CLAIM NO. F504870
Before the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission
OPINION FILED MAY 16, 2007
Upon review before the FULL COMMISSION in Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas.
Claimant represented by the HONORABLE JAMES A. McLARTY, III, Attorney at Law, Newport, Arkansas.
Respondents represented by the HONORABLE MELISSA WOOD, Attorney at Law, Little Rock, Arkansas.
Decision of Administrative Law Judge: Reversed.
OPINION AND ORDER
The respondent appeals an administrative law judge’s opinion filed September 13, 2006. The administrative law judge found, among other things, “On May 11, 2005, the claimant sustained an injury to his back, as well as his left lower extremity, arising out of and in the course of his employment with the respondents. The medical treatment rendered to the claimant relative to his back, right hip, right leg/foot complaint [sic] under the care of Dr. Nicole Lawson, as well as referrals therefrom, to include the February 24, 2006, MRI scan is reasonable and necessary medical treatment in connection to the claimant’s compensable injury. Respondents controverted the compensability of the claimant’s low back, right
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hip/leg/foot injury. The respondents shall pay all reasonable hospital and medical expenses arising out of the claimant’s low back injury which grew out of the May 11, 2005, compensable accident.”
After reviewing the entire record de novo, the Full Commission reverses the opinion of the administrative law judge. We find that the claimant failed to prove that he sustained a compensable injury to his low back, right hip/leg foot, in addition to his left lower extremity injury, which arose out of and in the course of his employment with the respondent on May 11, 2005. As a result, the Full Commission further finds that since the claimant did not meet his burden of proof that he sustained a compensable injury while working for the respondent, he is not entitled to any medical benefits for his low back, right hip, right leg/foot problems.
I. History
The claimant, age 46 (9/07/60), had worked for the respondent approximately 16 to 18 years, operating excavators and bulldozers, and performing mechanic-type work. On May 11, 2005, the claimant sustained an admittedly compensable work-related injury to his left lower extremity, in the form of a left ankle fracture when he jumped off of a sliding excavator. The respondent paid appropriate benefits for the claimant’s left lower extremity injury, which included a 21% impairment rating. However, it has controverted the claimant’s alleged low back, right hip/leg/foot injury in its entirety. Therefore, the claimant has brought this claim asserting his right to benefits for his alleged low back injury and related symptoms.
The claimant was initially treated at the emergency room of Harris Hospital, in Newport, due to an injury to his left foot, which he sustained while performing job duties for
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the respondent. The claimant was treated, released, and directed to follow-up with Dr. Diwakar Pulisetty.
Dr. Pulisetty conducted an initial evaluation of the claimant’s left foot injury on May 12, 2005. He reported:
HISTORY/PRESENT ILLNESS: This is a 44-year old male who works as a laborer for Greenhead Farming Co., jumped off a truck, twisted the left foot and ankle, sustained injury. He was seen later in the Emergency Room, was given a short-leg brace with the diagnosis of calcaneous fracture. From the injury, his main complaint is confined to the foot and ankle only. He did not have any other musculoskeletal injury. He didn’t have any other internal injury.
He assessed the claimant as having “minimally displaced fracture, os calcis, left foot,” for which he recommended non-surgical treatment.
On July 8, 2005, the claimant sought emergency treatment from Harris Hospital due to finger injury/pain, as a result of his finger having gotten caught in a chain.
The claimant next saw Dr. Pulisetty on September 9, 2005 for follow-up care of his ankle fracture.
On November 1, 2005, the claimant was seen by Dr. Stephen Eichert. He reported:
I examined Charles Barnes in the presence of his ex-wife today. He is a 45-year-old right-handed white male who jumped off of a vehicle and fractured his left foot May 11, 2005. Since that time he has been treated by an orthopedic surgeon for a fracture. He has done well, but complains that he cannot flex his left great toe and he has a little bit of numbness.
He has had low back pain for many years and is being treated by Dr. Coleman Kent for this currently. He tells me that his right leg goes to sleep at times and that on standing it seems to be more problematic. That is new. Current medicines are Valium, Soma, and Lortab. There are no allergies. Tobacco use is two packs of cigarettes per day for 20 years.
