Filed: Sep. 07, 2011
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Summary: NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 11a0661n.06 No. 09-6401 FILED 7 Sept 2011 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS LEONARD GREEN, Clerk FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT JULIE MELISSA GERONIMO, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE Plaintiff-Appellant, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE v. ) WESTERN DISTRICT OF ) TENNESSEE CATERPILLAR, INC.; CATERPILLAR, ) ) OPINION Defendants-Appellees. ) BEFORE: McKEAGUE and WHITE, Circuit Judges; and Zouhary, District Judge.* McKeague, Circuit Judge. Julie Melissa Gero
Summary: NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 11a0661n.06 No. 09-6401 FILED 7 Sept 2011 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS LEONARD GREEN, Clerk FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT JULIE MELISSA GERONIMO, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE Plaintiff-Appellant, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE v. ) WESTERN DISTRICT OF ) TENNESSEE CATERPILLAR, INC.; CATERPILLAR, ) ) OPINION Defendants-Appellees. ) BEFORE: McKEAGUE and WHITE, Circuit Judges; and Zouhary, District Judge.* McKeague, Circuit Judge. Julie Melissa Geron..
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NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 11a0661n.06
No. 09-6401 FILED
7 Sept 2011
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
JULIE MELISSA GERONIMO, )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE
Plaintiff-Appellant, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
) COURT FOR THE
v. ) WESTERN DISTRICT OF
) TENNESSEE
CATERPILLAR, INC.; CATERPILLAR, )
) OPINION
Defendants-Appellees. )
BEFORE: McKEAGUE and WHITE, Circuit Judges; and Zouhary, District Judge.*
McKeague, Circuit Judge. Julie Melissa Geronimo sued her former employer, Caterpillar,
Inc. and Caterpillar (collectively “Caterpillar”) for retaliatory discharge, after she was terminated for
failure to promptly report a work injury. Geronimo alleged that under the Tennessee Workers’
Compensation Law (“TWCL”), Tennessee Code Annotated § 50-6-101, et seq., she was entitled to
thirty days in which to report her gradual-onset carpal tunnel. Thus, according to Geronimo,
Caterpillar’s company policy requiring that employees report such injuries immediately or within
forty-eight hours, and its decision to terminate her for failure to adhere to this policy, constituted
retaliatory discharge for exercising her rights pursuant to the TWCL. Geronimo’s argument,
however, is premised upon an incorrect reading of the relevant statutory provision, and for the
reasons that follow, we DENY Geronimo’s motion to certify a question of law to the Tennessee
*
The Honorable Jack Zouhary, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Ohio,
sitting by designation.
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Supreme Court and AFFIRM the district court’s opinion granting summary judgment in favor of
Caterpillar.
I. BACKGROUND
Geronimo worked for Caterpillar at its Dyersburg, Tennessee facility as an employee-at-will
for approximately seven-and-a-half years, from March 27, 2000 until her termination on August 15,
2007. After giving her advanced notice in June 2007, Caterpillar transferred Geronimo from her
prior position as a machinist to an “assembler position” on July 9, 2007. After Geronimo started her
new position, she began to experience pain while completing the tasks required of her as an
assembler. The first time she had to press down the clutch plates on the assembly machine, she
experienced “some pain” in her hands. She explained that it was “like strain, muscle strain,” in her
palms, upper arms, and fingers. When asked how strong the pain was, using a one to ten scale with
ten being “unbearable pain,” Geronimo indicated that the pain was approximately a four. However,
she noted that after she let go of the machine the pain would stop. At the end of her first day,
Geronimo felt that her muscles were “tight,” and when she awoke the next morning her hands and
arms felt stiff and she again experienced pain in her hands while working her shift, though it stopped
each time she released the machine.
For approximately two weeks, the pain in Geronimo’s hands continued at this level. During
this time she felt like “blood would rush back into” her hands when she released the machine and
she needed to do stretches to help relieve the pain. After approximately three weeks, Geronimo
asked two of her co-workers if they had experienced any muscle soreness or pain when they first
started working as assemblers. Both indicated that they had some soreness but that it got better. One
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female co-worker specifically told Geronimo that it was not a “painful” job for her. After
approximately four weeks on the job, Geronimo noticed that while she was holding a telephone or
holding the steering wheel while driving her hands would start to go numb and tingle, which she
believed was caused by the tasks she completed at work.
