• No results found

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE IN AND FOR KENT COUNTY

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE IN AND FOR KENT COUNTY"

Copied!
11
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

DOVER POST, )

) C.A. No. 05A-11-005 (JTV) Employer-Below / , ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) ROBERT L. COOK, ) ) Claimant-Below / ) Appellee. ) Submitted: April 3, 2006 Decided: July 20, 2006

John J. Klusman, Esq., and Susan A. List, Esq., Tybout, Redfearn & Pell, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorneys for Appellant.

Raymond J. Otlowski, Esq., Newark, Delaware. Attorney for Appellee.

Upon Consideration of Appeal from Decision of the Industrial Accident Board

AFFIRMED

(2)

ORDER

Upon consideration of the parties' briefs and the record of the case, it appears that:

1. Dover Post, appellant, ("employer") is appealing a decision of a hearing officer of the Industrial Accident Board (“Board”) that awarded Robert L. Cook (“claimant”) total disability compensation, medical expenses, attorney fees and medical witness costs. The injury upon which the claimant based his claim occurred in 2002. The employer claims that the Board erred as a matter of law in determining that the claimant was in the course of his employment at the time of his injury. The employer also contends that the Board erred in refusing to decide whether the 2002 incident was a new injury or a recurrence of an old injury. The question of new injury versus recurrence of old injury is relevant, the employer contends, to a successive carrier analysis. While both injury events occurred while the claimant worked at this same employer, between the two the employer changed workers' compensation insurance companies.

(3)

was in operation. The Board noted that the testimony of both the claimant and Mr. Kendrick could be accurate. It decided the case on the claimant’s testimony. The next morning the claimant’s knee was swollen.

3. The claimant sought treatment from Dr. Eric Schwartz, an orthopedic surgeon, who arranged for an MRI. Surgery was proposed, but there was a delay in getting the surgery. The claimant was out of work from December 2002 until September 29, 2003.

4. This was not the claimant’s first work-related injury. In 1993, also while working for Dover Post, the claimant tore his anterior cruciate ligament (“ACL”) while running across a catwalk. Subsequent to this injury, the claimant missed time from work and underwent two knee surgeries. The claimant stated at the hearing that he has continued to have knee problems. In 1994, he was told to wear a knee sleeve and ice after activities. In 1995, the claimant reported a burning sensation in the knee. In 1996, he stated that taking a first step with his right leg brought sharp pain to the knee, so he began wearing a brace. The claimant suffered another knee injury in 2000 while at work when he stepped off a walkway. Dr. Schwartz proposed surgery after an MRI showed medial and lateral tears. However, by the time the claimant was examined by Dover Post’s doctor, the clamant had received physical therapy and was feeling better. Consequently, the company doctor told the claimant there was no need for surgery.

(4)

lateral joint line. He was placed on light-duty restrictions. The December 2002 MRI showed a thinning of the ACL, degenerative changes and evidence of an earlier meniscectomy.

6. On June 23, 2003, Dr. Schwartz performed surgery on the right knee. Despite the MRI showing severe arthritis, on observation during the surgery there was very little arthritis in the joint. Thus, according to Dr. Schwartz, the MRI was inaccurate. Additionally, Dr. Schwartz observed that the prior ACL reconstruction was not functioning well and the ACL was torn. He further testified that, in his opinion, the treatment and surgery were related to the November 2002 event. If the claimant had not been running, he would not have hurt his knee.

(5)

1

General Motors v. Freeman, 164 A.2d 686, 688 (Del. Super. 1960); Johnson v. Chrysler

Corporation, 213 A.2d 64, 66-67 (Del. 1965).

2

Oceanport Ind. v. Wilmington Stevedores, 636 A.2d 892, 899 (Del. 1999); Battista v. Chrysler Corp., 517 A.2d 295, 297 (Del.Super. 1986), appeal dism., 515 A.2d 397 (Del. 1986).

3

Johnson, 213 A.2d at 66.

it may have aggravated the degenerative disease shown on the MRIs.

8. The Board found that the 2002 injury was a compensable injury occurring within the scope of the claimant's employment. Although the claimant was not at the time of the injury working on a specific work related task, the Board was satisfied that the break to look at the Winnebago fell within the "personal comfort" doctrine, discussed hereinafter.

9. As to causation, the Board reasoned that it was not required to decide whether the claimant’s injury was a recurrence of the old injury or a new injury because the claimant was working for the same employer at both times and the 2002 event was clearly one or the other. Specifically, however, the Board did find that the November 2002 running event caused the 2002 injury in that the 2002 injury would not have occurred but for the 2002 running event.

(6)

4 19 Del. C. § 2301(18)(a). 5

Tickles v. PNC Bank, 703 A.2d 633, 637 (Del. 1997); Storm v. Karl-Mil, Inc. By Home

Ins. Co., 460 A.2d 519, 521 (1983).

