    that   of   Dr.
    Peterson.”
    Defendant also questions finding of fact 38, which states:
    It is Ms. Katz’ opinion that Plaintiff’s
    fall exacerbated her pre-existing depression
    and anxiety.    During her treatment with Ms.
    Katz, Plaintiff has made slow, but steady
    progress.    Ms. Katz opined that Plaintiff
    needs ongoing treatment with medications and
    psychotherapy     and   that   Plaintiff   is
    currently unable to work “full time.”
    Defendant contends that the Full Commission could not find that
    in “Ms. Katz’ opinion . . . Plaintiff’s fall exacerbated her
    pre-existing depression and anxiety.”            As discussed earlier, the
    Full Commission     was permitted to          find facts relating to Ms.
    Katz’s testimony as long as the Full Commission did not rely on
    Ms. Katz’s testimony when inferring causation.                    To the extent
    that the Full Commission relied upon Ms. Katz’s testimony to
    infer causation, the Full Commission erred.               However, in finding
    of fact 45 the Full Commission stated that it was giving great
    weight to Dr. Barkenbus’s testimony when inferring causation,
    and Dr. Barkenbus testified that he thought plaintiff’s fall was
    the    initiating    event     that     caused      several       medical      and
    psychological issues.
    Finally, defendant challenges findings of fact 44 and 45.
    Finding of fact 44 states:
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    Based upon a preponderance of the evidence,
    the   Full  Commission  finds   that   as   a
    consequence   of   her  January    30,   2008
    accident,     Plaintiff    experienced     an
    exacerbation of her underlying psychological
    condition,    including   her    pre-existing
    anxiety and depression.
    Finding of fact 45 states:
    Based upon a preponderance of the evidence
    of record, including the opinion of Dr.
    Barkenbus, which the Full Commission gives
    great weight, the Full Commission finds that
    Plaintiff’s    pre-existing    anxiety   and
    depression which were exacerbated by her
    compensable   injury,  contributed   to  her
    seizure disorder.
    Defendant    maintains   that      the      Full   Commission       could    not    have
    found a preexisting psychological condition because no expert
    diagnosed    plaintiff   with      a     psychological          condition,    and    no
    medical     expert   testified         as    to    the     exacerbation       of    any
    preexisting condition.
    This argument challenges findings of fact, as well as the
    Full Commission’s inference of causation.                       First, we only need
    to   find   some   evidence   in    the      record      that    supports    the   Full
    Commission’s findings of fact.              See Adams, 349 N.C. at 681, 509
    S.E.2d at 414.       Dr. Barkenbus, who was tendered as a medical
    expert, stated that in his report he was concerned with “some
    level of panic anxiety prior to [plaintiff’s] fall, [and that]
    [t]here was more ongoing depression in the aftermath of her
    -14-
    fall.”        Thus, there is evidence in the record to support the
    finding that plaintiff suffered from anxiety before her fall.
    Second, Dr. Barkenbus testified that he thought the fall
    was     the    initiating        event    that       caused    several        medical   and
    psychological issues that affected plaintiff’s ability to work.
    The Full Commission stated in finding of fact 45 that it was
    giving great weight to Dr. Barkenbus’s testimony.                               Therefore,
    there is expert medical testimony in the record that the Full
    Commission       relied     on     in    determining          the    causal     connection
    between       plaintiff’s    fall       and    her   current        medical    conditions.
    See Click, 
    300 N.C. at 167
    , 256 S.E.2d at 391.                         As a result, the
    Full Commission properly addressed the issue of causation.
    Next, we address the Full Commission’s order reopening the
    record.        When a party appeals a deputy commissioner’s opinion
    and award to the Full Commission, it may “if good ground be
    shown     therefor,       reconsider          the     evidence,        receive     further
    evidence, rehear the parties or their representatives, and, if
    proper, amend the award.”                
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-85
    (a) (2013).
    As a result, this statute confers plenary powers to the Full
    Commission to receive additional evidence, rehear the parties,
    amend the award, and reconsider the evidence.                           Lynch v. M. B.
    Kahn Constr. Co., 
    41 N.C. App. 127
    , 130, 
    254 S.E.2d 236
    , 238,
    -15-
    disc.     rev.      denied,      
    298 N.C. 298
    ,    
    259 S.E.2d 914
           (1979).