Around August 1,2007, Geronimo began to suspect that she had carpal tunnel syndrome and
decided to look it up on the internet, although she could not confirm her suspicions. Almost two
weeks later, on August 14, 2007, Geronimo spoke with a nurse at Caterpillar, which was the first
time she had spoken with anyone from Caterpillar’s management team about the pain she was
experiencing in her hands. A few days before seeing the nurse, Geronimo thought she may need to
have surgery, which she had learned was an option while researching on the internet. She finally
decided to speak with the nurse about her pain when she realized that, although the pain had
previously gone away at night or on the weekends when she was not working, the weekend prior to
the nurse visit the pain did not go away and she was “waking up at night that weekend with pain in
[her] hands, and the numbness after the weekend was over” was not any better. She stated that her
pain had reached a 9.75 out of ten by that weekend, and had increased gradually since her first day
of work.
When she spoke to the nurse, Geronimo informed the nurse that she was experiencing so
much pain in her hands that it was “to the point [she] wanted them cut off,” that she had begun
waking up at night because of the pain, and that it “felt like rubber bands were tied around [her]
wrists” and that her “hands were going to explode.” She admitted that the pain was waking her up
at night as early as the middle of the week prior to her visit to the nurse, on or about August 8. When
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the nurse asked Geronimo why she had not come sooner, Geronimo told her that she thought it was
muscle soreness she could work through, “because [she] needed [her] job.” When asked at her
deposition why she did not report her pain on Monday, August 13, Geronimo stated that she “thought
[she] would give it one more shot, try to work through it,” because she was afraid that she had no
“other options than to do the job.” Geronimo believed that if Caterpillar found someone else to do
her job, there would be no other job for her. She also admitted that she did not tell her supervisor
about the pain she was experiencing because she “didn’t want him to think [she] couldn’t do the job”
or that she was “having a problem with it,” because she believed that it would be “short-lived.”
After Geronimo explained her symptoms to the nurse, the nurse informed Geronimo that she
would try to set up an appointment for Geronimo to see a doctor. However, the next day Geronimo
was informed that she was being fired for “not meeting [Caterpillar’s] expectations” because of her
“failure to communicate an injury in a timely manner.” Specifically, under Caterpillar’s company
policy, employees can be disciplined for “business abuse,” which includes violations of the
company’s safety rules. One of these safety rules, which Geronimo admitted she was informed of
at the required weekly safety meetings she attended as well as at other employee presentations, was
to report the occurrence of injuries immediately or, if the injury was gradually-occurring, to report
it as soon as an employee realizes they are injured and suspects it is work related. Verbally,
Caterpillar clarified this requirement and informed its employees that if they sustain a gradually-
occurring injury, it must be reported within forty-eight hours.
These safety rules are enforced by the “Business Abuse and Behavior Correction Process,”
which is a five-level corrective process. Employees are informed that “[c]ertain acts of misconduct
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or procedure violations will not be tolerated and could result in an immediate jump to Phase 3/4 or
immediate termination.” Because Geronimo failed to report her injury as required by company
policy, she was fired.
In August 2008, Geronimo filed a complaint alleging that Caterpillar unlawfully terminated
her “in direct retaliation for making a claim for benefits and/or asserting her right to benefits under
[§ 50-6-201 (b) of] the TWCL,” which governs the provision of notice of a work-related injury.
Caterpillar then filed a motion for summary judgment and, in turn, Geronimo filed a partial motion
for summary judgment solely on the issue of Caterpillar’s liability.
The court ruled that “[a]lthough Tennessee Code Annotated § 50-6-201 allows an injured
party to file a claim for worker’s [sic] compensation benefits as long as that party gives notice to the
employer within thirty days of the injury, nothing in the statute shields the employee from all
consequences of postponing or failing to give the employer notice until right before an employee’s
worker’s [sic] compensation claim would be time-barred.” In analyzing the relevant statutory
provision, the district court concluded that subsection (a) of the statute requires immediate notice
by all employees, “not just those injured employees with non-gradual, non-cumulative injuries.”
