Billington v. General Motors Corp.
This text of 728 So. 2d 966 (Billington v. General Motors Corp.) 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.
Opinion
Yvonne BILLINGTON, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*967 Wallace & Long by William R. Long, Shreveport, Counsel for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Lunn, Irion, Johnson, Salley & Carlisle by Julia A. Mann, Shreveport, Counsel for Defendant-Appellee.
Before NORRIS, STEWART and CARAWAY, JJ.
NORRIS, Chief Judge.
The claimant, Yvonne Billington, appeals a judgment rejecting her demand for worker's compensation weekly benefits and awarding only one post-accident doctor visit. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.
Factual background
Ms. Billington was employed at the General Motors Shreveport plant as a line worker earning $18.23 an hour. In December 1995 she was transferred to the cruise control line. Line workers install cruise control manually, but may use a "battery gun" or air tool to screw in the end cap. Ms. Billington is right handed.
On December 19, she reported to the medical department[1] that she had sustained an acute sprain or strain to her left hand over a week earlier, on December 11. The Union representative referred her to an orthopedist, Dr. J.E. Smith. Ms. Billington went to see Dr. Smith, again describing an injury to her left hand. Dr. Smith gave her antiinflammatories and felt she could resume work. Two days later, however, GM started its Christmas shut-down, and Ms. Billington's last day of work was December 22. To this point, her complaints to both the medical department and to Dr. Smith concerned her left hand.
One day before she was to return to work, Ms. Billington underwent an EMG and nerve conduction study from Dr. Jerry Smith (Dr. J.E. Smith's son). These tests found nothing wrong with her left hand, but "possible early carpal tunnel syndrome" in the right hand. Dr. J.E. Smith released her to resume work the next day, as scheduled, but restricted her from various right hand activities: repetitive motion, pushing and pulling, and use of power tools. He admitted, however, that she had not complained of any pain or discomfort in her right hand.
*968 The next day, January 4, 1996, Ms. Billington went to the medical department and filled out an employee's report.[2] This again referred to an accident of December 11, stating that she had to "shot [sic] a gun in the right hand," but not saying which hand she actually injured. She never returned to work; her supervisor testified that there are "no one-arm jobs at GM." On January 10, GM's comp coordinator filed an Employer's Report[3] with LDOL, stating that Ms. Billington's work was "connecting cruise control" and she was injured by "grasping."
Later, on January 14, Ms. Billington filed a claim for sickness and disability benefits with GM's health insurer, Met Life.[4] Here she wrote that she was disabled because there were no jobs within her work restriction; she has to use a 20-lb. torque gun with her right hand. She began collecting on this policy effective January 9; these payments exceeded her comp rate, and GM never paid her anything designated as comp. To this point, none of the claim documents (exhibits "G," "H" or "I") mentioned any injury to Ms. Billington's right hand.
On January 31, Ms. Billington returned to Dr. Smith and complained, for the first time, of "tingling in the right hand in the morning, with pain." Dr. Smith gave her splints to wear at night. By May, he testified, she was "doing well, in some pain," but the pain was "not debilitating." He scheduled a carpal tunnel decompression, but GM denied this for comp. Feeling another opinion was needed, Dr. Smith referred her to Dr. John Knight of the Louisiana Hand and Upper Extremity Institute.
Ms. Billington did not see Dr. Knight until November 21, 1996, telling him that she started having problems with "her hands," including numbness and tingling of "all digits," in December 1995. Dr. Knight recorded her current complaint of pain in the left wrist, and numbness and tingling in both hands. He found no motor weakness, normal wrist motion, and slight instability in the left wrist only (which he attributed to a possible ligament tear). He conducted a nerve percussion test which found carpal tunnel syndrome in both wrists. He recommended surgery to the left wrist to repair the ligament tear and to decompress the median nerve; this should be followed, a month or so later, by surgery to the right wrist.
GM did not approve these operations for comp. Ms. Billington filed the instant disputed claim in December 1996. She alleged that repetitive work on the production line caused her carpal tunnel syndrome.
In a discovery deposition, she agreed that all her initial complaints concerned acute pain in the left hand, and that she did not mention right hand pain until Dr. Smith diagnosed possible carpal tunnel syndrome. At trial, however, Ms. Billington testified that her pain was in the right hand all along, and insisted that she had reported right hand pain to Drs. Smith and Knight. Cross examined about this inconsistency, she stated she could not remember giving that deposition testimony. She also could not explain why her Accident/Illness report, Employee's Report of occupational injury, and claim for Sickness and Accident benefits, all submitted within one month of the onset, failed to mention any pain in her right hand. Ms. Billington did not dispute GM records showing that she made three comp claims in 1995, that she had been transferred often, and that at the time of the instant claim she was on the verge of discipline for poor job performance.
The WCJ ruled from the bench that Ms. Billington's testimony was "wholly inadequate to establish anything." The WCJ cited her "subjective exaggerations and her inability to provide a consistent reliable history," along with her all-too-frequent lapses of memory, as damaging her credibility. The WCJ accepted the affirmative diagnosis of carpal tunnel syndrome, but concluded it was not disabling: Dr. Smith explicitly said the condition was "not debilitating," and Dr. Knight felt it was "not that bad," while Ms. *969 Billington's post-diagnosis complaints were undermined by her credibility deficit and by the fact that she "repeatedly and continually through 1995 tried to find reasons to get off work and get benefits." The WCJ therefore denied the claim for disability benefits, awarded only Dr. Smith's initial post-injury examination, and rejected the claim for penalties and attorney fees.
Applicable law
A claimant is entitled to temporary, total disability ("TTD") benefits if she sustains a work-related injury producing temporary total disability to engage in any self-employment or occupation for wages. R.S. 23:1221(1)(a). When the claimant is not working, she must prove by clear and convincing evidence, unaided by any presumption of disability, that she is physically unable to engage in any employment or self-employment. R.S. 23:1221(1)(c). To prove a matter by clear and convincing evidence means to "demonstrate that the existence of a disputed fact is highly probable, that is, much more probable than its nonexistence." Mitchell v. A T & T, 27,290 (La.App. 2 Cir. 8/28/95), 660 So.2d 204, writ denied 95-2474 (La.12/15/95), 664 So.2d 456, and citations therein.
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728 So. 2d 966, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 349, 1999 WL 92892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billington-v-general-motors-corp-lactapp-1999.