Cline v. St. Jude Medical Center, Inc.

619 So. 2d 712, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 1965, 1993 WL 177962
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1993
Docket92-CA-1775
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 619 So. 2d 712 (Cline v. St. Jude Medical Center, 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
Cline v. St. Jude Medical Center, Inc., 619 So. 2d 712, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 1965, 1993 WL 177962 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

619 So.2d 712 (1993)

Sylvia CLINE
v.
ST. JUDE MEDICAL CENTER, INC., et al.

No. 92-CA-1775.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

May 27, 1993.

Jerome Friedman, Thomas E. Stirewalt, Metairie, for plaintiff.

Teresa C. Leyva, Denis Paul Juge, Sutherland, Juge, Horack & Dwyer, New Orleans, for defendant.

Before BARRY, WARD and ARMSTRONG, JJ.

*713 ARMSTRONG, Judge.

This appeal arises out of a suit to recover worker's compensation benefits. The central issues presented for review are: (1) whether the trial court erred in awarding the maximum in supplemental earnings benefits (SEB); (2) whether the trial court erred in failing to award a complete credit for the total number of weeks of temporary total disability against the SEB obligation; (3) whether the trial court erred in refusing to award plaintiff, Sylvia Cline, penalties; and (4) whether plaintiff is entitled to an award of attorney's fees for this appeal.

Plaintiff, a nurse, was injured on August 29, 1987 while lifting a patient from the floor. At the time of her injury she was working in the course and scope of her employment with defendant, St. Jude Medical Center ("St. Jude"). She immediately felt a severe pain in her lower back radiating down her right leg into her foot. The trial court, in its Reasons For Judgment, summarized plaintiff's course of treatment as follows:

Immediately upon her [plaintiff's] injury she requested and was given medication for pain by doctors at her place of employment. She finished the work day (she states that she had no choice but to do so) and went home to bed. The following work day she went to see Dr. Robert Mimeles, an orthopedic surgeon, which began a lengthy and detailed course of diagnosis and treatment by an array of medical professionals.
Dr. Mimeles first saw Cline [plaintiff] on September 4, 1987. After taking a history and performing an orthopedic exam, he noted indications of a pinched nerve and prescribed muscle relaxers and anti-inflammatories. He then saw her several more times, each time noting that she suffered from severe pain in her lower back with pain radiating down her left leg, in her left buttock, with tingling in her fingers of the left hand and numbness in her left foot.
Finding no success from the medication and physical therapy, Dr. Mimeles recommended that Cline be hospitalized for tests, including a myelogram. Cline refused to undergo a myelogram, professing an allergy to the iodine used in that procedure. However, she was admitted to East Jefferson Hospital on September 29, and an MRI, CAT Scan, bone scan and EMG nerve conduction study were performed. She was discharged on October 3.
Dr. Mimeles testified, via deposition, that none of these tests revealed nerve root compression and that his diagnosis was soft tissue sprain. The MRI, in his opinion, showed a slight bulging of the L# -4 space which is evidence of dehydration, a normal aging process, and not the cause of her back pain. He found no evidence of herniation, no obvious mechanical derangement caused by this injury, and no pressure on the neural elements in her back.
He found no long range disability and stated that she could be released back to work based on the results of the testing done. In terms of further diagnosis, he testified that the only thing further that could be done was a lumbar myelogram, which Cline refused, and he suggested that she seek a second opinion.
For this second opinion Cline saw Dr. John D. Jackson, a neurosurgeon, who had performed a laminectomy and discectomy on her in 1975.[1] She first saw Dr. Jackson on October 16, 1987, performed a neurological exam, and reviewed the test results from her hospitalization. Dr. Jackson found no disc herniation but, rather, degenerative changes, and thought that she had an excellent chance of recovery through conservative treatment. He recommended physical therapy rather than surgery, and suggested that Cline lose weight.
Dr. Jackson saw Cline on two subsequent occasions; December 14, 1987, and January 14, 1988, at which time Cline complained that the pain was worse. Dr. *714 Jackson suggested that she undergo a myelogram, which she refused. Dr. Jackson released her to work and he has not seen her since that January visit.
According to Cline's testimony, she then saw a Dr. Natal at Tulane Medical Center, who referred her to Charity Hospital because of her financial situation. She then saw Dr. Charles Billings, then Dr. Whitecloud, then she went back to Dr. Billings. Neither Dr. Natal or Dr. Whitecloud testified at this trial.
Dr. Billings, an orthopedic surgeon, testified that he first saw Cline on April 15, 1988, as a referral by Dr. Montisherri, a neurosurgeon (whose testimony was also not offered at trial). Dr. Billings took a history, performed an orthopedic exam, and reviewed the previous diagnostic tests.
Contrary to the other medical testimony, Dr. Billings found that the MRI showed significant disc herniation at the L3-4 level. He diagnosed post-traumatic lumbar disc and joint disease, recommended further diagnostic studies, and prescribed pain relievers and anti-inflammatories. Dr. Billings saw Cline several times between the initial examination and December, 1988, each time noting her complaints of persistent pain.
Dr. Billings opined that, "... repeat lumbar spine surgery would probably represent the best means of rehabilitation because of the persistent complaint of pain." He made this determination based upon the persistence of pain despite the conservative measures taken and the physical findings of her condition. He recommended a lumbar discectomy and fusion and found her chances of recovering to be slim without surgery.
However, Cline refused the hospitalization for a proposed myelogram and surgery, and no other actions were taken by Dr. Billings. He did find that she was disabled from full-time nursing, but did not prohibit her from light duty.
Also testifying through deposition was Dr. Robert Applebaum, a neurosurgeon, who first saw Cline on June 8, 1988. He performed a neurological examination and reviewed her previous records and found, "moderate mechanical findings compatible with nerve root irritation." He examined her on three subsequent occasions, and made the same findings each time.
Dr. Applebaum found Cline to be a candidate for further diagnostic studies, including a myelogram followed by a CAT scan and would recommend surgery if the tests indicated a rupture. He testified that, based on her history, there is a 50-50 chance that Cline has a ruptured disc. He based this opinion on the nerve root irritation shown by the clinical evidence, and her poor response to conservative treatment.
Post-trial, with leave of court, the deposition of Dr. Harold Stokes was taken and admitted into evidence. Dr. Stokes, an orthopedic surgeon, saw Cline at the request of the Defendants on three occasions, the first on June 20, 1988. He found that her complaints were consistent with lumbar degenerative disc disease, and that it was necessary to do a myelogram to "clear the air" on the suggestion of herniation at the L3-4 level.
In connection with the second examination conducted on March 12, 1990, Dr. Stokes formulated the opinion that Cline was suffering from a lumbar disc.

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Bluebook (online)
619 So. 2d 712, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 1965, 1993 WL 177962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cline-v-st-jude-medical-center-inc-lactapp-1993.