Thus, the court reasoned that “[s]ubsection (b) does not exempt employees who suffer gradually
occurring injuries from notifying their employers immediately or as soon as they become aware of
their work-related injury,” but rather it “recognizes that there may need to be a variation to
subsection (a)’s thirty day period for claims when the ‘occurrence of the injury’ is unclear.” The
court also held that “the plain language of the statute does not establish a public policy prohibiting
employers from requiring employees to report work-related injuries immediately.” Accordingly, the
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court denied Geronimo’s motion for partial summary judgment and granted Caterpillar’s motion for
summary judgment. Geronimo filed a timely notice of appeal.
II. ANALYSIS
Motion for Summary Judgment
This court reviews a district court’s summary judgment order de novo. Escher v. BWXT Y-
12, LLC,
627 F.3d 1020, 1025 (6th Cir. 2010). “‘In reviewing a grant of summary judgment on
cross-motions seeking such relief, we apply the same legal standards as the district court: whether,
with the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, there are no genuine
issues of material fact, so that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.’” In re
Arctic Express Inc., –F.3d–, No. 09-3463,
2011 WL 722211, at *6 (6th Cir. Mar. 3, 2011) (quoting
United States v. Petroff-Kline,
557 F.3d 285, 290 (6th Cir. 2009)).
In Tennessee, it is well-established that “an employee-at-will can be discharged without
breach of contract for good cause, bad cause or no cause at all.” Clanton v. Cain-Sloan Co.,
677
S.W.2d 441, 443 (Tenn. 1984). However, the Tennessee Supreme Court has crafted exceptions to
this rule, the first of which it articulated in Clanton. Having determined that Tennessee had a clear
public policy in favor of protecting employees who sought workers’ compensation, the Court held
that a cause of action existed for retaliatory discharge when an employee exercises her rights under
the TWCL and then is terminated by her employer for doing so.
Id. at 444–45. The court later
clarified that in order “to establish a cause of action for discharge in retaliation for asserting a
workers’ compensation claim,” a plaintiff must show that: (1) she “was an employee of the defendant
at the time of the injury;” (2) she “made a claim against the defendant for workers’ compensation
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benefits; (3) the defendant terminated the plaintiff’s employment; and (4) the claim for workers’
compensation benefits was a substantial factor in the employer’s motivation to terminate the
employee's employment.” Anderson v. Standard Register Co.,
857 S.W.2d 555, 558 (Tenn. 1993).
On appeal, Geronimo argues that Caterpillar was not entitled to summary judgment because
the company terminated her in retaliation for exercising a right conferred on her by the TWCL.
Specifically, Geronimo’s argument rests upon interpretation of Tennessee Code Annotated § 50-6-
201, which governs the reporting of injuries for the purpose of later filing a claim for workers’
compensation. This section provides:
(a) Every injured employee or the injured employee's representative shall,
immediately upon the occurrence of an injury, or as soon thereafter as is reasonable
and practicable, give or cause to be given to the employer who has no actual notice,
written notice of the injury, and the employee shall not be entitled to physician's fees
or to any compensation that may have accrued under this chapter, from the date of
the accident to the giving of notice, unless it can be shown that the employer had
actual knowledge of the accident. No compensation shall be payable under this
chapter, unless the written notice is given the employer within thirty (30) days after
the occurrence of the accident, unless reasonable excuse for failure to give the notice
is made to the satisfaction of the tribunal to which the claim for compensation may
be presented.
(b) In those cases where the injuries occur as the result of gradual or cumulative
events or trauma, then the injured employee or the injured employee's representative
shall provide notice of the injury to the employer within thirty (30) days after the
employee:
(1) Knows or reasonably should know that the employee has suffered
a work-related injury that has resulted in permanent physical
impairment; or
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(2) Is rendered unable to continue to perform the employee's normal
work activities as the result of the work-related injury and the
employee knows or reasonably should know that the injury was
caused by work-related activities.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-201.
Geronimo admitted during her deposition that she was not claiming that Caterpillar ever tried
to make examples of people who turned in injury reports by firing them, nor was she claiming that
they were “out to get” her or “trying to get back” at her for filing a workers’ compensation claim.
In fact, Geronimo filed a workers’ compensation claim, which was not disputed by Caterpillar, and
she received a settlement for her injury and had surgery to remedy her carpal tunnel, which was paid
for by Caterpillar.