Physical exam is significant for brisk symmetric deep tendon reflexes, flexor plantar responses and the absence of focal weakness. He can heel and toe walk without obvious difficulty. Straight leg raising is unremarkable.
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Charles Barnes is recovering from a fracture of his left foot. He has chronic low back pain.
There is no evidence of a new neurologic injury and he is at MMI from my viewpoint.
The claimant underwent evaluation with Dr. Charles Varela on December 12, 2005 for evaluation of his compensable left lower extremity injury. His assessment was “Status post left calcaneal fracture, satisfactory progress, and fracture proximal phalanx, second toe, healed.” Therefore, Dr. Varela advised that at that time the fracture had healed about as well as could be expected, and instructed the claimant to wear good supportive work boots and engage in normal activity as tolerated without restriction or impairment. In these medical notes, Dr. Varela made no mention of any complaints by the claimant of any problems relating to his low back, right hip, leg and/or foot.
On February 22, 2006, the claimant returned to see Dr. Varela. His assessment was “healing calcaneus fracture,” for which he performed an intraarticular injection of Depo-Medrol, Lidocaine and Marcaine.
Dr. Varela next saw the claimant on March 22, 2006. At which time, he assessed the claimant with a 21% permanent physical impairment to his left foot, utilizing the AMA Guides to the Evaluation of PermanentImpairment (4th ed 1993).
Dr. Nicole Lawson reported the following on February 24, 2006:
I have been treating Mr. Barnes since January of this year for severe back pain. According to Mr. Barnes he injured his back at work and pain has gotten increasingly worse with time. He has been trying to work which requires manual labor, therefore causing his symptoms to worsen. Because of the symptoms he continues to have and the history I have obtained, it is my medical opinion he needs an MRI of his lumbar and thoracic spine as soon as possibly along with physical therapy. I previously ordered this but was unable to get this done due
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to the cost. Please see if you can be of assistance in helping get authorization for this. If you have any questions or concerns or I may be of further assistance, please give me a call. The claimant underwent an MRI of the lumbar spine on February 24, 2006, with the following impression:
1. Right paracentral disk protrusion at L5-S1 measuring 8mm with superior migration and possibly impingement upon the right S1 nerve root. Additionally diffuse disk bulge at L5-S1 appears to impinge upon the exiting bilateral L5 nerve roots at the neural foramen.
2. Slight extraforaminal broad based disk protrusion at L2-3. Impingement on the right L2 nerve root cannot be excluded at this level.
3. No other evidence of nerve root impingement or canal stenosis is observed.
According to a medical report dated November 15, 1992, the claimant sought treatment from Harris Hospital due to a four-wheeler accident wherein he had sustained multiple trauma.
On May 26, 1994, the claimant again sought emergency treatment from Harris Hospital due to an onset of back pain after riding a four-wheeler. He was assessed with “acute lumbar sprain, recurrent.”
The claimant again sought treatment from Harris Hospital on September 6, 2002 due to complaints of multiple contusions, pain of the right shoulder, chest, and right leg pain as a result of injuries he sustained in a motor vehicle accident when his pickup truck overturned and hit a tree.
A hearing was held before the Commission in this matter on June 16, 2006. At the hearing, the claimant gave testimony. The claimant agreed that when he became weight bearing with the crutches, he began to experience new problems in his right hip and leg. The claimant admitted to being involved in a motor vehicle accident prior
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to his work-related injury of May 11, 2005. The claimant further testified that he had not experienced prior similar problems.
