Dеfendants Gator Wood, Inc. and Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company appeal from an opinion and award of the North Carolina Industrial Commission awarding disability and medical compensation to plaintiff Bobby Britt. Because the Commission’s findings of fact are supported by competent evidence with respect to the award of temporary total disability compensation for the period of 1 June 2002 through 16 June 2002 and for temporary partial disability after 6 February 2003, we uphold the awards for those time periods. With respect, however, to the award of temporary total disability compensation for the period of 13 January 2003 through 7 February 2003, we must remand for further factual findings under
Russell v. Lowes Prod. Distribution,
Facts
Plaintiff was hired in April 1999 by defendant-employer as a timber buyer. In this position, plaintiff scouted properties, walked the land to demarcate areas for logging, measured trees, negotiated prices, and performed title searches. Because defendant-employer had lost a major contract, plaintiff was notified in April 2002 that he would be laid off, with his last day of work being 31 May 2002.
On 1 May 2002, plaintiff sustained an admittedly compensable injury by accident while working on a tract where defendant-employer was conducting logging operations. Plaintiff stepped on a log, lost his footing, and fell in an awkward, twisting manner. He landed hard with his right knee directly striking the log. Despite the injury and even though the knee ached, plaintiff continued to work. He did not seek immediate medical treatment, as he hoped the pain would resolve itself.
After a week had passed, during which the swelling and pain in the injured knee continued, plaintiff saw Dr. Edward F. Hill. Dr. Hill diagnosed plaintiff’s condition as a mild knee strain. Over the following weeks, the pain in plaintiff’s knee became progressively worse, such that, by 31 May 2002, he was physically incapable of performing the regular duties of his job as a timber buyer. Plaintiff testified: “[T]he pain was just getting increasingly worse. It was harder to walk. Crawling was not an option. The more time on the leg, the more pain and the swelling.”
On 5 June 2002, plaintiff returned to Dr. Hill with continued knee pain and was referred to Dr. Scott Hannum, an orthopedist. After seeing plaintiff on 17 June 2002, Dr. Hannum ordered an MRI. The MRI suggested that plaintiff had a tom medial meniscus. On 10 July 2002, Dr. Hannum wrote plaintiff out of work, and a month later, on 13 August 2002, plaintiff underwent recommended knee surgery. Following the surgery, defendants accepted the compensability of the injury in a Form 60, but specified that disability did not begin until the date of the surgery.
Plаintiff continued to have follow-up visits with Dr. Hannum, and on 2 December 2002, Dr. Hannum concluded that plaintiff had reached maximum medical improvement. He assigned a 7% permanent partial disability rating to plaintiff’s right knee and released plaintiff to work without restrictions. In his deposition, Dr. Hannum stated that plaintiff could hаve returned to his previous occupation as a timber buyer had there been a position available, but acknowledged that such work would have given plaintiff a “hard time” and that plaintiff would need to be especially cautious with respect to his knee. According to Dr. Hannum, even after rеcovery, plaintiff’s knee injury placed him at risk of developing post-traumatic arthritis and of requiring further knee surgery in the future.
Plaintiff obtained opinions from two additional orthopedists— Dr. Gilbert Whitmer and Dr. Kevin Speer — regarding his disability rating. Both Dr. Whitmer and Dr. Speer assigned a 12% permanent partial disability rating to plaintiffs right knee. They recommended that plaintiff’s activities be restricted, including no lifting or carrying over 30 pounds and no excessive squatting, kneeling, crawling, and stair or ladder climbing. Dr. Hannum ultimately agreed that the disability
Plaintiff remained out of work from 1 June 2002 through 6 February 2003. On 7 February 2003, plaintiff obtained employment in a different line of work and at lower wages than he had previously earned as a timber buyer.
When the parties were unable to reach an agreement regarding the extent of the benefits to which plaintiff was entitled, plaintiff requestеd a hearing before the Industrial Commission. Deputy Commissioner J. Brad Donovan entered an opinion and award on 6 June 2005 that awarded plaintiff temporary total disability compensation for the period 17 June 2002 through 12 January 2003 and permanent partial disability compensation for an additional 24 weeks.
Plaintiff appealed to the Full Commission, which modified the deputy commissioner’s decision in an opinion and award filed on 16 June 2006. The Commission determined that plaintiff was entitled to: (1) temporary total disability beginning on 1 June 2002 and continuing through 7 February 2003; (2) temporary partial disability beginning on 7 February 2003 and continuing for the remainder of 300 weeks from the date of injury; and (3) compensation for “medical expenses incurred or to be incurred as a result of the compensable injury as may be required to provide relief, effect a cure, or lessen the period of disability,” including compensation to address any рost-traumatic arthritis that plaintiff might develop or any future knee surgery that he might require. Defendants timely appealed to this Court.
Discussion
Our review of a decision of the Industrial Commission “is limited to determining whether there is any competent evidence to support the findings of fact, and whether the findings of fact justify the сon-
elusions of law.”
Cross v. Blue Cross/Blue Shield,
Defendants do not dispute the award of benefits for the pеriod 17 June 2002 through 12 January 2003. Defendants contend, however, that the Commission erred in awarding (1) temporary total disability benefits for the periods 1 June 2002 through 16 June 2002 and 13 January 2003 through 7 February 2003; and (2) temporary partial disability benefits beginning 7 February 2003. 1
“The term ‘disability’ means incapacity because of injury to earn the wages which the employee was receiving at the time of injury in the same or any other employment.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-2(9) (2005). In order to support a conclusion of compensable disability, the Commission must find:
(1) that plaintiff was incapable after his injury of earning the same wages he had earned before his injury in the same employment, (2) that plaintiff was incapable after his injury of earning the same wages he had earned before his injury in any other employment, and (3) that this individual’s incapacity to earn was caused by plaintiff’s injury.
