Vite v. Vite
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Cite as 2010 Ark. App. 565
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION III
CA09-1375
No.
GILBERTO VITE, EMPLOYEE
APPELLANT
V.
GILBERTO VITE, EMPLOYER,
FIRSTCOMP INSURANCE CO., and
DEATH & PERMANENT TOTAL
DISABILITY TRUST FUND
APPELLEES
Opinion Delivered SEPTEMBER 1, 2010
APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS
WORKERS’ COMPENSATION
COMMISSION
[F712434]
AFFIRMED
RITA W. GRUBER, Judge
Appellant employee Gilberto Vite (Mr. Vite), a self-employed carpet layer for appellee
employer Gilberto Vite, a sole-proprietorship, suffered a compensable back injury in
November 2007 when he was struck by a large roll of carpet being unloaded from the back
of a truck. He appeals the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission November 9, 2009
decision denying his claim for permanent disability and additional medical benefits. He
contends 1) that the Commission incorrectly calculated his average weekly pay, and 2) that
substantial evidence does not support the Commission’s denial of permanent disability benefits
and additional medical treatment. We affirm.
At a February 18, 2009 hearing, the administrative law judge accepted the parties’
stipulations that Mr. Vite had reached maximum medical improvement and his healing period
Cite as 2010 Ark. App. 565
had ended on April 30, 2008, as reported by his treating physician; and that the treating
physician, Dr. Rodney Routsong, had assigned a ten-percent anatomical rating to the body
as a whole. Mr. Vite contended that as a result of his compensable injury he was permanently
and totally disabled, based upon the ten-percent rating and a loss in wage-earning capacity;
that he was entitled to additional medical treatment, including treatment from Dr. Routsong;
and that wages should be calculated upon gross earnings without consideration of business
deductions, resulting in the maximum compensation rate allowed by workers’ compensation.
Appellees contested these issues, controverted the ten-percent impairment rating, and
requested credit for any benefits paid in excess of the correct compensation rate.1
The law judge found that Mr. Vite failed to prove entitlement to permanent disability
benefits or to additional medical treatment from Dr. Routsong as being reasonable and
necessary; that Mr. Vite’s average weekly wage was $587.30; that compensation for total
disability benefits and permanent partial disability benefits would be based upon this weekly
wage; and that appellees were entitled to a credit for any benefits paid in excess of this rate.
The Commission affirmed and adopted the law judge’s decision.
Mr. Vite, fifty-four years old at the time of the hearing, worked in northwest Arkansas
for the fourteen years preceding his injury and had lived in the United States for thirty years.
The law judge noted that appellee Death and Permanent Total Disability Trust Fund had
deferred to the outcome of litigation. The Fund has filed no brief in the present case.
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His testimony was presented through a Spanish/English interpreter.2 Other evidence included
Mr. Vite’s medical records; a functional capacity evaluation of Mr. Vite, performed on March
20, 2008; testimony by Tanya Owen, a rehabilitation expert, and the vocational evaluation
she performed on November 4, 2008; an independent medical evaluation by Dr. Earl Peeples,
an orthopedic surgeon, on October 16, 2008; and Mr. Vite’s recent tax returns.
Mr. Vite testified that his middle back was injured on November 19, 2007, when he
and another employee were handling a carpet roll that weighed at least 350 pounds. He said
that he was carrying the roll on his shoulder; it began to fall; the other employee pushed it;
and it hit Mr. Vite’s back, causing him to trip, fall, and lose consciousness. He said that the
pain caused by this injury had rendered him unable to do any carpet laying since the accident.
He described his symptoms on the hearing date as pain radiating into both legs and shoulders,
pain and numbness in his knees, and his lower back hurting when he walked, making him
unable to walk without limping or favoring one side. He testified that he occasionally went
gambling and that after his injury had gone with his wife to a nearby city, where he stood and
sat at slot machines. He said pain sometimes precluded him from driving, but he could fill
out paperwork without pain, could handle items with his hands, and was “okay” with normal
activities such as stretching his arms out. He said he was unaware that his functional capacity
evaluation produced unreliable results or that Dr. Routsong noted he walked normally on
June 5, 2008.
