Carla Sowell v. Process Equipment

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 7, 2007
DocketWCA-0006-1198
StatusUnknown

This text of Carla Sowell v. Process Equipment (Carla Sowell v. Process Equipment) 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
Carla Sowell v. Process Equipment, (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

06-1198

CARLA SOWELL

VERSUS

PROCESS EQUIPMENT

************

APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION, DISTRICT 2, PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 05-00452, JAMES L. BRADDOCK, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION JUDGE

MICHAEL G. SULLIVAN JUDGE

Court composed of John D. Saunders, Jimmie C. Peters, and Michael G. Sullivan, Judges.

AFFIRMED AS AMENDED.

M. Blake Monrose Hurlburt, Privat & Monrose Post Office Drawer 4407 Lafayette, Louisiana 70502-4407 (337) 237-0261 Counsel for Defendant/Appellant: Process Equipment

Edward A. Kaplan Attorney at Law Post Office Box 12386 Alexandria, Louisiana 71315 (318) 448-0831 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee: Carla Sowell SULLIVAN, Judge.

Process Equipment appeals a workers’ compensation judgment in favor of its

former employee, Carla Sowell. For the following reasons, we affirm as amended.

Discussion of the Record

Mrs. Sowell filed a disputed claim for compensation alleging that she was

injured on August 21, 2004, while setting up a monorail on a job for Process

Equipment in Florence, South Carolina. At trial, she described being knocked to the

floor on her right side when her co-employee, Wayne Johnson, “wiggled” a piece of

equipment that she was holding after the monorail became jammed. Mrs. Sowell’s

husband, Wayne Sowell, who was working at the same job site but on another level,

testified that he arrived on the scene just after Mrs. Sowell fell and while she was still

on the floor. Mr. Sowell stated that he heard a “bam-slam” as he was walking

upstairs and that, when he got to the top of the stairs, he saw Mr. Johnson kneeling

beside her on the floor. Mr. Sowell then described how he and Mr. Johnson helped

his wife up and sat her in front of a window, where she requested to stay for about ten

minutes. Mr. Johnson, however, denied that he witnessed Mrs. Sowell having an

accident on the job.

Mrs. Sowell testified that she reported the accident later that day to Jeff

Bowden, the job foreman, who was away from the site at the time of the accident, and

to Roger Land, the safety man on the night shift, but that no one mentioned anything

to her about filling out an accident report. Mr. Land testified that Mrs. Sowell

reported to him that she had hurt her back while working with Mr. Johnson, but that

she did not want to go to the doctor because she thought it was only a muscle strain.

Mr. Land then told her to report the accident to Mr. Bowden and to Mike Williamson,

the company’s safety director. According to Mr. Land, Mrs. Sowell later told him that she did report the accident to Mr. Bowden. Mr. Land also testified that he

assumed she had reported the accident to Mr. Williamson because at some point

Mr. Williamson called him about it, and Mr. Land told Mr. Williamson that

Mrs. Sowell told him that she hurt her back. However, both Mr. Bowden and

Mr. Williamson testified that they did not learn about the accident until after

Mrs. Sowell filed suit in January of 2005, and Mr. Williamson stated that Mr. Land

never told him that Mrs. Sowell had reported the accident to him.

After the accident, Mrs. Sowell continued to work on several jobs in other

states for Process Equipment, sometimes returning to her home in Jena, Louisiana,

between jobs. She first sought medical treatment on November 16, 2004, from

Dr. I. C. Turnley, Jr., reporting to him that she hurt her back two and a half months

earlier while pulling on a beam and has had pain since then. Dr. Turnley ordered an

MRI, which revealed marked spondylosis with discogenic and plate changes at L5-

S1; neural foraminal narrowing and facet hypertrophy bilateral at L5-S1 and right-

sided at L4-5, with clinical correlation for a right L4 and bilateral L5 radiculopathy

recommended; and a left paracentral disc bulge at L5-S1 contacting the left S1 nerve

root, with clinical correlation for left S1 radiculopathy recommended. Mrs. Sowell

was also seen by at least two other physicians, one at LSU Hospital in Shreveport,

Louisiana, and one at Huey P. Long Medical Center in Pineville, Louisiana, who

recommended physical therapy. She finally did begin a physical therapy program in

March of 2005, but that course was discontinued in April of 2005 after she reported

no significant change in pain and that some exercises “made her back pain worse.”

She testified that she is no longer able to work, as she cannot sit or stand very long

due to back and leg pain. She acknowledged that three years before the present

2 accident she reported to Dr. Turnley that she had low back pain for about a year, but

she also stated that she had never had this type of back pain before.

At the close of the evidence, the workers’ compensation judge (WCJ) found in

favor of Mrs. Sowell, awarding her supplemental earnings benefits (SEB) at the

maximum compensation rate and on a zero-earnings basis, $4,000.00 in penalties for

the failure to pay indemnity benefits and medical expenses, and $5,000.00 in attorney

fees.

Work-Related Injury

In its first assignment of error, Process Equipment argues that the WCJ erred

in finding that Mrs. Sowell was injured in the course and scope of her employment,

given that her co-employee, Mr. Johnson, denied that an accident occurred and that

Mrs. Sowell continued to work and did not seek medical treatment for nearly three

months after the accident.

In oral reasons, the WCJ stated that he found corroboration of Mrs. Sowell’s

accident in the testimony of Mr. Land, who stated that she reported the accident to

him and that he later told this to Mr. Williamson; in the testimony of her husband,

who saw her on the floor with Mr. Johnson kneeling beside her; and in the medical

records of Dr. Turnley, who recorded that Mrs. Sowell reported hurting her back

about two and a half months previously while pulling on a beam. In making these

credibility determinations, the WCJ specifically noted the conflict in the testimony

of Mr. Land and Mr. Williamson, in that Mr. Land stated that he told Mr. Williamson

that Mrs. Sowell reported the accident to him, whereas Mr. Williamson denied that

Mr. Land ever told him that the accident had been reported to him. The WCJ also

found that any inconsistent statements regarding Mrs. Sowell’s prior back problems

3 were insignificant, considering that there was no evidence of any medical care for

those problems and that Mrs. Sowell continued to work for Process Equipment during

that time.

In Dean v. Southmark Construction, 03-1051, p. 7 (La. 7/6/04), 879 So.2d 112,

117 (citations omitted), the supreme court discussed the standard of review in

workers’ compensation cases as follows:

In worker’s compensation cases, the appropriate standard of review to be applied by the appellate court to the OWC’s findings of fact is the “manifest error-clearly wrong” standard. Accordingly, the findings of the OWC will not be set aside by a reviewing court unless they are found to be clearly wrong in light of the record viewed in its entirety. Where there is conflict in the testimony, reasonable evaluations of credibility and reasonable inferences of fact should not be disturbed upon review, even though the appellate court may feel that its own evaluations and inferences are as reasonable.

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