Hilliard v. Apex Cabinet Co.,
(1) the production of medical evidenсe 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 futilebecause of preexisting conditions, i.e., age, inexperience, lack of education, to seek other employment; or (4) the production of evidence that he has ob tained other employment at a wage less than that earned prior to the injury.
Russell,
With respect to the period of 1 June 2002 through 16 June 2002, defendants first contend that there was no competent evidence of plaintiff’s disability. Defendants do not, however, dispute that plaintiff was totally disabled due to his compensable accident as of 17 June 2002, the date he was first examined by Dr. Hannum. Following the MRI, “the results of which suggested a tom medial meniscus,” Dr. Hannum wrote plaintiff out of work due to his knee condition. The evidence from Dr. Hannum meets the requirements of the first method of proof set forth in Russell.
As for the two weeks before plaintiffs visit with Dr. Hannum, defendants contend that since plaintiff had not yet been written out of work or assigned any work restrictions, he has not proven that he was disabled. The Commission could, however, reasonably draw the inference that plaintiffs condition on 1 June 2002 was the same as his condition a mere two weeks later on 17 June 2002 — the date by which defendants agree plaintiff had become totally disabled.
On 1 June 2002, plaintiff was suffering from the torn medial meniscus resulting from his fall on 1 May 2002, and he testified to his steadily progressing pain. That condition had simply not yet been diagnosed. By 31 May 2002 — several weeks after the accident — plaintiffs condition had gotten “increasingly worse” such that “[i]t was harder to walk” and “[t]he more time on the leg, the more pain and the swelling.”
See Perkins v. Broughton Hosp.,
In short, the Commission had before it medical evidence that established, under the first prong of Russell, that plaintiff was totally disabled as of 17 June 2002, as well as plaintiffs testimony permitting the inferеnce that plaintiffs condition as of 1 June 2002 was physically the same as on 17 June 2002. This combination of evidence is sufficient to support the Commission’s finding of total temporary disability as of 1 June 2002.
Defendants, however, alternatively argue that because plaintiff was laid off on 31 May 2002, “the evidence of rеcord shows that [p]laintiff s loss of wage earning capacity . . . was not the result of his injury by accident but instead was due to an economic downturn.” Defendants have focused on the wrong issue. While the immediate cause of the loss of plaintiff’s wages as of 1 June 2002 may have been the lay-off, that fact dоes not preclude a finding of disability. As
Peoples v. Cone Mills Corp.,
A plaintiff meets the burden of proving that incapacity by offering evidence consistent with one of the methods of proof set forth in
Russell.
Because plaintiff presented medical evidence showing an impairment of his earning cаpacity under the first prong of
Russell,
the burden shifted to defendants to show that there were suitable jobs that plaintiff was capable of obtaining during the first two weeks in June 2002.
Burwell v. Winn-Dixie Raleigh, Inc.,
With respect to the period of 13 January 2003 to 7 February 2003, defendants assert that plaintiff failed to prove total disability because Dr. Hannum released plaintiff to return to work without restrictions in December 2002. In response, plaintiff contends that he wаs entitled to a presumption of ongoing disability despite having received a doctor’s release to work.
A presumption of disability only applies, however, when (1) there has been an executed Form 21 or Form 26, or (2) there has been a prior disability award from the Industrial Commission.
Clark v. Wal-
Mart,
Plaintiff has not met the requirements of the first method of proof under Russell since he presented no medical evidence that he was incapable of work in any employment during the period of 13 January 2003 to 7 February 2003. In fact, Dr. Hannum released plaintiff to return to work in December 2002. Thus, the Commission’s finding of total disability for the period of 13 January 2003 to 7 February 2003 cannot be premised upon the first Russell method.
The absence of medical proоf of total disability, however, “does not preclude a finding of disability under one of the other three
[Russell]
tests.”
White v. Weyerhaeuser Co.,
Finally, defendants assert that plaintiff failed to establish the existence of ongoing disability following his return to work on 7 February 2003 sufficient to entitle him to an award of temporary partial disability benefits. When, however, a worker presents evidence that satisfies the fourth prong оf
Russell
— “that he has obtained other employment at a wage less than that earned prior to the injury,”
Here, plaintiff presented evidence that he оbtained other employment on 7 February 2003 at lower wages than he had previously earned, as well as evidence showing agreement among all the doctors that he had permanent restrictions on the type of work he could perform. Consequently, the burden shifted to defendants to show that plaintiff could obtain a higher-paying job.
Although defendants challenge the sincerity of plaintiffs job search and make various arguments regarding plaintiff’s educational and vocational background, they presented no evidence to the Commission to show that plaintiff could, in fact, have obtained employment at higher earnings.
See Bond v. Foster Masonry, Inc.,
Accordingly, the Commission could properly determine that plaintiffs reduced wages were a manifestation of his disability and, further, that this diminished earning capacity entitled him to temporary partial disability benefits.
See Whitfield v. Lab. Corp. of Am.,
Affirmed in part; remanded in part.
Notes
. Defendants report in their brief that they have paid plaintiff temporary total disability benefits from 17 June 2002 through 12 January 2003.