The claimant testified he initially treated with Dr. Pulisetty at the ER. According to the claimant, within the first week of his injury, he began experiencing new problems in his right hip and leg and a burning below the belt line once he started attempting to get around on crutches. The claimant again denied having previously experienced the symptoms (right hip, right leg pain, and numbness in his right foot) he began to experience when he started the weight-bearing. The claimant testified he first brought notice of his symptoms (leg and hip pain) to Linda (Grimes) with workman’s comp. According to the claimant, she explained to him he was just putting too much weight on his leg and his symptoms would go away, and she did not offer him any medical care. The claimant testified that although he continued to tell Linda about his continuing problems, she never took any steps to provide any medical checkup or medical treatment for his complaint. However, the claimant maintains that he did tell one of the doctors that Linda provided for him about his additional problems with his hip, right hip and right leg, but they did not offer to examine or treat that area of his body. The claimant essentially testified that the final word he got from the respondent was to wait until he got off the crutches, and until he could put weight on both legs. According to the claimant, after he got off of the crutches, he called the respondent back about his symptoms, but they told him it had been too long. The claimant agreed that these were the same people who were telling him on the front end his symptoms would go away. The claimant testified he brought his right hip, right leg, right foot pain to the attention of Dr. Varela, and asked him to check it out, but he never did anything.
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The claimant testified he went on crutches about a week after his May 11, 2005 accident, and stayed on them for about 12 weeks. He testified he went back to work on a part-time basis approximately four weeks after his injury while still on crutches.
The claimant testified his family doctor referred him to Dr. Lawson, whom he saw back in February. According to the claimant, he paid for the MRI that Dr. Lawson ordered. The claimant denied any other events that could have triggered his right hip, right leg and right foot pain other than the jump off of the excavator.
On cross-examination, the claimant admitted to having several motor vehicle accidents and several four-wheeler accidents. However, the claimant did not recall having a four-wheeler accident on November 15, 1992 wherein he flipped backwards. The claimant admitted to complaining of back pain on May 26, 1994 after riding a four-wheeler. He also admitted to having a motor vehicle accident on September 5, 2002 after running off the road, hitting a tree and flipping his pickup over. The claimant admitted he was aware he was complaining of leg trouble at that time. The claimant agreed that the initial ER report may show that he had a history of chronic back pain. He also admitted he was aware that Dr. Pulisetty wrote in a report dated May 12, 2005, he had no other muscular, skeletal or internal injuries. The claimant admitted to seeking emergency treatment for his finger on July 8, 2005 which had gotten caught in a chain. The claimant agreed that at that time there was no mention of any leg or back trouble when he sought this treatment. He admitted to getting a full duty release on November 1, 2005. The claimant admitted to seeing Dr. Eichert for back pain. He agreed that Dr. Coleman Kent is his family doctor and has treated him in the
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past for his back. According to the claimant, Dr. Kent was giving him shots in his shoulders for bursitis and pain medication for pulled muscles in his back.
The claimant testified:
Q. And then in December, December 5th, 2005, you were seeing Dr. Varela by that time. Is that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. Would you agree with me that you have no mention of leg or back pain when you first saw him?
A. Did I tell him that?
Q. Correct.
A. Yes. I did tell him.
Q. And would you agree that the medical record that day doesn’t show anything about it?
A. I’ve always had trouble with it.
The claimant admitted it is possible he complained of left knee pain on May 8, 2006, but he was unaware of any injury to his left knee. He maintains that he told Dr. Lawson about his prior back problems, and he agreed to having told him about all of his motor vehicle and four-wheeler accidents. The claimant admitted that prior to his MRI, he had never gotten an MRI.
On redirect examination, the claimant testified that despite him having told Dr. Pulisetty about his other problems, he spoke with him about why he was not going to deal with that and why.
Shelley Evins, also gave testimony during the hearing. Mr. Evins testified that he is the general manager of the business for the respondent. He further testified he
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has known the claimant since 1990, after becoming general manager. He admitted to talking to caseworkers about concerns he had for the claimant’s foot.
Mr. Evins testified:
Q. Are you aware, sir, in this case that Charles [the claimant] is complaining that within the week after this event of jumping off the trackhoe, he began experiencing significant pain in his right hip, burning pain in his right leg, and numbness in his right foot?
A. He’s told me about this. This is one of the reasons he can’t do what he did before because that aggravates the pain.
He testified that the claimant is one of the few employees he has never caught lying, and he stated the claimant is very trustworthy. Upon the claimant’s return to work after his accident, Mr. Evins admitted to having padded the claimant’s time so that he could get full pay.
On cross-examination, Mr. Evins admitted he was not aware the claimant had prior back problems or chronic back problems in the past.