Mr. Vite’s English-speaking son accompanied him to various medical appointments, as
did an interpreter on occasions such as the functional capacity evaluation.
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Tanya Owen testified that a wide-range achievement test and Raven Progressive
Matrices she administered to Mr. Vite showed that he had no computer skills; was not literate
in English; had a third-grade level in reading, kindergarten level in spelling, and fifth-grade
level in arithmetic; and was poorly equipped for retraining. She said Mr. Vite would be
unlikely to get and keep work because of his age; his lack of fluency in English, work skills
outside construction, or computer skills; and his limited ability to learn computer skills. She
testified that he would have to sit as needed; there were few sedentary, unskilled jobs to begin
with; and there were no jobs in the area that he could do.
Ms. Owen stated that she reached her conclusion “irresponsive [sic] of the functional
capacity exam” but that it was consistent with what Mr. Vite told her in his two-to-threehour interview, including a discussion of his physical symptoms; his functional capacity exam,
which limited him to sedentary work; and the opinion of Dr. Routsong, his treating physician
and an osteopathic doctor, who limited his lifting to five pounds. Ms. Owen said she would
assign greater weight to a treating physician’s opinion than a one-time opinion by a different
doctor, and she said she had not had access to the independent medical exam. She noted that
the examiner administering the functional capacity evaluation exam concluded that Mr. Vite
was capable of sedentary-level work after observing a lack of consistent effort and “numerous
indicators of self-limiting effort.” Reiterating that Dr. Routsong had restricted lifting to five
pounds, she stated that sedentary-level work required lifting up to ten pounds and that carpet
laying is classified as heavy-level work with a requirement of occasionally lifting a hundred
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pounds.
Acknowledging the examiner’s statement that Mr. Vite’s “true functional
limitations” were unknown due to his demonstrated inconsistencies, she said that, because the
examiner was more qualified than she to make the statement, she would defer to him if that
was his opinion.
Dr. Routsong’s reports included his assessment of Mr. Vite for complaints of back pain
on November 26, 2007, a week after he suffered his compensable injury. Dr. Routsong
noted that x-ray reports demonstrated minimal anterior compression fractures from T12
through L3. He ordered thoracic and lumbar MRIs, which were performed on December
6, 2007. Among the impressions stated on the report of the lumbar MRI were mild
desiccation of L4-5 and L3-4 disc spaces, with minimal disc bulging; no focal disc protrusion,
extruded disc fragment, central canal stenosis, or neural exit foraminal stenosis; moderate
degenerative facet arthropathy at all levels; and no pathologic marrow signal intensity arising
from vertebral bodies that would suggest healing trauma. Similarly, the thoracic MRI
revealed no pathologic marrow signal intensity to suggest marrow infiltrative process or
healing trauma, and it revealed normal alignment with no cord compression, enlargement,
syrinx, or pathologic signal intensity suggesting neoplasm or myeloma. Dr. Routsong’s
treatment of Mr. Vite from December 2007 through April 2008 included prescriptions for
medications and physical therapy. At a final office visit on June 5, 2008, Dr. Routsong
referred Mr. Vite to a Dr. Tejeda for ongoing pain management of his spine, shoulders,
elbows, and knees.
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Average Weekly Wage
Mr. Vite’s first point on appeal presents an issue of first impression for this court
regarding calculation of average weekly wage: whether any portion of business expenses
should be deducted from a sole proprietor’s gross income. In deciding this issue, the
Commission followed the precedent it had established in Hunt v. Lovett, filed September 16,
1996 (E218307).
