Cormier v. Save-Time, Inc.
This text of 497 So. 2d 404 (Cormier v. Save-Time, 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.
Opinion
Cynthia Ann CORMIER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SAVE-TIME, INC., Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*405 Cox, Cox and Townsley, Rex D. Townsley and James J. Cox, Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellant.
Daniel K. Rester, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellee.
Before DOMENGEAUX, YELVERTON and KNOLL, JJ.
YELVERTON, Judge.
This is a worker's compensation appeal by the plaintiff, Cynthia Ann Cormier, from a judgment of the trial court holding that she had failed to prove disability beyond May 11, 1984, and dismissing her claim for penalties and attorney's fees. We affirm the finding that the disability had ceased, but we reverse the denial of an award of penalties and attorney's fees. We find that the failure of the employer to initially commence benefits within the statutory time was arbitrary and capricious.
Plaintiff, a 25 year old, unmarried mother of two children was working for Save-Time, Inc., as a clerk at a convenience store in Vinton, Louisiana, when on August 26, 1982, she suffered a back injury while lifting a case of cold drinks in a beverage cooler. She reported the accident and was given authorization to see a doctor. She saw Dr. Allen C. Richert on August 27 and on August 30 he told her she could go back to work but to avoid heavy lifting.
Returning to work on August 31, she worked for three days and up to the middle of her shift on the fourth day, then left the job because of pain.
She returned to Dr. Richert and was hospitalized at West Calcasieu-Cameron Hospital from September 10 to September 14. During this hospitalization an orthopedist in consultation with Dr. Richert diagnosed a moderate thoracic back strain. Following the hospitalization, Dr. Richert treated her with ultrasound for three days in the latter part of September. She saw Dr. Jerome Ambrister twice in late September *406 and early October 1982, and he diagnosed a dorsal sprain from which he felt plaintiff should recover in not more than ten weeks.
On November 1, 1982, Save-Time, Inc. received a letter from plaintiff's attorney making demand for worker's compensation benefits.
Plaintiff went to see Dr. Dean Moore, a neurosurgeon, on November 10, 1982. She complained of low back pain and he found moderate paravertebral muscle spasm in the lumbar region resulting in limitation of motion of the back. He hospitalized her for five days in November for physical therapy, bed rest, and traction. He diagnosed a lumbar strain with nerve root irritation.
A medical report dated November 10, 1982, from Dr. Moore finding a herniated disc was forwarded to defendant as soon as that letter became available.
Dr. Moore continued to treat the plaintiff for the next two years. In 1983, after he had reached the conclusion based on early objective tests and her continuing subjective symptoms that she had a herniated disc, he caused a myelogram to be run. This myelogram, done on April 7, 1983, did not confirm a herniated disc so he recommended a diskogram. Plaintiff refused the diskogram. Other tests were normal.
Plaintiff returned several times in late 1983 and early in 1984 complaining of headaches, as well as low back pain. Dr. Moore continued to recommend a diskogram which the patient continued to refuse. At her last visit to him on August 22, 1984, he again recommended a diskogram, and plaintiff again refused. On this occasion plaintiff was complaining about her nerves and Dr. Moore suggested that he would be willing to set up a psychiatric examination for her, but the plaintiff did not pursue this suggestion.
At the trial of the case on May 30, 1985, Dr. Moore testified that he was still of the opinion that plaintiff had a ruptured disc, but to a question from the trial court he gave the following response:
"When I've checked her she's had positive clinical findings to indicate a ruptured disc, but nothing test wise had backed that up."
He testified that he was basing this diagnosis and his opinion regarding her disability solely on her present subjective complaints of pain.
On November 29, 1982, the plaintiff's petition for worker's compensation benefits was filed. Defendant filed an answer to this lawsuit on December 14, 1982, denying all liability.
The defendant began to pay compensation benefits on January 4, 1983, and paid the first medical bills on January 26 of that year. Thereafter, defendant paid most of the medical bills and paid weekly benefits in the amount of $93.32 up until May 11, 1984, when it discontinued the payment of benefits. Defendant acknowledged at the trial that its discontinuance of benefits on May 11, 1984, was done because that was the date it learned plaintiff had refused to take a diskogram.
The defendant's explanation of the delay in making the initial payment of benefits raises three main defenses. First, the demand notice did not comply with the technical notice procedure outlined in LSA-R.S. 23:1293 and 1294, in effect at the time of this accident. Second, the employer did not receive notice of plaintiff's proof of disability until three months after the accident, therefore the 60 days did not begin to run until then. Third, Save-Time, Inc. declared that once it received Dr. Moore's report it forwarded everything to the insurance company believed to be its worker's compensation insurer, and relied on the insurance company to do the rest, only to learn that it was not covered for worker's compensation insurance.
The trial court, ruling from the bench following the trial on the merits, held that plaintiff had not proved any disability beyond May 11, 1984, and rejected her claim for weekly benefits. The court denied penalties and attorney's fees. The court awarded $1,096.62 in unpaid medical expenses.
*407 Determination of Benefits
Although the employer admittedly stopped the payment of benefits on May 11, 1984, solely because of the refusal of the plaintiff to undergo a diskogram test, which Dr. Moore thought would reveal whether or not the plaintiff suffered a herniated disc, and although the trial court in its reasons for judgment rejecting plaintiff's demand held that it would not award plaintiff benefits beyond May 11, 1984, our appreciation of the trial court's reasons for judgment is that the trial court did not thereby sanction the discontinuance of benefits for the failure of the plaintiff to undergo that test. The real reason why the trial court rejected plaintiff's demand for benefits beyond May 11, 1984, implicit in its reasons for judgment, was that plaintiff had ceased being eligible for benefits at some indefinite but considerable time before May 11, 1984. In other words, what the court was saying was that the defendant was justified in terminating benefits on May 11, 1984, because plaintiff was not disabled as of that date and had not been disabled for some considerable time before that date.
The trial court in its oral reasons for judgment emphasized that the inconsistencies and lack of truthfulness in plaintiff's testimony caused him to be convinced that she had long ago stopped suffering from any disability caused by this accident. When the question is credibility the trial court's vantage point in assessing the witnesses is superior to our own. Childs v. Zurich American Ins. Co., 476 So.2d 403 (La.App. 2nd Cir.1985), writ denied, 479 So.2d 920 (La.1985). Great weight is afforded to the findings of the trial court with regard to the credibility of the plaintiff in a worker's compensation suit. Kilgore v.
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497 So. 2d 404, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 8046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cormier-v-save-time-inc-lactapp-1986.