K-Mart Corp. v. Morrison
K-Mart Corp. v. Morrison
Opinion of the Court
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
K-Mart Corporation appeals the award of the Worker’s Compensation Board in favor of Jo Ann Morrison. We affirm.
ISSUES
I. Whether the Worker’s Compensation Board was required, under our previous remand, to hear additional evidence.
II. Whether the record supports the Board’s determination that Morrison was temporarily totally disabled.
III. Whether Morrison justifiably refused a job offered to her by K-Mart.
IV. Whether the Board erred in awarding medical expense payment of $1,200.
V. Whether the Board’s award exceeds the statutory limit.
FACTS
As previously described in K-Mart Corp. v. Morrison (1993), Ind.App., 609 N.E.2d 17, Jo Ann Morrison was involved in a work related accident occurring October 9,1986, at the K-Mart store in Warsaw, Indiana. She was struck by numerous falling boxes which contained clothing. Morrison was treated by several doctors authorized by K-Mart. She also sought and obtained some medical diagnosis and treatment from doctors not authorized by K-Mart. Morrison continued to work at K-Mart from the time of her accident until March 8, 1988, when she was no longer able to do so.
On April 2,1987, Morrison filed an application for worker’s compensation benefits. An award by the Board to Morrison of permanent total disability benefits was appealed in K-Mart Corp. v. Morrison, supra. We affirmed the Board’s finding that Morrison suffered from reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD)
After receipt of voluminous correspondence from the respective counsel on this matter (and many others), the single Board member ruled on December 13,1993, that on the “issue of Plaintiffs disability status,” the parties were “limited ... to the facts, as present in the record” according to the “Court of Appeals Opinion, Page 25.” R. at 225. The same order instructed the parties “to communicate with one another” and “resolve the issue of unpaid medical bills.” Id. at 226.
The order of the single member dated March 8, 1994, stated that the parties had “agreed that the issue of the compensability of all past medical bills shall be resolved with the payment” by K-Mart to Morrison of $1,200. Id. at 250. After twenty-eight findings of fact, the order concluded Morrison had been and continued to be “temporarily totally disabled” since March 9, 1988. Id. at 254. K-Mart applied for review by the full Board. On June 30, 1994, the full Board adopted the single member’s decision of March 8th and appended ten more findings of fact. R. at 312.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
In reviewing a decision by the Board of Worker’s Compensation, “we are bound by the Board’s findings of fact and may only consider errors in the Board’s conclusions of law.” Duvall v. ICI Americas, Inc. (1998), Ind.App., 621 N.E.2d 1122, 1124
1. Mandate of the previous Court of Appeals decision
K-Mart claims that “the Board should have held a hearing and heard evidence” rather than use the existing record. Appellant’s brief at 12. K-Mart asserts that when this court stated, “we remand ... for a redetermination, using the facts as presented in the record, of Morrison’s disability status,” we were actually
“simply stating the elemental principle, that there must be evidence to support findings, and findings must support legal conclusions. This is a general statement of the law, not a limitation on the receipt of evidence on remand.”
Appellant’s reply at 10. While we will concede that the language employed in directing that a redetermination be made on remand would allow the option of being interpreted as K-Mart suggests, the language can in no way be found to require the Board to conduct an evidentiary hearing.
The only authority to which K-Mart refers us on this issue is Herrell v. Casey (1998), Ind.App., 609 N.E.2d 1145. In Herrell, we declared that “[i]t is beyond dispute that a trial court, upon remand after reversal of an order granting summary judgment, is empowered to adduce such additional facts as are dispositive of the case and rule accordingly.” Id. at 1147 (emphasis added). In both K-Mart’s brief (at 11) and its reply (at 10), K-Mart quotes the above while omitting the underlined portion. As cited by K-Mart, the quotation is misleading.
We find no error in the Board’s having proceeded to make a determination of Morrison’s disability based upon the existing record.
II. Disability determination
K-Mart’s challenge to the Board’s determination that Morrison is temporarily totally disabled is couched in two separate arguments. First, K-Mart claims that
“[t]he current award amounts to the same award as this Court reversed on the last appeal as unsupported in the evidence. It is based on the same record which this Court found inadequate to support that award.”
Appellant’s brief at 6.
What we previously found with respect to Morrison’s disability was that the award of permanent total disability was erroneous because Morrison’s “disability was not permanent or quiescent.” K-Mart, supra at 29. Our analysis of the disability evidence of record focused solely on the permanent nature of Morrison’s disability; thus, we did not reach the question of whether the disability was total or partial. K-Mart’s appeal fails to assert that any single one of the member’s findings of fact describing Morrison’s inability to work
Second, K-Mart claims
“[t]he award of continual total disability to March 8, 1994 on a record where proofs were closed on April 9,1991, is pure speculation and contrary to law....”
Appellant’s brief at 7. In support of this argument, K-Mart refers us to Olin Corp. v. Calloway (1974), 160 Ind.App. 69, 309 N.E.2d 829, and Callahan v. Lovelace Truck (1973), 158 Ind.App. 164, 301 N.E.2d 801 for the requirement that evidence must exist to support an award of compensation by the Board.
Again, K-Mart fails to challenge any of the findings of fact which indicate that Morrison’s RSD condition in 1991 required treatment, and without treatment there would be no improvement.