6 Tickles v. PNC Bank, 703 A.2d 633, 637 (Del. 1997). 7

Id. findings.

11. The employer first contends that the claimant was not working in the course of his employment when the 2002 knee injury occurred, because the injury occurred when he went to the back door to look at the co-worker's new Winnebago. The claimant's response to the co-worker's invitation to look at the Winnebago was, the employer contends, a personal deviation from employment which was not within the course of the claimant's employment.

(7)

8 2003 WL 751278, Toliver, J. "personal comfort" doctrine.

13. In this case the Board believed that when the claimant ran from the press to the door to look at the co-worker's new Winnebago, he was within the "personal comfort" doctrine. I agree with the Board that the injury, although not caused by a job-related activity, is compensable. The accident occurred on the work premises while the claimant was at work. The evidence supports an inference that it was a minor deviation from his job tasks. There is no evidence that he violated any work place rule or that the deviation would have caused him to neglect his assigned work. Common knowledge tells us that minor distractions at work do occur. It is not realistic to expect that workers will avoid distractions while at work as one might expect from someone at military attention. What occurred here was a minor interruption from work which might reasonably be expected in the course of a day's activities. For these reasons, I conclude that the injury which occurred here was caused by an accident arising out of and in the course of the claimant's employment. 14. The employer cites the case of Tabannor v. Advanced Security8 as support for its contention that personal deviations from employment are not considered within the course and scope of employment. Tabannor, however, is distinguishable on its facts.

(8)

injury. Such an analysis was necessary, the employer contends, because it had different insurance carriers in 1993 and 2002, and a successive carrier analysis was necessary to decide which of the two insurance companies was responsible for the 2002 event.

16. On this issue, the Board stated, in pertinent part, as follows: Therefore, let me be clear that, based on the testimony of Dr. Schwartz, the treating surgeon who opined that Claimant would not have hurt his knee in 2002 if he had not been running, I find that but for the November 2002 running event Claimant would not have developed the knee problems that he had in 2002.

From Claimant’s perspective, therefore, he had established that he was injured in a compensable work event on November 30, 2002, while he was working for Post. While it is true that Claimant had a preexisting knee condition, the 2002 work event was the

?

trigger” for the 2002 complaints and, therefore, compensable. See Reese v. Home Budget Center, 619 A.2d 907, 910 (Del. 1992). Contrary to Post/Hartford’s position in its motion for reargument, Claimant did not have to assert an alternative theory of liability because he has established liability under the date of accident that he asserted in his petition.

(9)

say that the preexisting condition was a cause of the 2002 knee condition does not mean that the 2002 work event was not also a cause. Claimant’s burden at this hearing was to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that the 2002 event was

?

a” cause of his knee problems in 2002. Under Reese, all that is needed is for the work event to be a

?

trigger” of an underlying preexisting condition in order for causation to be satisfied for purposes of compensability. Reese, 619 A.2 at 910. Claimant has met this burden. Under Reese and Steen, he needed only to establish that there was an event in 2002 that triggered his condition, not that that event caused a

?

new” injury or was

?

untoward” as those terms are used in Nally. Thus, Post/Hartford’s argument that Claimant had the responsibility for bringing in the earlier carrier is unavailing. Claimant would only have had that responsibility if he was trying to establish that the 1993 injury was

?

a” cause of his knee problem. He was not.

(10)

9 306 A.2d 716 (Del. 1973). 10

Nally at 646.

11 2004 Del. Super. LEXIS 321.

Post/Hartford can bring a cause of action against the earlier carrier for contribution. If it does, then the issue would have to be decided whether the 2002 event constituted a

?

new injury” or

?

untoward event.” It is this question that I make no ruling on because the prior carrier is not party to the present litigation.

Steen and Nally, mentioned but not fully cited in the foregoing language, are cited below.

I find no error in the Board's analysis.

(11)

case. I am not persuaded that the case is authority for the need for any successive carrier liability analysis in this case.

18. I conclude that the Board's decision is supported by substantial evidence and free from legal error. Therefore, it is affirmed.

References

Related documents

Field experiments were conducted at Ebonyi State University Research Farm during 2009 and 2010 farming seasons to evaluate the effect of intercropping maize with

Results suggest that the probability of under-educated employment is higher among low skilled recent migrants and that the over-education risk is higher among high skilled

In the 2002 AAMC Faculty Personnel Policies Survey, 103 medical schools with tenure systems reported that basic science faculty members initially appointed to a nontenure track

19% serve a county. Fourteen per cent of the centers provide service for adjoining states in addition to the states in which they are located; usually these adjoining states have

I find that before naturalisation those who acquire citizenship are more likely to identify as British, be familiar with the British political system and are less interested in

It was decided that with the presence of such significant red flag signs that she should undergo advanced imaging, in this case an MRI, that revealed an underlying malignancy, which

Also, both diabetic groups there were a positive immunoreactivity of the photoreceptor inner segment, and this was also seen among control ani- mals treated with a