Hunt v. Lovett was the Commission’s case of first impression addressing what portion
of business expenses, if any, should be deducted from a sole proprietorship’s gross income in
calculating average weekly wage. It reads in pertinent part:
Although the claimant insists that no expenses should be deducted, other states . . .
have held that a sole proprietorship’s net earnings should be used as the basis for
determining a claimant’s wages because inclusion of unreimbursed business expenses
does not accurately reflect a claimant’s actual earnings during the period. See, Oak
Industries v. Industrial Commission of Arizona, 739 P.2d 829 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1987);
Happle Solar Contractors v. Happle, 547 So.2d 1035 (Fla. Ct. App. 1989); D & C
Express, Inc. v. Sperry, 450 N.W.2d 842 (Iowa 1990); LaFleur v. Hartford Insurance
Company, 449 So.2d 725 (La. Ct. App. 1984); Baldwin v. Piedmont Woodyards, Inc., 293
S.E.2d 814 (N.C. Ct. App. 1982); Nortrim, Inc. v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal
Board, 615 A.2d 873 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1992); Meredith Construction Company, Inc. v.
Holcombe, 466 S.E.2d 108 (Va. Ct. App. 1996). Net earnings represents the difference
between gross income and necessary business operating expenses. Duvio v. Continental
Casualty Co., 446 So.2d 436 (La. Ct. App. 1984); Nortim, Inc., supra; Florida Timber
Products v. Williams, 459 So.2d 422 (Fla. Ct. App. 1984).
The business expense which has received the greatest degree of judicial
attention is the expense associated with depreciation of equipment purchased and used
by a sole proprietorship in carrying out its business purposes. . . . [T]he vast majority
of jurisdictions addressing the issue now hold that depreciation expenses must be
deducted from gross income to accurately calculate the actual income of a
self-employed workers’ compensation claimant.
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Hunt at 5. On this basis the Commission reduced Mr. Hunt’s gross earnings in an amount
equal to business expenses paid, including depreciation, during the pertinent period.
In the present case, the Commission rejected Mr. Vite’s contention that his average
weekly wage should be based upon the gross receipts paid to him in his business without
deduction of any business expenses. The Commission’s calculations were these:
In this particular case, claimant filed Schedule C entitled Profit or Loss from
Business for the tax year 2007. This schedule is contained in the documentary
evidence. That schedule shows gross receipts of $292,734.00. That schedule also shows
expenses and depreciation totaling $265,695.00 for a net profit of $27,039.00.
The Trust Fund has correctly determined that in 2007 the claimant worked for
46 weeks prior to his injury on November 19, 2007. Dividing claimant’s net profit of
$27,039.00 by 46 weeks results in an average weekly wage of $587.30. This would
entitle claimant to a compensation rate of $392.00 for total disability benefits and
$294.00 for permanent partial disability benefits.
Noting that Mr. Vite’s temporary total disability benefits had been incorrectly paid based
upon the maximum compensation rate, the Commission found that appellee was entitled to
a credit for any benefits paid in excess of the correct rate.
Mr. Vite did not request that depreciation be included in computing his average
weekly rate, and the parties agree that depreciation is not an issue. Mr. Vite argues instead
that the Commission erred in deducting from his gross wages three business expenses: $16,
560 for car and truck expenses, $8,202 for insurance, and $1,270 for legal and professional
services. These deductions are shown on Form 1040 of his 2007 taxes at Schedule C, Profit
or Loss From Business, one of the tax documents introduced into evidence at the hearing.
Mr. Vite argues that the goal of our workers’ compensation law should be to replace
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what the injured worker would have earned but for the injury. He asserts that after deducting
for contract labor, he earned over $93,000; that he cannot sustain his standard of living or his
business on the temporary total disability rate of $392 calculated by the Commission; and that
he is entitled instead to the maximum rate, $504. Appellee responds that both self-employed
claimants and traditional employers incur various unreimbursed expenses that are needed to
maintain their businesses. Appellee asserts that using net income rather than gross earnings
is imminently reasonable for ascertaining a self-employed claimant’s weekly wage because it
provides a close estimate of average wage or take-home pay.
Mr. Vite argues in his reply brief that cases from other jurisdictions that appellee cites,
while informative, are not authoritative. He notes that each state must follow its own
workers’ compensation law. See, e.g., Olson v. Workforce Safety & Ins., 2008 ND 59, 747
N.W.2d 71 (calculating average weekly wage of a self-employed employer under the
provision of N.D.C.C. § 65-01-02 (2003) that average weekly wage is based upon “net
earnings”).
