Amigos Meat Distributors, L.P. v. Guzman

526 S.W.3d 511, 2017 WL 1953345
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 8, 2017
DocketNO. 01-16-00149-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 526 S.W.3d 511 (Amigos Meat Distributors, L.P. v. Guzman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amigos Meat Distributors, L.P. v. Guzman, 526 S.W.3d 511, 2017 WL 1953345 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Sherry Radack, Chief Justice

This is an appeal from an award on a jury verdict in favor of an- employee against his non-workers’ compensation subscriber employer.

BACKGROUND

Appellee Julian Guzman went to work as a truck driver for appellant Amigos Meat Distributors in 2008. As part of his job, he had to lift and carry frozen animal carcasses. In May 2011, Guzman was injured lifting a 175-pound frozen cow carcass. He and his wife, appellee Catherine Monteja-no, sued Amigos, a worker’s compensation non-subscriber.

The jury found that Amigos’s negligence proximately caused Guzman’s injury, and awarded to him $287,809.94 in past medical expenses, $150,000 in past pain and mental anguish, and $150,000 in past physical impairment. The trial court entered judgment on that verdict.

■ Amigos does not challenge the jury’s negligence finding on appeal. It challenges the damages findings, however, contending that (1) the medical expenses awarded are not supported by legally sufficient evidence of causation, and (2) Guzman was impermissibly awarded more damages than those “paid or incurred.” Amigos also asserts Guzman’s attorney made improper statements during closing argument appealing to the jury’s prejudices against a corporate employer in favor of a worker, introducing incurable error into the trial.

We affirm.

[515]*515MEDICAL EXPENSES

On May 6, 2011, Guzman’s supervisor, Humberto Arellano, told Guzman to unload three frozen cow carcasses from an 18-wheeler truck. Guzman followed the procedure he learned from watching others at Amigos, i.e., he wrapped his arms around the carcass, lifted it upward off the hook suspending it from the ceiling, shifted the carcass onto one shoulder, walked off the truck, bent over while turning, and laid the carcass down. Guzman lifted and carried the first two carcasses without incident. As he started to lift the third carcass, which bore a tag indicating it weighed 175 pounds, off the hook, Guzman “felt something like snap, pain and burning sensation in [his] lower back.” He testified that the pain in his lower back was immediate. He began walking with the carcass, still feeling a burning sensation in his lower back. Then his legs started to give way, “like gelatin or something,” and he dropped the carcass.

Guzman testified that Arellano had witnessed this incident, and Guzman told him, “I think I hurt myself. I can’t feel my legs.” Guzman dropped to the ground, and Arellano had to help him load the last carcass onto a pallet. Despite Guzman telling Arellano that he was injured, and that he could not shake it off, Arellano told Guzman that he needed to go make his deliveries. Amigo then assigned Guzman a helper, a young teenager. The helper was small and unable to do most of the lifting, so Guzman was expected to continue doing so himself.

Before his May 6, 2011 injury, Guzman had never experienced any problems with his back and had never been injured at work. Guzman’s wife Montejano testified that, on the evening of May 6, Guzman came home from work in pain. The following day, he could not get out of bed without his brother’s help. His family took him to see Dr. Arango, a chiropractor. Aran-go’s records contain the following notes:

During the initial consultation, Mr. Julian Guzman stated that he injured his low back secondary to a work-related injury which took place on 5/6/11. The patient reports that he lifted a steer carcass and experienced low back pain. At the moment he felt he was going to collapse due to pain, the patient report- . ed it to his supervisor and was asked to only drive along with a helper. Mr. Guzman finished the day worse and went home. Today he decided to seek care in our clinic.
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From the evaluation of Mr. Guzman’s history, subjective complaints and the objective findings from orthopedic, neu-rologic and radiographic examinations, it is evident from a chiropractic viewpoint, that this type of injury would have resulted from the type of work related injury this patient suffered on 05/06/11.

Arango provided Guzman with a disability certificate that day, which stated he was “totally incapacitated.” Guzman presented that at work. Francisco Mox’eno, Amigos’s manager or owner, told Guzman to call when he needed anything, and that he “was one of the best workers there so they were going to take care of’ him. On May 11, 2011, Arango -reclassified Guzman as “partially- incapacitated,” and indicated that he was restricted to light duty.

Because Arango thought Guzman might recover with conservative chiropractic care, Guzman had his back injury treated with physical therapy, chiropractic care, and epidural steroid injunctions., He did not get better, and began to get overwhelmed by the constant doctor’s appointments. He had. to take. pain, medications three times a day.

[516]*516True to its promise, Amigos paid Guzman’s medical bills for the first three months after his injury. Amigos discontinued payments in August 2011. Amigos did not let Guzman know, but refused payment to Dr. Chanani, his pain management doctor for several scheduled spinal injections.

When Guzman visited Amigos’s office in August 2011, Amigos’s management showed him a video, obtained by a private investigator, of Guzman carrying a laundry basket. Amigos then told him that they would no longer pay his medical bills and terminated his employment. Both Guzman and his wife testified that he had carried the laundry basket because his doctor had ordered him to try walking for five or ten minutes per day and ease into lifting.

For the next two years, Guzman regularly went to Ben Taub Hospital and various doctors. At one point, Ben Taub placed him on suicide watch after he reported, “I can’t bear the pain. I just want to kill myself.” Montejano, Guzman’s wife, testified that Guzman was constantly in pain after his May 6, 2011 injury. He was diagnosed with depression, constantly took prescription pain pills, and ceased his daily involvement with their children.

On October 30, 2013, Guzman first visited Doctor Reynolds, a surgeon Guzman was referred to by another doctor who believed Guzman might require surgical intervention. Reynolds discussed with him his options and possible outcomes for each. Reynolds did not recommend Guzman first pursue more conservative, non-surgical treatments because Guzman had already tried the things Reynolds would recommend, i.e., physical therapy and steroid injections. Although Guzman was hesitant, he ultimately opted to have surgery. Reynolds testified that Guzman and his wife expressed that they were both concerned about how his pain was affecting his psyche and life, and he wanted to return to work.

On May 8, 2014, Reynolds performed surgery, described as discectomy and a fusion with some placement of hardware, at Guzman’s L4-5 disc. When asked about the causal links between Guzman’s workplace injury, his back pain, and the need for surgery, Reynolds testified—based on a reasonable medical probability—that the May 6, 2011 injury caused Guzman a significant amount of pain that persisted. He also testified that, based on the MRI images he reviewed, Guzman had some preexisting damage to the L4-5 disc. While it is impossible to tell from MRI imaging when and how the damage to Guzman’s disc was caused, Reynolds noted that, based on Guzman’s medical history, any preexisting damage was asymptomatic.

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Bluebook (online)
526 S.W.3d 511, 2017 WL 1953345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amigos-meat-distributors-lp-v-guzman-texapp-2017.