Barbara Brown v. Lafayette Association of Retarded Citizens, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 2012
DocketWCA-0011-1595
StatusUnknown

This text of Barbara Brown v. Lafayette Association of Retarded Citizens, Inc. (Barbara Brown v. Lafayette Association of Retarded Citizens, Inc.) 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
Barbara Brown v. Lafayette Association of Retarded Citizens, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

11-1595

BARBARA BROWN

VERSUS

LAFAYETTE ASSOCIATION OF RETARDED CITIZENS, INC.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION - DISTRICT 4 PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. 10-02240 SHERAL KELLAR, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION JUDGE

JIMMIE C. PETERS JUDGE

Court composed of Jimmie C. Peters, Elizabeth A. Pickett, and Shannon J. Gremillion, Judges.

AFFIRMED AND RENDERED.

Gremillion, J., concurred in part and dissented in part and assigns reasons.

John H. Pucheu Pucheu, Pucheu & Robinson P.O. Box 1109 Eunice, LA 70535-1109 (337) 457-9075 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: Barbara Brown M. Jeremy Berthon Johnson, Stiltner & Rahman P. O. Box 98001 Baton Rouge, LA 70898-8001 (225) 231-0925 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS: Lafayette Association of Retarded Citizens, Inc. Louisiana Workers’ Compensation Corporation PETERS, J.

The defendants, the Lafayette Association of Retarded Citizens, Inc. and the

Louisiana Workers‘ Compensation Corporation, appeal from a judgment of the

workers‘ compensation judge (WCJ) finding that the plaintiff, Barbara Brown,

suffered a work-related accident and that she was entitled to statutory penalties and

attorney fees. Mrs. Brown answered the appeal, seeking an award of additional

attorney fees for work performed by her attorney on appeal. For the following

reasons, we affirm the WCJ judgment in all respects and award Mrs. Brown an

additional $5,000.00 as attorney fees for work performed by her attorney on appeal.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

The evidentiary record establishes that on the morning of November 3, 2009,

Mrs. Brown was employed by the Lafayette Association of Retarded Citizens, Inc.

(LARC) as a direct care specialist in LARC‘s Lafayette Parish facility. LARC

provides a home environment for intellectually disabled individuals at its facility.

Mrs. Brown had been employed by it for a period of approximately seven months.

As a direct care specialist, Mrs. Brown was directly involved in the care of the

residents, and this care including lifting, feeding, bathing, changing, training, and

transporting the residents as the need arose.

On November 3, 2009, Mrs. Brown arrived at work at 6:00 a.m. and began

her daily routine. While attempting to lift a resident, she felt a pain in her chest.

Although the resident weighed only approximately 160 pounds, Mrs. Brown had to

wait for five to ten minutes after experiencing the initial pain before moving the

resident into her wheelchair.

A short time later, after returning to her work obligations, Mrs. Brown felt

the pain in her chest return. Because she had suffered a heart attack in 2007, she

sat down and took a nitroglycerine pill. She testified that she spilled her pills when attempting to retrieve one from her purse, and one of her co-workers, Connie

Redeaux, helped her pick them up. Ms. Redeaux recalled the incident, testifying

that she came upon Mrs. Brown sitting down and holding her chest. Ms. Redeaux

recognized that something was very wrong and advised Mrs. Brown to inform

Henrietta Grant, their supervisor, of her condition.

Mrs. Brown did not initially follow Ms. Redeaux‘s advise. Instead, she

returned to her duties after sitting for a few minutes. However, a short time later

while delivering medication to a resident, she became hot and felt a heaviness over

her left shoulder and down her legs. At this point, she knew that she was suffering

another heart attack. She returned to her assigned area, informed Ms. Grant of her

situation, and asked Ms. Grant to telephone her husband, Ivory J. Brown, Jr. Ms.

Grant made the telephone call, and a co-worker drove Mrs. Brown to meet her

husband. Mr. Brown, driving from Crowley, intercepted the co-worker between

the facility and Crowley and carried his wife to the Crowley American Legion

Hospital. Once stabilized, she was transported by ambulance to the Heart Hospital

of Lafayette in Lafayette, Louisiana, where she was treated for a blocked stent by

her regular cardiologist. Upon her release the next day, her husband drove her to

the LARC facility where she gave her supervisor a work excuse from her

cardiologist.

Two days later, Mrs. Brown presented herself to Dr. Yamen Korab, a

Crowley, Louisiana family practice physician and Mrs. Brown‘s family physician,

complaining of left-sided neck pain. She returned to Dr. Korab on November 24,

2009, complaining of pain in her neck and down into her shoulder and behind her

left knee, numbness in her toe, and ringing in her ears. A cervical MRI ordered by

Dr. Korab revealed a small central disc protrusion at C3-4 and mild spondylosis

2 impinging on the left side of the neural foramina at C5-6 and C6-7. Based on this

finding, Dr. Korab recommended that Mrs. Brown see a neurosurgeon.

On January 11, 2010, Mrs. Brown saw Dr. Patrick A. Juneau, III, a Lafayette,

Louisiana neurosurgeon, complaining of neck and lower back pain relating back to

November of 2009. Mrs. Brown told Dr. Juneau that she had suffered a heart

attack while lifting a patient but, afterwards, she also began to experience pain in

her neck and lower back. After examining her and reviewing the results of the

MRI ordered by Dr. Korab, Dr. Juneau concluded that Mrs. Brown had suffered a

work-related injury, but that her MRI revealed only mild degenerative changes. At

this point, he ordered that a lumbar MRI be performed, and the results of that test

proved normal.

When she returned to Dr. Juneau on March 1, 2010, Mrs. Brown was

complaining of increased neck and bilateral arm pain, worse on the left side;

numbness and tingling sensations in her arms and legs, worse on the left side;

numbness and tingling sensations in her left foot, particularly in her fourth and

fifth toes; and numbness and tingling sensations in her right great toe. Dr.

Juneau‘s examination revealed that Mrs. Brown exhibited diminished sensation

over the lateral aspect of her left foot, into the fourth and fifth toes, and over the

right great toe. He found these symptoms consistent with left S1 radiculopathy and

possible involvement of the L5 nerve root. Given his findings, Dr. Juneau

prescribed several tests to pinpoint whether Mrs. Brown‘s pain was discogenic or

muscular in nature. LARC refused to approve payment for these tests.

Mrs. Brown‘s physical condition continued to deteriorate and on May 25,

2011, Dr. Juneau noted after examining Mrs. Brown that she continued to have

complaints of pain in her neck; left trapezius muscle; arm; forearm; and hand, with

3 tingling sensations in her second, third, and fourth fingers, especially the third

finger; as well as pain radiating across the right trapezius muscle to the shoulder.

After closely reevaluating Mrs. Brown‘s cervical MRI in light of her current

presentation, Dr. Juneau concluded that his patient was suffering from foraminal

stenosis on the left at C5-6 and C6-7. Based on this diagnosis, he recommended

that rather than undergo testing, Mrs. Brown undergo an anterior cervical

discectomy with instrumented fusion at C5-6 and C6-7. LARC refused to approve

payment for this treatment as well.

On March 8, 2010, Mrs. Brown filed a disputed claim for compensation

against LARC and the Louisiana Workers‘ Compensation Corporation (LWCC),

seeking indemnity and medical benefits and the medical testing and treatment

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