Rather, Geronimo argues that because § 50-6-201 permits employees to report gradually-
occurring work injuries within thirty days of the injury for the purpose of seeking workers’
compensation, Caterpillar’s policy requiring employees to report such injuries immediately or within
forty-eight hours of the injury, and authorizing termination of the employee for failure to comply
with the employer’s reporting requirements, violates the public policy of Tennessee established by
§ 50-6-201. Geronimo asserts that because the reporting of her injury was protected by Tennessee
public policy, her termination by Caterpillar for failure to report her injury amounts to retaliatory
discharge for exercise of her rights under the workers’ compensation laws.
Although Geronimo is correct that the statute gives her thirty days in which to report a
gradually-occurring injury for the purpose of later filing a claim for workers’ compensation, she
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overlooks two essential elements of the statute that ultimately foreclose her claim. First, despite her
arguments to the contrary, § 50-6-201(b) does not eliminate the requirement that an injury be
reported immediately, as required by § 50-6-201(a). The text of the statute makes clear in subsection
(a) that “every injured employee . . . shall immediately” report an injury to her employer, regardless
of the nature of that injury. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-201(a) (emphasis added). It then explains that
“[n]o compensation shall be payable” for sustained injuries if written notice is not given within thirty
days “after the occurrence of the accident.”
Id.
Subsection (b) was added by the legislature to amend the statute in 2001. That subsection
clarifies the latter portion of subsection (a) dealing with the maximum time allowable for reporting
injuries in order to obtain compensation and explains what constitutes the “occurrence” of an injury
when such an injury is gradually-occurring. Subsection (b) explains that if the injury is “the result
of gradual or cumulative events or trauma,” then the “occurrence” of the injury, and correspondingly
the start of the employee’s thirty-day window for providing written notice, will be either (1) when
the employee knows or reasonably should know that she “has suffered a work related injury that has
resulted in permanent physical impairment” or (2) when the employee can no longer perform
“normal work activities as the result of the work-related injury and the employee knows or
reasonably should know that the injury was caused by work-related activities.”
Id. at § 50-6-201(b).
Thus, the plain terms of subsection (b) do not exempt an employee from the first part of
subsection (a) requiring immediate notice. Instead, § 50-6-201(b) simply recognizes that with
gradually-occurring injuries, the “occurrence” of the injury is not necessarily identifiable by the
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employee at the precise moment of onset, as with an immediate and concrete injury, such as a broken
bone. Accordingly, subsection (b) provides clarification for employees who sustain gradually-
occurring injuries as to what specific conditions, namely permanent physical impairment or an
inability to perform normal work activities, trigger the thirty-day window for providing notice. See
Banks v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
170 S.W.3d 556, 561 (Tenn. 2005) (explaining that subsection
(b) “recognizes that although by definition a gradually-occurring injury occurs over time, some date
must be chosen to trigger the notice requirement,” therefore “employees are relieved from the notice
requirement until they know or reasonably should know that their injury was caused by their work
and that the injury has either impaired them permanently or has prevented them from performing
normal work activities”).
Second, although the statute permits an employee to provide notice within thirty days for the
purpose of obtaining workers’ compensation, it does not expressly prohibit or establish a public
policy prohibiting an employer from imposing separate notice requirements for workplace injuries.
The Tennessee Supreme Court has made clear that it “does not engage in hypothetical guessing to
fashion public policy.” Stein v. Davidson Hotel Co.,
945 S.W.2d 714, 717 (Tenn. 1997). Moreover,
“the exception cannot be permitted to consume or eliminate the general rule.” Chism v. Mid-South
Milling Co., Inc.,
762 S.W.2d 552, 556 (Tenn. 1988). Therefore, “[t]o be liable for retaliatory
discharge . . . , the employer must violate a clear public policy” that is “evidenced by an
unambiguous constitutional, statutory or regulatory provision.” Id.; see also Crews v. Buckman
Labs. Int’l, Inc.,
78 S.W.3d 852, 862 (Tenn. 2002) (explaining that “the elements of a typical
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common-law retaliatory discharge claim” are discharge of an employee-at-will, where “the reason
for the discharge was that the employee attempted to exercise a statutory or constitutional right, or
for any other reason which violates a clear public policy evidenced by an unambiguous
constitutional, statutory, or regulatory provision,” and that exercise of rights was “a substantial
factor” in the discharge of the employee).