Prior to the hearing, a prehearing conference was held on May 9, 2006, and as a result, a Prehearing Order was entered on that same date. The following stipulations were submitted by the parties, and accepted by the administrative law judge:
1). The Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission has jurisdiction of the within claim.
2). The existence of the employee relationship at all times pertinent to include May 11, 2005, when the claimant suffered a compensable injury to his lower extremity.
3). The claimant was earning sufficient wages to entitle him to compensation rates of $305.00 for total disability benefits and $229.00 for permanent partial disability benefits.
By agreement of the parties, they stipulated that the issues to be litigated at the hearing were limited to the following:
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1). Compensability of the claimant’s alleged lower back injury on about May 11, 2005.
2). Medical benefits.
3). Attorney’s fees.
In regard to the foregoing issues, the claimant contended that his post injury symptomatic back injury was caused by and is related to his May 11, 2005 injury.
The respondent contended that the claimant did not suffer a compensable lower back injury on or about May 11, 2005 or any other time while working for respondent employer. Respondents contend the medical documentation does not support any such injury nor does it support entitlement to benefits associated with the same.
After a hearing before the Commission, the administrative law judge found, “On May 11, 2005, the claimant sustained an injury to his back, as well as his left lower extremity, arising out of and in the course of his employment with the respondents. The medical treatment rendered to the claimant relative to his back, right hip, right leg/foot complaint [sic] under the care of Dr. Nicole Lawson, as well as referrals therefrom, to include the February 24, 2006, MRI scan is reasonable and necessary medical treatment in connection to the claimant’s compensable injury. Respondents controverted the compensability of the claimant’s low back, right hip/leg/foot injury. The respondents shall pay all reasonable hospital and medical expenses arising out of the claimant’s low back injury which grew out of the May 11, 2005, compensable accident.”
The respondent appeals to the Full Commission.
II. Adjudication
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The claimant now contends that he sustained a compensable injury to his low back, right hip, right leg/foot, in addition to his admittedly compensable left lower extremity injury, while working for the respondent on May 11, 2005.
Ark. Code Ann. (11-9-102(4)(A) defines compensable injury:
(i) An accidental injury causing internal or external physical harm to the body . . . arising out of and in the course of employment and which requires medical services or results in disability or death. An injury is “accidental” only if it is caused by a specific incident and is identifiable by time and place of occurrence[.]
A compensable injury must be established by medical evidence supported by objective findings. Ark. Code Ann. (11-9-102(4)(D). The burden of proof shall be a preponderance of the evidence. Ark. Code Ann. (11-9-102(4)(E)(i).
In the present matter, the administrative law judge essentially found that, “On May 11, 2005, the claimant sustained an injury to his back, right hip, right leg/foot, in addition to his compensable left lower extremity injury, arising out of and in the course of his employment with respondent.” The Full Commission reverses this finding. We find that the claimant failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he sustained a compensable injury to his back, right hip, right leg/foot, on May 11, 2005, while working for the respondent.
The instant claimant has an extensive prior history of chronic back problems preceding his May 11, 2005 injury, as the claimant has admitted to being involved in several motor vehicle and four-wheeler accidents, and the medical records demonstrate the same. Although the claimant initially denied prior similar symptoms of right hip, leg, and foot pain, on cross-examination, the claimant admitted to having complained of right leg pain after his September 2006 motor vehicle accident wherein his pickup truck overturned. When the claimant reported his injury, he made absolutely no mention of any injury to his back, and the medical reports of one of his treating physicians
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(Dr. Eichert) for his left lower extremity injury do not reflect that the claimant ever made a documented report of symptoms relating to his right leg until November 1, 2005, almost some six months after his compensable left lower extremity injury. Further, there is no medically documented complaint by the claimant of any back problems until some time in January of 2006 (per reference in Dr. Lawson’s February 24, 2006 letter), approximately eight months after his compensable injury. Prior to this, on July 8, 2005, the claimant sought emergency treatment for some unexplained accidental injury to his finger involving a chain, but at no time did he make a complaint about his back, right hip, leg/foot. While we recognize that the claimant maintains that he told the adjusters about his symptoms, we do not find this to be credible given the fact that he had several opportunities (but failed to do so) to make these complaints known to his treating physicians, who were in a better position of addressing these issues. Although Mr. Evins testified that the claimant told him about his back problems, he does not specifically state when these concerns were brought to his attention, nor had he been made aware of the claimant’s prior history of back problems. Therefore, based on the record before the Full Commission, we find that it would require conjecture and shear speculation to causally link the claimant’s alleged back, right hip, leg problems to his work incident of May 11, 2005. Speculation and conjecture, even if plausible, cannot supply the place of proof. Dena Construction Co. v. Herndon, 264 Ark. 791, 575 S.W.2d 155 (1979). Accordingly, due to all of the foregoing reasons, we find that the claimant failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that there is a causal connection between his accidental work injury on May 11, 2005 injury, and his current back, right hip/leg/foot problems.