Determining how to calculate a sole proprietor’s weekly wages requires the statutory
interpretation of workers’ compensation statute Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-518:
(a)(1) Compensation shall be computed on the average weekly wage earned by the
employee under the contract of hire in force at the time of the accident and in no case
shall be computed on less than a full-time workweek in the employment.
....
(c) If, because of exceptional circumstances, the average weekly wage cannot be fairly
and justly determined by the above formulas, the commission may determine the
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average weekly wage by a method that is just and fair to all parties concerned.
Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-518 (Repl. 2002) (emphasis added). Act 796 of 1993 significantly
changed our workers’ compensation statutes and the way that compensation claims are to be
resolved. Sierra v. Griffin Gin, 374 Ark. 320, 287 S.W.3d 556 (2008). Pursuant to the Act,
workers’ compensation statutes now must be strictly construed, allowing nothing to be taken
as intended unless clearly expressed. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-704 (c)(3) (Repl. 2002); Stewart
v. Arkansas Glass Container, 2010 Ark. 198.
Here, we hold that the Commission’s decision to deduct the business expenses Mr.
Vite claimed from his gross receipts, as set forth in his 2007 federal tax return, constituted a
determination of average weekly wage that was “just and fair to all parties,” as allowed by
Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-518(c). The Commission’s interpretation of the statute was correct,
and we affirm its decision to deduct all claimed business expenses from gross earnings in the
present case.
Permanent Disability and Additional Medical Treatment
Mr. Vite’s remaining point on appeal is that substantial evidence does not support the
Commission’s denial of permanent disability benefits and additional medical treatment. He
complains that the Commission erred in basing these issues on the opinion of Dr. Peeples, the
independent medical examiner, rather than the opinions of both Dr. Routsong and Ms.
Owen, the treating physician and the vocational expert who tested Mr. Vite. He argues that
Dr. Peeples and the Commission disregarded the x-rays that Dr. Routsong referred to shortly
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after the injury, which documented a thoracic compression fracture, three lumbar
compression fractures, and three lumbar disc bulges.
Permanent impairment is permanent functional or anatomical loss remaining after the
healing period has ended. Excelsior Hotel v. Squires, 83 Ark. App. 26, 115 S.W.3d 823 (2003).
Determination of the existence or extent of physical impairment shall be supported by
objective and measurable physical or mental findings. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-704(c)(1)(B)
(year). “Objective findings” are defined as findings that cannot come under the voluntary
control of the patient. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-102(16)(A)(i) (year). Complaints of pain may
not be considered in determining physical or anatomical impairment. Ark. Code Ann. §
11-9-102(16)(A)(ii)(a). Neither straight-leg-raising tests nor range-of-motion tests shall be
considered objective findings for the purpose of making physical or anatomical impairment
ratings to the spine. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-102(16)(A)(ii)(b) (year).
Arkansas Code Annotated section 11-9-508(a) (Supp. 2009) requires an employer to
pay for medical treatment that is “reasonably necessary in connection with the injury received
by the employee.” The claimant bears the burden of proving entitlement to additional
medical treatment. Evans v. Bemis Co., 2010 Ark. App. 65.
The Commission’s conclusion that Mr. Vite was not permanently totally or partially
disabled, and that he had not suffered wage-loss disability, was based upon two findings: the
ten-percent impairment rating assigned by Dr. Routsong was not supported by objective
measurable physical findings, and the opinion of Dr. Peeples was entitled to greater weight
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than that of Dr. Routsong. Observing that Dr. Routsong’s rating mentioned a diagnosis of
“multilevel spinal somatic dysfunction,” the Commission wrote:
The only objective tests performed on the claimant by Dr. Routsong were the
MRI scans of the thoracic and lumbar spine. Those scans were interpreted as revealing
no signs of nerve or spinal cord compression. Nor are there any other objective
findings establishing a permanent functional or anatomical loss.