Here, Geronimo argues that her “exercise of rights” under the TWCL includes notifying her
employer of her injury pursuant to § 50-6-201(b), and therefore is a protected act. Yet, Geronimo
does no more than present conclusory arguments about the existence of a public policy, and nothing
in the statutory language evinces an unambiguous directive preventing companies like Caterpillar
from implementing reporting requirements for the purpose of safety. The statute merely grants
employees the right to wait thirty days to file their notice of injury and still receive workers’
compensation, and that is exactly what Geronimo was able to do. See
Clanton, 677 S.W.2d at 444
(explaining that “the Workers' Compensation Law is a comprehensive scheme enacted to provide
a certain and expeditious remedy for injured employees” that “reflects a careful balancing of the
interests of employer and employee”). There is simply nothing in the language of § 50-6-201 that
gives an employee the right to violate her employer’s reporting requirements, or that demonstrates
an intent to foreclose on the ability of employers to regulate injury reporting for the purpose of
workplace safety.1
1
The dissent points to Lawson v. Lear Seating Corp.,
944 S.W.2d 340, 343 (Tenn. 1997) for
the proposition that, as a matter of Tennessee law, Geronimo’s injury did not “occur” until the day
she was no longer able to work, and thus Caterpillar should have found that she complied with its
reporting requirements. This argument conflates what is allowed under workers’ compensation
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If Geronimo’s assertion regarding the public policy embodied in § 50-6-201(b) was correct,
it would give employees the opportunity to aggravate existing work injuries, potentially compromise
the safety of other individuals, and prevent their employers from providing possible remedies for
gradually-occurring injuries at the earliest possible date, by choosing not to report their injuries for
days, or even weeks, after the employee realizes she has been injured.2 Moreover, although the
statute grants an employee a maximum of thirty days in which to report the injury and still obtain
workers’ compensation, the language itself not only mandates immediate reporting by all employees,
but provides incentive to do so by refusing to allow payment of physician’s fees or compensation
for the period of time between when the injury occurred and when the employee provided notice of
the injury. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-201(a).
Geronimo also attempts to argue that Caterpillar’s policy forces employees to either keep
their injuries hidden and remain employed, or report their injuries and subject themselves to possible
termination. Such an argument is simply incorrect based on the facts in the record. The policy
established by Caterpillar requires timely reporting, and so long as reporting is timely, there is no
jurisprudence with what is required of employers in their internal safety dealings. Although
Tennessee workers’ compensation law may allow the date of an employee’s injury to be measured
from when that employee was no longer able to work, that does not compel employers to use the
same measuring date when crafting their on-the-job safety reporting requirements.
2
In a Declaration by Rhonda Lee, the Human Resources Manager at Caterpillar’s Dyersburg
facility, it was explained that “[t]he reason for the rule requiring immediate reporting of work-related
injuries is that, in Caterpillar’s view, late reporting of injuries can result in otherwise avoidable
aggravation of those injuries, whereas timely reporting will allow the problems to be addressed
before they become severe and may also help to prevent other employees from becoming similarly
injured.”
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disciplinary action. Additionally, Geronimo overlooks the fact that, regardless of whether or not she
ultimately filed a claim for workers’ compensation, she still violated Caterpillar’s reporting policy
and would have been subject to termination if she failed to report the injury and Caterpillar was
otherwise notified of that injury by another employee who was aware of Geronimo’s injury.
Accordingly, we find that the district court did not err when it determined that Caterpillar could not
be liable for retaliatory discharge and entered summary judgment its favor.
Motion to Certify
Geronimo has also filed a motion to certify a question of law to the Supreme Court of
Tennessee regarding whether the public policy of Tennessee requires the immediate reporting of all
work-related injuries in light of the language in § 50-6-201, and whether an employer can
“promulgate and enforce by the sanction of termination of employment a policy that requires
employees to report gradually occurring work-related injuries immediately (or even within forty-
eight hours) after learning that an injury is or may be occurring,” in light of the existing language in
the TWCL. Although the issue may be a matter of first impression under Tennessee law, because
this court is able “to make a clear and principled decision” that the district court did not err in finding
that the statute was clear and that Caterpillar was not liable, certification would not be appropriate.