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Based on our de novo review of the entire record, the Full Commission finds that the claimant failed to prove that he sustained a compensable injury to his low back, right hip/leg/foot, on May 11, 2005, which arose out of and in the course of his employment with the respondent. Therefore, we reverse the opinion of the administrative law judge. As a result, this claim is denied and dismissed.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
OLAN W. REEVES, Chairman
KAREN H. McKINNEY, Commissioner
Commissioner Hood dissents.
DISSENTING OPINION
The Majority is reversing an Administrative Law Judge’s decision that the claimant suffered a compensable back injury during an admitted job-related accident. For the reasons set out below, I must respectfully dissent from that decision.
The claimant, who is a heavy equipment operator, was injured when he jumped from a track hoe that was turning over. In this accident, he suffered a broken left foot. The respondent accepted liability for that injury and paid all appropriate benefits. However, the claimant also alleges that he injured his lower back in this accident and is entitled to appropriate medical and disability benefits based upon that condition.
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The Majority has denied the back claim because, they found, the claimant did not promptly report a back injury and because he, “. . . has an extensive prior history of chronic back problems preceding his May 11, 2005 injury. . . .” Based upon my de novo review of the record, I find that the evidence adduced in this matter does not support either finding.
Despite, the Majority’s statement to the contrary, the medical record does not reflect that the claimant had any significant past medical history of a back problem. Also, even though the Majority states that the claimant was involved in “several motor vehicle and four-wheeler accidents,” there are only two such accidents mentioned in the medical record. In an emergency room record dated November 15, 1992, approximately thirteen (13) years prior to his job-related accident, the claimant was seen after he had been involved in an accident where a four-wheeler had flipped over backwards. However, that report indicates that the claimant was complaining of upper abdominal and neck pain. There are no references anywhere in the emergency room record suggesting that the claimant had any back injuries.
The only other document in the record that suggests that the claimant was involved in a vehicular accident was another emergency room record dated September 5, 2002. That record states that the claimant was seen after having been involved in a motor vehicle accident the prior day. The record states that the claimant was complaining of pain in his right shoulder and chest and his right leg. It also stated that he had multiple bruises on his forehead,
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hands, and chest. Once again, there is no mention of any pain, bruising, abrasions, or other injuries to his back.
The only prior mention of any back pain in the claimant’s medical records is in yet another emergency room note dated May 26, 1994. That report states that while riding a four-wheeler, the claimant noted pain in his lower back. The report states that the pain began while riding over rough ground and was not the result of any wreck or from falling off the four-wheeler. In examining the claimant, the emergency room physician noted that the claimant had muscle spasms and mild to moderate tenderness. He diagnosed the claimant as having a lumbar strain, prescribed him medication and physical therapy, and directed him to return to his treating physician for further care. The medical records contain no further references to any back problems that the claimant may have suffered from.
In my opinion, one medical report referring to a back strain eleven (11) years prior to a compensable injury does not constitute an “extensive prior history of chronic back problems.” Likewise, two relatively minor accidents, one involving a four-wheeler and one involving a pickup running into a ditch, do not constitute “several motor vehicle and four-wheeler accidents.”
