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Judy Kilburn v. Granite State Insurance Company

Tenn.April 10, 2017No. M2015-01782-SC-R3-WCCited 2 times
Defendant WinRyan Brown
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Justice Roger A. Page
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Workers’ Compensation

Outcome

The Tennessee Supreme Court reversed the lower court's finding that the employee's death from oxycodone overdose was compensable under workers' compensation, ruling that the death was not causally related to the work injury.

Excerpt

In this workers' compensation case, Charles Kilburn sustained several injuries from a motor vehicle accident. He underwent cervical spine surgery to resolve his neck injury complaints. His authorized physician also recommended lumbar spine surgery to combat his back pain, but that request was denied through the utilization review process. Mr. Kilburn took oxycodone to alleviate his back pain, and his treating physician referred him to a pain management clinic. Six months after the cervical spine surgery, Mr. Kilburn died due to an overdose of oxycodone combined with alcohol. After a bench trial, the chancery court found that the death was compensable. Mr. Kilburn's employer appealed. The appeal was initially referred to a Special Workers' Compensation Appeals Panel, but we later transferred the case to the Supreme Court for review. After examining the record, the parties' arguments, and the applicable law, we reverse the judgment of the chancery court.

What This Ruling Means

# Kilburn v. Granite State Insurance Company Summary **What Happened** Charles Kilburn was injured in a car accident and received neck surgery through workers' compensation. His doctor recommended back surgery, but the insurance company denied it through their review process. Instead, Mr. Kilburn was prescribed oxycodone for pain management. He later died from an oxycodone overdose. **Court Decision** The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled against Mr. Kilburn's family. The court decided his death was not connected enough to his original work injury to qualify for workers' compensation benefits. The insurance company won the case. **Why This Matters for Workers** This ruling shows that workers' compensation cases involving medication-related deaths face a high bar. Even when a worker receives prescribed painkillers for a work injury, courts may not consider a resulting overdose death as compensation-eligible if they determine the death isn't directly caused by the original injury. Workers and their families should understand that workers' compensation coverage has limits, and outcomes in complex cases depend heavily on how courts interpret the connection between the injury and what follows.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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