Pennington v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
553 F.3d 447, 450 (6th Cir. 2009); see also In re
Century Offshore Mgmt. Corp.,
119 F.3d 409, 415 (6th Cir. 1997) (“Certification is ‘most
appropriate where the question is new and state law is unsettled.’”) (quoting Transamerica Ins. Co.
v. Duro Bag Mfg. Co.,
50 F.3d 370, 372 (6th Cir. 1995)).
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Furthermore, as this court has previously noted, certification is disfavored where a plaintiff
files in federal court but then, “in light of an unfavorable judgment, seek[s] refuge” in a state forum.
Local 219 Plumbing & Pipefitting Indus. Pension Fund v. Buck Consultants, LLC, 311 F. App’x
827, 831 (6th Cir. 2009). Similarly, we have also made clear that “[t]he appropriate time to seek
certification of a state-law issue is before a District Court resolves the issue, not after receiving an
unfavorable ruling.”
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted); see also St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.
v. Cassens Transport. Co., 86 F. App’x 869, 873 (6th Cir. 2004) (noting in a denial of a motion to
certify that “St. Paul filed its complaint for contribution in federal court, without claiming that Ohio
law was unsettled, and its request for certification came only after losing in the district court”).
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, we DENY the motion to certify a question of
law to the Tennessee Supreme Court and AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
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HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge (dissenting). Because I conclude that the Tennessee
Supreme Court would find Caterpillar’s action in terminating Geronimo’s employment based on her
purported failure to timely report her injury contrary to Tennessee law, I respectfully dissent.
Caterpillar has consistently argued that Geronimo was terminated for failing to comply with
the company’s written policy on reporting workplace injuries, which requires employees to “notify
the Company promptly [i.e., within 48 hours] after they realize they are injured and suspect that the
injury is related to their work.” (R. 19, Lee Decl., at ¶ 5.) According to Caterpillar, Geronimo
violated this policy because she realized or suspected that her injury was work related several days
or even weeks before she went to the company nurse.
Under established Tennessee law, carpal-tunnel syndrome is an accidental injury that is
deemed to have occurred on the date the employee can no longer perform her work. In Lawson v.
Lear Seating Corp.,
944 S.W.2d 340, 340 (Tenn. 1997), an employee (“Lawson”) experienced
increasingly painful carpal-tunnel symptoms over the course of several years working for the same
company. On the suggestion of her doctor, Lawson transferred to different positions within the
company in order to alleviate the problem; each time, her symptoms abated temporarily, only to
return.
Id. As the pain worsened and spread to her arms and shoulders, Lawson received monthly
injections to reduce the pain.
Id. Eventually, Lawson notified the company nurse and was formally
diagnosed with carpal-tunnel syndrome; despite undergoing surgery, Lawson suffered 10%
permanent partial impairment in her hands.
Id. at 341. Lawson sued to recover permanent partial-
disability benefits, but a Special Workers’ Compensation Appeals Panel of the Tennessee Supreme
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Court determined that her claim was time-barred because she did not file it within one year of the
“accident resulting in the injury,” as required by T.C.A. § 50-6-203(b)(1).
Id. Lawson appealed to
the Tennessee Supreme Court, which observed that “[t]he identification of the ‘accident resulting
in the injury’ is problematic” in cases of repetitive-stress injuries like carpal-tunnel syndrome.
Id.
For guidance, the court looked to Berry v. Boeing Military Airplanes, a Kansas Court of Appeals
case that held:
We . . . conclude that the last day of work should be the date from when disability is
computed in all cases involving carpal tunnel syndrome . . . . If we were to adopt
either the date on which the injury “manifests itself” or the date on which the injury
is “diagnosed,” we would set a potential trap for the individual who, despite pain and
discomfort, continues to work long after his or her carpal tunnel is “diagnosed” or has
“manifested itself.” Those individuals would find their claims for compensation
barred by the statute of limitations. It seems to us that we should adopt the rule that
causes the least potential prejudice and upholds the spirit of our Workers
Compensation Act. We believe use of the last day of work accomplishes both of
those purposes.
