Adrienne Stermer v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 2014
DocketCA-0014-0147
StatusUnknown

This text of Adrienne Stermer v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Company (Adrienne Stermer v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adrienne Stermer v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Company, (La. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

14-147

ADRIENNE STERMER

VERSUS

ARCHER-DANIELS-MIDLAND COMPANY AND AMERICAN RIVER TRANSPORTATION COMPANY

**********

APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF ACADIA, NO. 08-6424 HONORABLE ELLIS J. DAIGLE, DISRICT JUDGE

ELIZABETH A. PICKETT JUDGE

Court composed of Jimmie C. Peters, Marc T. Amy, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.

AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS. Lawrence N. Curtis Lawrence N. Curtis, LTD. (A Professional Law Corporation) 300 Rue Beauregard, Bldg. C. Post Office Box 80247 Lafayette, Louisiana 70598-0247 (337) 235-1825 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT: Adrienne Stermer

Koerner Law Firm Louis R. Koerner, Jr. Post Office Box 4297 Houma, Louisiana 70361 (985) 580-0350 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT: Adrienne Stermer

Georges M. Legrand Adam P. Sanderson Mouledoux, Bland, Legrand & Brackette LLC 701 Poydras Street, Suite 4250 New Orleans, Louisiana 70139 (504) 595-3000 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS: American River Transportation Company Agrinational Insurance Company PICKETT, Judge.

A maritime employer appeals the trial court‟s awards of penalties and

attorney fees to a seaman for the employer‟s failure to pay maintenance and cure

for almost two and one-half years after the seaman was injured. Finding no

manifest error in the trial court‟s determination that the employer‟s failure to pay

maintenance and cure more promptly was arbitrary and capricious, we affirm the

award of penalties in the amount of $300,000.00 and the finding that an award of

attorney fees is warranted, but reverse the award of $150,000.00 in attorney fees

and remand to the trial court to receive evidence on the issue of attorney fees. We

award $10,000.00 in attorney fees for work performed on appeal.

FACTS

Adrienne Stermer began working for American River Transportation

Company (ARTCO) in November 2005 as a cook on motor vessels ARTCO

operated on the Mississippi River transporting barges between New Orleans and

St. Louis, Missouri. Ms. Stermer boarded the M/V COOPERATIVE

ENTERPRISE on September 21, 2007. She performed her usual duties on the

vessel twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week until October 18, 2007, when

she left the vessel and returned home due to injuries she claimed to have suffered

on October 9, 2007. By letter dated October 19, ARTCO notified Ms. Stermer that

her “recent complaints did not manifest itself [sic] in the service of the vessel” and

that it would not make voluntary payments for maintenance and cure. Then, by

letter dated October 22, 2002, ARTCO notified Ms. Stermer that it had concluded

its investigation into her alleged injury, that her “willful disregard for the truth . . .

demonstrate[d] an unacceptable standard of conduct,” and that her employment

was terminated. Ms. Stermer filed suit against ARTCO, its insurer, Agrinational Insurance

Company, and Archer-Daniels-Midland Company, owner of the M/V

COOPERATIVE ENTERPRISE and ARTCO‟s parent company. She alleged that

she was a Jones Act seaman injured on October 9, 2007, while working in the

service of the M/V COOPERATIVE ENTERPRISE, that the vessel was

unseaworthy, that her dismissal by ARTCO was a retaliatory discharge, and that

ARTCO unreasonably refused to pay her maintenance and cure after she was

injured. She sought to recover lost wages, medical expenses, damages for pain and

suffering, negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress, punitive

damages, and attorney fees.

On October 14, 2007, Ms. Stermer reported to Captain Thomas Jones that

she had injured herself on October 9, when the M/V COOPERATIVE

ENTERPRISE was facing up to a tow. According to her testimony and the

Injury/Illness/Near Miss Report completed by Ms. Stermer on October 14, she was

squatting in front of the lower half of the refrigerator in the galley cleaning

condiment bottles when the vessel faced up to the tow. As she was squatting, she

felt “a little jar to the boat,” lost her balance, and fell forward into the refrigerator.

She tried to grab a shelf in the refrigerator with her right hand to steady herself, but

her fingers went through the rack, and her right hand was pushed backward. Her

knees hit the floor at the bottom of the refrigerator, and she put her left hand down

on the floor to brace her fall. Ms. Stermer rolled on her legs to the right such that

she was sitting on her right ankle. She then got up, brushed herself off, and went

back to work. She experienced pain and swelling in her hands and right ankle for

which she took Advil.

2 Ms. Stermer testified that she did not report the incident the day it occurred

because she did not think she was hurt and because she was afraid she might lose

her job. She further testified that she told David Glisson, an engineer on the

vessel, about the incident on October 14 because her hands and right ankle

continued to swell and she could no longer lace her shoes. She formally reported it

after Mr. Glissson reported what she told him to Randoll Inness, the pilot who had

been operating the vessel when she was injured. In her October 14

Injury/Illness/Near Miss Report,1 Ms. Stermer described where she was and how

the accident happened, stating, in pertinent part:

[B]ending of the knees in front of refrigerator cleaning out steak sauce tray . . . Facing up we pumped [sic]. I lost my balance fell to my knees grabbing the shelf, my [food handling] glove slipped off. My right hand was pushed backwards towards forearm. I have been using ice and taking Advil. Very little swelling now. But I don‟t have much strength . . . my fingers are swollen the top of my hand and completely around my wrist. A throbbing goes towards my elbow.

On October 17, ARTCO transported Ms. Stermer to shore and to the

Western Baptist Hospital in Paducah, Kentucky, for evaluation and treatment. Her

description of how she was injured and her complaints were consistent with the

report she completed on the vessel. After examination and x-rays, Ms. Stermer

was diagnosed with bilateral hand and wrist sprains and right ankle sprain. The

emergency room doctor prescribed and fitted her with bilateral wrist splints and an

ace wrap and air cast for her right ankle. The doctor also prescribed anti-

inflammatory medication and pain medication. Ms. Stermer returned to the vessel

and performed her duties but was relieved and transported to Baton Rouge. A

1 Ms. Stermer completed a revised report on October 17 and/or 18 due to technical errors. In those reports, she essentially restated what she stated in her October 14 report.

3 personal friend picked her up at the Baton Rouge airport and drove her home to

Krotz Springs.

As noted by ARTCO, Ms. Stermer‟s claim was “hotly contested” by Captain

Thomas Jones and Bobby Joe Stark, other ARTCO employees who were in the

galley at the time Ms. Stermer claimed she was injured. Both men repudiated her

claim that she was injured October 9 when the vessel was facing up to its tow.

Captain Jones testified that two bumps occurred when the vessel faced up and that

he was facing in the same direction as Ms. Stermer at that time. He further related

that Ms. Stermer was squatted in front of the refrigerator with the door open on the

first bump. When asked if she lost her balance, he stated that he did not see her

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