Barrios v. Rheem Manufacturing Co.

410 So. 2d 862, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 6815
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 1982
DocketNo. 5-146
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 410 So. 2d 862 (Barrios v. Rheem Manufacturing Co.) 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
Barrios v. Rheem Manufacturing Co., 410 So. 2d 862, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 6815 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

KLIEBERT, Judge.

The plaintiff, Curtis E. Barrios (hereafter Barrios), was employed by Rheems Manufacturing Company (hereafter Rheems), as a press operator for 30 years. On May 20, 1980, Barrios was operating the press when a rod broke, resulting in the press crushing Barrios’ right hand. At the time of the injury, Barrios was 60 years of age, had a ninth grade education and had no other skills or specialized training other than being a janitor.

On August 8,1980, the plaintiff filed suit against Rheems and its insurance carrier, The Home Indemnity Company (hereafter Home), claiming total disability compensation benefits plus penalties and attorney fees. Rheems and Home filed an answer admitting the employment and the injury but denying all other allegations of the petition.

Trial on the merits was had on April 10, 1981. At commencement of the trial, the parties stipulated that “medicals paid to date is $7,495.88; that compensation paid to date is $5,497.14.”1 Payments were made by Home. The plaintiff testified in person. Dr. Morris Fisher, the treating physician’s deposition dated January 7, 1981 was submitted in evidence by stipulation. The only other witness was Fadious Foret, a supervisory employee of Rheems and a friend of Barrios.

Barrios testified that he was naturally right handed, was hospitalized for about three weeks and had attempted to return to [864]*864work for the first time on November 26, 1980. He worked for about three months and then decided to leave (he stopped going to work three or four weeks before the trial) with the idea of taking five weeks of vacation and then retiring because he could not perform the work he was assigned to do without pain. Barrios stopped working after he was involved in an automobile accident in March, 1981. He sustained rib injuries in the accident and obtained medical treatment for the injuries. Barrios denies receiving any instructions from his doctor relative to the continuation of work after sustaining the rib injuries. He also testified that before the injury he had planned on retiring at 62 or 65, depending on how he felt. Barrios had worked for Rheems for thirty years and prior thereto had been a clerk in a grocery store and had worked at cleaning business machines. During the period Barrios returned to work, he would tape his fingers with bandaids. Nevertheless, blood blisters would form on the “nubs” of the amputated fingers.

Mr. Fadious Foret, an employee of Rheems and a personal friend of Barrios, testified that when Barrios returned to work, he assigned him to all types of work, except the operation of the heavy press on which he was injured, and instructed Barrios to inform him if he could not perform the work. At no time did he receive a complaint from Barrios about his ability to perform the assigned work. He stated, however, that Barrios had talked to Rheem about stopping work and retiring before he was injured in the automobile accident.

Dr. Fisher had last seen Barrios on December 20, 1980. When first seen by him, Barrios had “severe tissue destruction on the second and third fingers of the right hand and a crushed fracture of the distal end of the right thumb.” He amputated the second and third fingers and repaired the remainder of the hand. Dr. Fisher described the injuries when he last saw Barrios as follows:

“He had limited motion in the right thumb, which had a fracture when he originally got injured. The amputated fingers, the second and third fingers, were healing satisfactorily. They were still tender and still swollen. So he was having pain in the three fingers he had injured. In the other two fingers there was limited extreme motion of the fingers due to some swelling of the fingers, which I’m sure was just a reaction to the healing from the injury he sustained.”

He testified that Barrios was not on pain medication at the time of his last visit and that he considered Barrios’ anatomical disability as:

“... he has loss of the two fingers and right now I would estimate 35% permanent disability of that right hand.”

As to Barrios’ functional disability, Dr. Fisher believed that he would never be able to lift heavy objects with his right hand, but in time would be in a position to lift light objects, but could never return to operating the press he was working on at the time of the injury.

The trial judge concluded Barrios was totally disabled and awarded compensation benefits as such, together with penalties and attorney fees. The defendants have appealed. In brief here, they do not contest the trial judge’s ruling of total disability but strenuously argue that penalties and attorney fees should not have been awarded, or alternatively, the $5,000.00 award for attorney fees is excessive.

The disability benefit provisions of the workmen’s compensation statute, i.e., R.S. 23:1221(2) read as follows: [865]*865and R.S. 22:658 is the authority for assessing penalties and attorney fees against the insurer, where the insurer discontinues the payment of compensation benefits, and such failure is found to be arbitrary, capricious and without probable cause.

[864]*864“Compensation shall be paid under this Chapter in accordance with the following schedule of payments:
(2) For injury producing permanent total disability of an employee to engage in any gainful occupation for wages, whether or not the same or a similar occupation as that in which the employee was customarily engaged when injured and whether or not an occupation for which the employee, at the time of injury was particularly fitted by reason of education, training and experience, 66 and % percen-tum of wages during the period of such disability.”

[865]*865The crucial question here was whether Barrios’ impairment disabled him from “engaging in any gainful occupation for wages” within the meaning of R.S. 23:1221(2). As observed by the trial judge in his reasons for judgment, since the supreme court decision in Oster v. Wetzel Printing Inc., 390 So.2d 1318 (La.1980), the answer to the question is to be determined by application of the “odd-lot” doctrine.

Justice Dennis, in the Oster case, supra, at page 1323 and page 1324 stated the criteria for application of the “odd-lot” doctrine as follows:

“In order to determine whether the plaintiff fits within this category of odd-lot workers, he must show that because of his physical impairment, mental capacity, education, training, age, availability of employment in his area, and any other relevant factor, that he “cannot perform the substantial and material parts of some gainful work or occupation with reasonable continuity.” Reese v. Preston Marketing Assoc., 274 Minn. 150, 142 N.W.2d 721, 723 (1966). If the plaintiff is successful in showing a combination of factors indicating that the services which he is able to render are so limited in quality, quantity, or dependability that a market for his labor does not exist within which he can effectively compete, he has presented a prima facie case for classification in the odd-lot category. An offering of such proof by the plaintiff, therefore, satisfies his burden of proving that he should be awarded benefits for permanent and total disability.

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Related

Bowman v. F. Christiana and Co., Inc.
553 So. 2d 971 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1989)
Barrios v. Rheem Manufacturing Co.
414 So. 2d 379 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
410 So. 2d 862, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 6815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrios-v-rheem-manufacturing-co-lactapp-1982.