885 P.2d 1261, 1267-68 (Kan. Ct. App. 1994) (quoted in
Lawson, 944 S.W.2d at 342) (second
ellipsis in Lawson). The Supreme Court of Tennessee found Berry’s policy rationale especially
persuasive, stating:
Like the Kansas statute, our workers’ compensation statute is remedial in nature.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-116. As we stated in Betts v. Tom Wade Gin,
810 S.W.2d
140[, 142-43] (Tenn. 1991),
this Court must interpret those statutes in a manner designed to
protect workers and their families from the economic devastation
that, in many instances, can follow on-the-job injuries. Furthermore,
Tennessee’s workers compensation laws must be construed so as to
ensure that injured employees are justly and appropriately reimbursed
for debilitating injuries suffered in the course of service to the
employer. [(footnote omitted).]
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Lawson, 944 S.W.2d at 342. The court noted that in cases where carpal-tunnel syndrome results
from a traumatic event, “the statute of limitations would begin to run when by reasonable care and
diligence the compensable injury is discoverable and it is apparent that such injury is work-related.”
Id. at 343 (citing Livingston v. Shelby Williams Ind., Inc.,
811 S.W.2d 511, 515 (Tenn. 1991)).
However, since Lawson’s injuries were the product of repetitive stress, the court held that the
limitation period for filing a workers’ compensation claim began to run on the day that Lawson was
unable to perform her job:
As in Barker, the repetitive movements of Lawson’s hands as she performed
her job caused her injuries. Each day Lawson worked contributed to her injury.
Because there is no one particular incident or event identifiable as an “accident
resulting in the injury” and because Lawson suffered new trauma to her hands each
day she worked, we hold that the date of the accidental injury is the date that Lawson
was no longer able to work because of her
injury. 944 S.W.2d at 343. [Emphasis
added.]
To be sure, Lawson involves the denial of a claim for permanent disability benefits, while
the issue here is whether Geronimo’s termination violated Tennessee law. However, this distinction
does not alter Lawson’s core holding: As a matter of Tennessee law, carpal-tunnel syndrome
“occurs” and the employee suffers an injury on the day when the employee is no longer able to work.
Lawson was decided in 1997, four years before the Tennessee Legislature clarified the notice
rules for gradually-occurring injuries by enacting T.C.A. § 50-6-201(b). However, subsection (b)
was not intended to modify the existing common law. Quite to the contrary; as the Tennessee Senate
explained in summarizing the amendment:
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No. 09-6401
Geronimo v. Caterpillar, Inc.
This bill would require an injured employee with a workers’ compensation claim for
an injury based upon gradual or cumulative events or trauma to provide written
notice to the employer within 30 days after the employee: (1) Knows or should know
that the employee has suffered a work-related injury resulting in permanent physical
impairment; OR (2) Is rendered unable to continue performing normal work activities
as a result of the injury, provided that the employee knows or should know that the
injury was caused by work-related activities. Under present law, the general notice
provisions apply to such injuries, which is 30-days’ written notice from the date of
the injury, unless there is a reasonable excuse. This bill is consistent with Tennessee
case law. For example, in the case of Lawson v. Lear Seating Corp.,
944 S.W.2d
340 (Tenn. 1997), the Tennessee Supreme Court held that the statute of limitations
started to run when the employee at issue was unable to perform her job. The
employee in that case had worked for several years while suffering from carpal tunnel
syndrome and never filed a workers’ compensation claim. When the employee’s
condition became such that she could no longer work, she then filed her claim.
Tenn. Bill Summ., 2001 Reg. Sess. S. B. 1404 (emphasis added). There is no doubt that subsection
(b) was intended to integrate the holdings of Lawson and other state cases on gradually-occurring
injuries into the TWCL’s statutory framework.
Thus, because Tennessee law unequivocally provides that a gradually-occurring injury
“occurs” on the date the employee is no longer able to perform her work, and in this case that day
was August 14, 2007, the same day Geronimo informed the company nurse of her injury,1 Geronimo
complied with Caterpillar’s 48-hour injury-reporting policy, and Caterpillar’s conclusion to the
contrary runs counter to the Tennessee Supreme Court’s Workers’ Compensation jurisprudence. For
this reason, I would reverse the decision of the district court.
1
Geronimo testified that she did not return to her regular workstation after speaking to the
nurse. Instead, she sat in the break room for a long time, presumably while her supervisors decided
what task to give her; eventually, she was sent to take computer classes. The next day, Geronimo
was assigned to help out in the office until the morning break, when she was called to her
supervisor’s office and terminated.
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