    Therefore, the Full Commission’s determination relating to one
    of its plenary powers “will not be reviewed on appeal absent a
    showing    of       manifest     abuse    of    discretion,”              id.   at      131,       
    254 S.E.2d at 238
    ,      and   an    abuse        of     discretion       occurs          when    a
    determination “is so arbitrary that it could not have been the
    result of a reasoned decision.”                       Porter v. Fieldcrest Cannon,
    Inc., 
    133 N.C. App. 23
    , 26, 
    514 S.E.2d 517
    , 520 (1999).
    Defendant           does   not     argue       that     the        Full     Commission’s
    decision       to    reopen      the   record        was     an    unreasoned           decision.
    Instead, defendant seems to argue that the Full Commission’s
    decision    was       unfair     because       it    gave    the     plaintiff          a    second
    opportunity to prove her case.                      Such an argument fails to show
    that the Full Commission abused its discretion, and we will not
    review its determination to reopen the record.
    Finally, defendant argues that the Full Commission should
    not      have        awarded      plaintiff           temporary           total         indemnity
    compensation and medical compensation because plaintiff failed
    to provide evidence that satisfies the test in Russell v. Lowes
    Product Distrib., 
    108 N.C. App. 762
    , 
    425 S.E.2d 454
     (1993).                                         We
    disagree.
    Under         the    Workers’      Compensation             Act,    an    employee           is
    -16-
    disabled when their earning capacity has been impaired.            Peoples
    v. Cone Mills Corp., 
    316 N.C. 426
    , 434, 
    342 S.E.2d 798
    , 804
    (1986), appeal after remand, 
    86 N.C. App. 227
    , 
    356 S.E.2d 801
    (1987).   Thus, the employee must show that “he is unable to earn
    the same wage he had earned before the injury, either in the
    same employment or in other employment.”          Russell, 
    108 N.C. App. at 765
    , 
    425 S.E.2d at 457
    .
    The employee may meet this burden in one of four ways:
    (1) the production of medical evidence that
    he   is   physically   or   mentally,   as   a
    consequence of the work related injury,
    incapable of work in any employment; (2) the
    production of evidence that he is capable of
    some work, but that he has, after a
    reasonable   effort   on    his   part,   been
    unsuccessful   in   his   effort   to   obtain
    employment; (3) the production of evidence
    that he is capable of some work but that it
    would be futile because of preexisting
    conditions, i.e., age, inexperience, lack of
    education, to seek other employment; or (4)
    the production of evidence that he has
    obtained other employment at a wage less
    than that earned prior to the injury.
    
    Id.
    In this case, the Full Commission concluded that plaintiff
    had satisfied the Russell test under either part one or part
    three.    The   Full   Commission    made   the   following   unchallenged
    finding of fact:
    [I]t would have been futile for Plaintiff to
    -17-
    look for suitable employment due to her
    limited and past relevant vocational history
    of working primarily as a deli cook which
    required prolonged standing and lifting up
    to 50 pounds, her limited vocation skills
    associated mainly with the type of work she
    is currently unable to perform . . . her
    current seizure disorder, in combination
    with her work related, severe permanent
    restrictions assigned by Dr. Broadhurst of
    no lifting more than ten pounds, sitting or
    resting up to ten minutes each hour, no
    ladder climbing, minimal stair climbing and
    no repetitious twisting or forward trunk
    reaching, and her other physical limitations
    due to severe pain, needing a cane to
    ambulate, her need for multiple medications
    and her non-work related medical conditions,
    including   a   stroke  and   heart   attack
    following her injury.
    This    finding      of   fact     supports    the      Full    Commission’s
    conclusion      that   it    would    have    been   futile    for    plaintiff    to
    search for employment.           See Barrett v. All Payment Servs., Inc.,
    
    201 N.C. App. 522
    , 527, 
    686 S.E.2d 920
    , 924 (2009) (holding that
    the    plaintiff    had     satisfied     part   three    of   the    Russell    test
    because the Commission found “it would be futile for [employee]
    to    seek    employment,     given     his   advanced    age,   his    prior    work
    history, his pre-existing conditions, his severely debilitating
    back condition due [to] his current work related [sic] injury as
    well as non-work related [sic] causes and his work related [sic]
    physical      restrictions”      (alterations        in   original)),     writ     of
    supersedeas and disc. rev. denied, 
    363 N.C. 853
    , 
    693 S.E.2d 915
    -18-
    (2010).
    In conclusion, for the reasons stated above, we affirm the
    Opinion and Award of the Full Commission.
    Affirmed.
    Judges McGEE and CALABRIA concur.