Courville v. Omni Drilling
This text of 676 So. 2d 861 (Courville v. Omni Drilling) 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
Mickey J. COURVILLE, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
OMNI DRILLING, Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*862 W. Glenn Soileau, for Mickey J. Courville.
David Keith Johnson, Baton Rouge, for Omni Drilling.
Before COOKS, WOODARD, AMY, SULLIVAN and GREMILLION, JJ.
WOODARD, Judge.
The worker's compensation administrative hearing officer awarded the plaintiff-appellee, Mickey J. Courville, Supplemental Earnings Benefits (SEB) and penalties and attorney fees. The defendants-appellants, Omni Drilling and Louisiana Worker's Compensation Corporation (LWCC), appeal that decision. We amend and affirm.
FACTS
Courville was an employee of Omni in the course and scope of his employment when he was injured on September 28, 1994. He was provided with medical care and properly paid temporary total disability (TTD) worker's *863 compensation benefits from September 28, 1994, through March 9, 1995. Courville's indemnity benefits were then terminated and he filed this claim. After a hearing on the matter, the hearing officer ruled that Courville was entitled to temporary total disability September 28, 1994, through March 15, 1995, supplemental earnings benefits (SEB) March 16, 1995, through June 30, 1995, and to payment of all medical bills, medication expenses, and transportation expenses attributable to the accident of September 28, 1994. The hearing officer also concluded that LWCC had been arbitrary and capricious in refusing to pay SEB to Courville after March 9, 1995, and assessed it $2,000 in penalties and $2,000 in attorney fees.
The defendants have appealed that decision. The plaintiff, although submitting a brief, has neither appealed in his own right nor answered the defendants' appeal.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Defendants assign two errors: (1) that the hearing officer was manifestly erroneous in awarding SEB after March 9, 1995, because Courville failed to produce any evidence of disability beyond that date, or, alternatively, that the hearing officer erred in awarding SEB based upon a zero earnings basis; and (2) that the hearing officer manifestly erred in awarding penalties and attorney fees on the ground that the defendants were arbitrary and capricious in terminating Courville's indemnity benefits.
LAW & ARGUMENT
The scope of appellate review for worker's compensation cases is the same as that which is applicable to district court findings. The hearing officer's findings of fact are not to be set aside by the court of appeal unless those findings are clearly wrong/manifestly erroneous in light of the record reviewed in its entirety. Alexander v. Pellerin Marble & Granite, 93-1698 (La.1/14/94); 630 So.2d 706. The reviewing court must give great weight to the trier of fact's factual conclusions, and reasonable evaluations of credibility and reasonable inferences of fact should not be disturbed, even if the appellate court believes its own evaluations and inferences are as reasonable. Bruno v. Harbert Intern. Inc., 593 So.2d 357 (La.1992); Frelow v. Mills, 94-799 (La.App. 3 Cir. 12/7/94); 647 So.2d 475, writ denied, 95-65 (La. 3/10/95); 650 So.2d 1180.
ENTITLEMENT TO SEB
We cannot say that the hearing officer erred in concluding that Courville was entitled to supplemental earnings benefits. To be entitled to SEB, the claimant bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that his work-related injury prevents him from earning wages equal to 90% or more of his wages at the time of his injury. La.R.S. 23:1221(3); Smith v. Louisiana Dept. of Corrections, 93-1305 (La. 2/28/94); 633 So.2d 129; Woolley v. CAS Refining, Inc., 94-648 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1/11/95); 651 So.2d 860, writ denied, 95-1158 (La. 6/16/95); 655 So.2d 331. An analysis of the facts and circumstances of the particular case is employed, the court keeping in mind the tenet that worker's compensation law is to be liberally construed in favor of coverage. Smith, 633 So.2d 129. In determining whether the claimant is entitled to SEB, the court must weigh all evidence, medical and lay, to determine if the claimant has met his burden of proof. Woolley, 651 So.2d 860. Once the employee meets his burden of proof, the employer then has to show that the employee is physically able to perform a certain job and that the job was offered to the employee, or was available to the employee, within the employee's or employer's community or reasonable geographic region. La. R.S. 23:1221(3)(c)(i); Smith, 633 So.2d 129.
In the instant case, LWCC terminated Courville's worker's compensation payments based on a medical release, dated March 8, 1995, by Dr. Steven J. Snatic, Courville's treating physician. However, the hearing officer specifically found that Dr. Snatic had not released Courville to return to work without restriction until June 21, 1995; the release was conditioned upon Courville being allowed to take medication while working, which Omni forbade. Thus, LWCC should not have terminated the payments based on the March 8 release.
*864 Defendants stand their ground on a literal, narrow, out of context reading of Dr. Snatic's release of March 8, 1995, which simply noted in longhand on a prescription pad slip that "Mr. Courville is allowed to return to work at full duty." However, Dr. Snatic forwarded to LWCC a copy of a letter dated March 2, 1995, that he had written to Dr. Warren Degatur, Courville's family physician, which should have put LWCC on notice that Courville was not being released without restriction. That letter read, in pertinent part, as follows: "My intention is for Mickey to return to work with medication if that will be allowed by his employer. If his employer will not allow him to return to work with medication, we may have a problem that cannot be successfully handled medically." Hence, Dr. Snatic had clearly informed LWCC that Courville's release was to be contingent. Courville has stated that Omni would not allow him to return to work until he was released without restrictions, and Omni has never denied Courville's statement. The defendants microscopically dwell on the March 8 release as if that were the only opinion by Dr. Snatic, and the only medical, on record. The hearing officer, however, found that the medical evidence "overwhelmingly preponderates in favor of the claimant." The defendants' only evidentiary challenge to this is, again, the release of March 8. Clearly, the treating physician, Dr. Snatic thought that Courville had not completely recovered, because he did not unconditionally release him to return to work until June 21. Too, while insisting that Courville was offered a job by Omni, the defendants are careful not to state that the job was offered with the stipulation that Courville could take medication while on that job. Omni and LWCC never directly answer whether Courville would have been allowed to perform the employment, supposedly offered him, while under medication; and if Omni would have allowed him to perform that employment while under medication, whether he could have done so safely. The worker's compensation claimant seeking SEB does not have to accept employment that involves appreciable and significant risk to his well-being. Id. Working without needed prescribed medication could very well have involved such a risk, and, depending on the job, working under the influence of needed medication could have also involved a risk. The defendants never attempted to clarify those two points.
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676 So. 2d 861, 1996 WL 382259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courville-v-omni-drilling-lactapp-1996.