Much is also made of the fact that the first mention of the claimant having a back injury as a result of the 2005 accident is in a doctor’s report dated February 24, 2006. However, the claimant testified that he advised his employer, the adjuster or nurse case manager assigned to his claim by the respondent, as well as his initial treating physicians that he was having pain
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radiating from his back into his right leg. This testimony was corroborated by that of Shelley Evins, the claimant’s immediate superior. Mr. Evins stated that he was aware that the claimant was suffering from back problems subsequent to the injury, and, in addition to accommodating the claimant and his foot injury, also had to accommodate his back problems.
It is true that the claimant’s initial treating physicians, who were primarily concerned with treating his broken foot, did not document any complaints of back pain. But, that is not surprising, since the claimant’s immediate problem was his broken foot, the ailment they were directed to treat. This Commission has also dealt with many cases in which doctors have erroneously recorded, or failed to record, data of this nature. Merely because the doctors did not note the claimant’s complaint about a possible back injury, does not mean he did not report it or that it did not occur.
The claimant also testified that he advised the two individuals that the respondent had designated to handle his claim about his foot injuries. The Majority discounted this testimony because they believe that the physicians would be in a better position to address those issues and that there would have been no reason to report it to the respondent’s employees. However, according to the claimant’s counsel, one of the persons in question was a nurse case manager, who, presumably, had been designated to assist in finding the claimant appropriate medical treatment. It seems to me that it is entirely appropriate for the claimant to make his need for additional medical treatment known to these
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individuals in the belief that they would see that he got appropriate medical treatment for this condition.
Another reason I find the testimony of the claimant in this regard to be credible is because the respondent made no effort to rebut it. If the claimant was lying about notifying employees of the respondent about his back injury, I am confident that they would have called their employees as witnesses in the claim. But, they did not. While I realize that it is a well settled evidentiary rule that testimony cannot simply be accepted as factual because it is not controverted, I believe that where, as here, the respondent could easily rebut the testimony of the claimant, but failed to do so, the failure supports the credibility of that testimony.
My review of the medical evidence also strongly suggests that the claimant sustained a traumatic injury to his back in the manner in which he described. When the claimant could not get his designated treating doctor to acknowledge his back injury, and the respondent advised him that they would not agree to send him to a doctor for that purpose, he sought medical treatment on his own. Eventually, he saw Dr. Nicole Lawson, a general practitioner in Newport, Arkansas. In that letter, she notes that she had been seeing the claimant since January 25, 2006, for severe back pain. Her letter goes on to state that: “According to Mr. Barnes, he injured his back at work and pain has gotten increasingly worse with time.” The letter also indicates that the claimant’s date of injury is May 11, 2005. Lastly, Dr. Lawson states that it is her belief that the
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claimant needed to undergo an MRI to determine the nature and extent of his injuries.
This MRI was performed on February 24, 2006. The radiology report from that test reflects that the claimant had a paracentral disc protrusion at T12-L1, a diffuse disc bulge at L2-L3 with impingement on the right L2 nerve root, a diffuse bulge at L4-L5, and, most significantly, a disc bulge at L5-S1 with an 8 mm. paracentral disc extrusion impinging on the thecal sac at the S1 nerve root.
An extruded disc fragment is clearly the type of injury that would result from a traumatic accident. It also seems unlikely that the claimant would have had such an injury for an extended period of time. Since following his admittedly job-related accident of May 11, 2005, the claimant was in a cast and on crutches, it seems highly unlikely that he was engaging in any type of physical activity which would have likely caused a significant spinal injury. Likewise, had this condition existed prior to his job related accident, it seems unlikely that he would have been able to function normally as a heavy equipment operator, as both the claimant and Mr. Evins testified.
In my opinion, the evidence in this case is clearly sufficient to establish that the claimant suffered a compensable back injury on May 11, 2005. The claimant’s testimony, which is corroborated by Mr. Evins, reflects that he was not having any back problems until after that date and that his symptoms began appearing afterwards. Also, if the claimant had been untruthful about notifying the respondent’s employees about his injury, they could have easily
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rebutted that testimony by calling those employees to testify. Lastly, the medical record does not establish that the claimant had any significant prior history of back injuries or back complaints as suggested by the Majority. For those reasons, I must respectfully dissent from the Majority’s Opinion denying this claim.
PHILIP A. HOOD, Commissioner
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