III. Job refusal
We previously considered whether K-Mart’s having offered Morrison an alternative position—working behind the jewelry counter, rather than in her position as a clerk in apparel—would permit K-Mart to “reduce its workmen’s compensation obligation by procuring for the injured employee employment by which [s]he can earn some wages without injury to [herjself” under Ind.Code 22-3-3-11. K-Mart, supra at 31. The statute provides:
(a) If an injured employee, only partially disabled, refuses employment suitable to his capacity procured for him, he shall not be entitled to any compensation at any time during the continuance of such refusal unless in the opinion of the worker’s compensation board such refusal was justified.
(b) Before compensation can be denied under this section the employee must be served with a notice setting forth the consequences of the refusal of employment ....
We found the Board’s findings of fact lacked specificity with respect to its analysis in concluding Morrison’s failure to accept the jewelry counter position was justified.
As noted in our previous decision as well as in Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. v. Kilburne (1985), Ind.App., 477 N.E.2d 345, and as explicitly stated in the statute, the “refusal of employment” provision is only applicable when the injured employee is partially disabled. Because the Board found Morrison to be totally disabled, a determination we have found not to be erroneous, we need not consider any alleged error in applying I.C. 22-3-3-11.
IV. Medical expenses
In its original appeal, K-Mart claimed the Board erred in awarding over $9,000 in medical expenses because many of the included expenses had been already paid and others were not authorized by its treating physicians. We referred to the statute governing medical treatment, of injured employees pending adjudication of impairment:
After an injury and prior to an adjudication of permanent impairment, the employer shall furnish or cause to be furnished, free of charge to the employee, an attending physician for the treatment of his injuries, and in addition thereto such surgical, hospital and nursing services and supplies as the attending physician or the worker’s compensation board may deem necessary. ...
While K-Mart concedes that “[d]uring the remand period, the parties conferred and agreed that the amount which could be in controversy” was $1,200, K-Mart contends that there was no agreement “concerning ‘liability’ to pay that amount.” Appellant’s brief at 9.
As noted in the FACTS section, in December of 1993 the Board ordered the parties to resolve the issue of unpaid medical bills. On January 25, 1994, Morrison’s counsel notified the Board in writing that “the parties have reached an agreement that K-Mart Corporation’s obligation to pay all past medical bills, to the date of January 21, 1994, is $1,200.00” R. at 232. The letter indicates that a copy of that letter was sent to K-Mart’s counsel. K-Mart has never asserted nonreceipt of the letter. The record maintained by the Board for the period from our remand through the issuance of the instant award comprises over 300 pages. Up to the time of the December 1993 order, that record contains at least twelve instances in which a filing by one party with the Board was followed by a responsive filing by the other party.
Morrison refers us to Frazier v. Whited (1938), 106 Ind.App. 57, 16 N.E.2d 974, wherein we found a matter not raised before the Board could not be considered by the appellate court. See, also, Reeve v. Georgia-Pacific Corp. (1987), Ind.App., 510 N.E.2d 1378. K-Mart counters that counsel’s letter to the Board “is not evidence,” and because there was never a hearing the matter could never have been argued by K-Mart as required by Frazier. Appellant’s brief at 10.
We find K-Mart’s failure to notify the Board of its “disagreement” about what the agreement of the parties was as to medical expenses may have waived this matter. Alternatively, we find support for the award in K-Mart, supra. Our discussion concerning medical expenses began by setting out the statute cited above, which requires an employer to provide medical services to an employee injured on the job. We proceeded to note the need to distinguish paid from unpaid bills and to direct that bills from certain physicians not approved by K-Mart to treat Morrison be excluded from K-Mart’s liability.
V. Statutory limit to benefits
K-Mart reminds us that the law limits payment for temporary total disability to “a period not to exceed five hundred (500) weeks.” I.C. 22-3-3-8. The original single Board member order of October 8, 1991, included the stipulation of the parties that K-Mart had paid Morrison for 3% weeks of temporary total compensation shortly after the accident. Original record at 276. K-Mart suggests that the absence of any reference to K-Mart’s payment of this compensation in the instant order renders the order
K-Mart presents no authority for this contention. Morrison concedes that the Board’s order “neglected to give [K-Mart] credit for the 3$ weeks” of temporary total disability compensation K-Mart paid to Morrison. We agree with Morrison that we can assume the Board will follow its statute and, accordingly, K-Mart will receive the credit to which it is due.
We affirm.
. RSD is “a little known but potentially debilitating condition affecting the sympathetic nervous system.” K-Mart, supra at 21.
. Counsel is reminded of his obligation under Ind.Professional Conduct Rule 3.3.
. For example, "7. [In August 1988, Jo Ann] was still having problems with her left arm, shoulder and her legs. She had severe pain and burning and was getting progressively worse with developing emotional difficulties, including depression. She had been falling down and continued falling. She would drop things. She started using a cane, then crutches for stability. She often spent the entire day in bed.” R. at 251.
. For example, the prognosis of one physician was that, "absent proper treatment, [Jo Ann] would eventually be a total cripple.” R. at 252. Another doctor’s prognosis was "very poor without proper treatment” and his recommendation was for "intensive physical therapy, relief of pain by continuous analgesic procedures, and psychological behavioral attention to behavioral modification..” Id. at 253.
. See, Record at 34 and 36; 40 and 41; 44 and 53; 60 and 75; 63 and 75; 79, 81 and 82; 79 and 90; 99, 104 and 110; 115, 121, 125; 130 and 137; 207 and 211; 204 and 214.
. Because a "new doctor or treatment should, at the very minimum, be communicated to the employer in such a way that that employer is put on notice that medical care is needed and the employer is given an opportunity to provide” such medical treatment, "K-Mart cannot be held liable for” treatment by the physicians treating Jo Ann without K-Mart’s knowledge. K-Mart, supra at 34.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.