Acknowledging that Dr. Routsong was the treating physician who evaluated Mr. Vite
over a period of time and on multiple occasions while Dr. Peeples evaluated him on only one
occasion, the Commission explained why it gave Dr. Routsong’s opinion less weight that of
Dr. Peeples:
Dr. Peeples wrote a very detailed five-page report setting forth his findings and the
basis for his opinion. More importantly, the findings made by Dr. Peeples regarding
claimant’s pain behavior during his examination are corroborated by the results of the
functional capacities evaluation which claimant underwent on March 20, 2008. A
review of the functional capacities evaluation report indicates that claimant gave an
unreliable effort and did not put forth consistent effort.
Further, the Commission noted that the functional capacity evaluation report indicated that
the results were unreliable and that Mr. Vite’s true functional limitations “remain unknown
due to the inconsistencies that he demonstrated.” The Commission found that the functional
capacities evaluation was corroborated by Dr. Peeples’ observations during his examination
of Mr. Vite, while Dr. Routsong simply noted that the functional capacities evaluation
indicated Mr. Vite was “sedentary” and did not discuss or acknowledge that the evaluation
was unreliable due to the inconsistencies.
In appeals involving claims for workers’ compensation, this court views the evidence
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and all reasonable inferences deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to the
Commission’s decision and affirms the decision if it is supported by substantial evidence,
which is evidence a reasonable person might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.
Evans, supra. When a claim is denied because the claimant has failed to show an entitlement
to compensation by a preponderance of the evidence, the substantial-evidence standard of
review requires us to affirm if the Commission’s opinion displays a substantial basis for the
denial of relief. Allen v. International Paper Co., 89 Ark. App. 266, 202 S.W.3d 13 (2005).
The Commission may not arbitrarily disregard medical evidence or the testimony of
any witness, but it is within the province of the Commission rather than this court to
reconcile conflicting evidence, including the medical evidence. Roberts v. Whirlpool, 102 Ark.
App. 284, 284 S.W.3d 100 (2008); Stone v. Dollar Gen. Stores, 91 Ark. App. 260, 209 S.W.3d
445 (2005). We are powerless to reverse the decision of the Commission when it chooses the
testimony of one physician over that of another. Ark. Wood Products v. Atchley, 21 Ark. App.
138, 729 S.W.2d 428 (1987). The issue is not whether the appellate court might have
reached a different result or whether the evidence would have supported a contrary finding,
and we must affirm the decision if reasonable minds could reach the Commission’s
conclusion. Goyne v. Crabtree Contracting Co., 2009 Ark. App. 200, 301 S.W.3d 16. Under
these standards, we are compelled to affirm the present case.
Dr. Peeples concluded that there was no anatomic evidence of significant injury after
he reviewed the medical records, his own physical examination of Mr. Vite, a lumbar
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radiograph performed the same day, and reports of the MRIs that Dr. Routsong had ordered
as follow-up to the earlier x-ray report. Dr. Peeples stated that his examination indicated
profound psychological abnormality and unsupported pain behavior, and that treatment by
Dr. Routsong had been unsuccessful. Because there was “no anatomic basis,” Dr. Peeples
disagreed with Dr. Routsong’s rating. He wrote, “Of singular importance for objective
documentation is the FCE exam which clearly documented manipulation of the test results
as well as significant non-anatomic pain behavior.” He noted he had told Mr. Vite and his
son that there was no medical explanation for his complaints of pain, and that no medical
explanation of “a blow to the lower [sic]” producing the total body pain that Mr. Vite had
reported. Dr. Peeples placed no work restrictions on Mr. Vite and stated he should be
released from all treatment, could resume any desired activity, and could return to work if he
could “obtain the essentials of work (motivation, determination, effort).”
In denying Mr. Vite’s claims for permanent disability benefits and additional medical
treatment, the Commission chose the opinion of Dr. Peeples over that of other professionals.
Quite simply, it was within the province of the Commission to do so. We hold that the
Commission’s opinion, with its assignment of greater weight to the opinion of Dr. Peeples,
displays a substantial basis for the denial of these claims.
Affirmed.
VAUGHT, C.J., and BROWN, J., agree.
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