Daugherty v. Domino's Pizza

674 So. 2d 947, 1996 WL 266576
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 21, 1996
Docket95-C-1394
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 674 So. 2d 947 (Daugherty v. Domino's Pizza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daugherty v. Domino's Pizza, 674 So. 2d 947, 1996 WL 266576 (La. 1996).

Opinion

674 So.2d 947 (1996)

Edward L. DAUGHERTY
v.
DOMINO'S PIZZA and Zurich-American Insurance Company.

No. 95-C-1394.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

May 21, 1996.

*948 Kenneth Ray Williams, Baton Rouge, for Applicant.

Robert Michael Caldwell, Baton Rouge, Moore, Walters & Shoenfelt, for Respondent.

KIMBALL, Justice.[*]

ISSUE

We granted writs in this worker's compensation case to determine whether an employer's offer of a light-duty job at a location which the claimant is unable to reach due to physical restrictions existing as a result of his work related injury satisfies the employer's burden under La.R.S. 23:1221(3)(c)(i) and allows for a reduction in the claimant's supplemental earnings benefits. Because the evidence in this case indicates the claimant's work related injury resulted in his physical inability to drive more than a short distance from his home, we hold that the offering of a light-duty job 30 miles from his home does not satisfy the employer's burden of showing available employment in the employee's community or reasonable geographic region.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On November 21, 1988, Edward L. Daugherty, a Domino's employee who drove tractor-trailer trucks delivering supplies to Domino's stores, injured his lower back lifting a pallet of heavy boxes while making a delivery. Subsequently, Dr. Anthony Ioppolo, a neurosurgeon, diagnosed a lumbar disc rupture at L4 and, on December 5, 1988, performed surgery on Mr. Daugherty wherein he repaired ruptures at L4 and L5 and performed disc excisions and foraminotomies on both the L4 and L5 discs. Based upon Mr. Daugherty's average pre-accident weekly wage, Domino's paid Mr. Daugherty $267.00 per week in temporary total disability benefits, the maximum rate, from late November, 1988, through June 12, 1989.

On June 12, 1989, following post-operative recovery and improvement in his condition, Dr. Ioppolo released Mr. Daugherty to return to light-duty work with a restriction on any heavy lifting. Domino's offered claimant a light-duty desk job at the same Baton Rouge facility in which he had previously worked, and claimant accepted the position and began working there for $7.65 per *949 hour. However, Mr. Daugherty, who lived in Baker, Louisiana, testified that he soon began to have spasms in his left leg while driving the thirty mile distance from his home to the Domino's facility in Baton Rouge. Mr. Daugherty therefore would work at the facility for several hours a day for two or three days in a row (occasionally four or five days in a row), and then have to take a day or two off due to the spasms induced by the lengthy drive. Based on Mr. Daugherty's pay rate of $7.65 per hour for an average of 3.25 hours per day, five days per week, Domino's discontinued Mr. Daugherty's temporary total disability benefits on June 12, 1989, and began paying him $200.67 per week in supplemental earnings benefits.

During the months of June, July, and August, 1989, Mr. Daugherty worked intermittently, as described above, at the Domino's facility in Baton Rouge. Mr. Daugherty testified that despite suffering occasional spasms in his left leg, he was able to perform the light-duty work assigned to him at the facility. However, both Mr. Daugherty's testimony and the deposition testimony of Dr. Iopollo show that during this period Mr. Daugherty suffered from spasms in his left leg while driving between his home in Baker and the Domino's facility in Baton Rouge which, in Mr. Daugherty's opinion, made his driving dangerous as he was unable to fully control his vehicle during the spasms. During this same period, Dr. Ioppolo examined Mr. Daugherty several times, finding a grade one spondylolisthesis at L5-S1, which had existed prior to Mr. Daugherty's surgery, and post-operative changes with mild fibrosis. Due to Mr. Daugherty's complaints of back pain and leg spasms, Dr. Ioppolo prescribed pain medication and a corset.

On August 3, 1989, Alexis Risk Management, Domino's adjustor, referred Mr. Daugherty to Dr. Dulligan for a current status evaluation. Dr. Dulligan's report notes continued post-operative back and leg pain with left leg spasms and comments on Mr. Daugherty's noticeable difficulty in sitting and bending. Dr. Dulligan's report also notes that his review of Mr. Daugherty's post-operative MRI scan shows a protrusion of the L5-S1, L4-5, and L3-4 discs. Dr. Dulligan also noted that various tests revealed weakness in Mr. Daugherty's left leg. Finally, Dr. Dulligan opined in his report that Mr. Daugherty was still suffering from nerve root irritation and, at least at that time, was certainly not a candidate for returning to work as a truck driver.

On August 28, 1989, after Mr. Daugherty returned to see Dr. Ioppolo and related to him that he was having back and left leg pain and was unable to continue working at the Domino's facility due to the spasms in his left leg which made his driving hazardous, Dr. Ioppolo again listed Mr. Daugherty as "disabled" and prescribed physical therapy. Despite the fact that Dr. Ioppolo had listed Mr. Daugherty as "disabled" and had prescribed physical therapy, Domino's continued to pay Mr. Daugherty's supplemental earnings benefits at the reduced $200.67 per week rate.

Mr. Daugherty attended physical therapy at a clinic near his home in Baker for approximately one month, then returned to Dr. Ioppolo on October 3, 1989, reporting no discernable differences in his condition. At this point, Dr. Ioppolo decided to do a myelogram and a CT scan of Mr. Daugherty's lower back. These tests showed the previously noted slippage between discs L5-S1, poor filling of the L5 left nerve root, epidural scarring, and no recurrent disc ruptures. Dr. Ioppolo placed Mr. Daugherty on a TENS unit and prescribed a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication. After Mr. Daugherty reported at a subsequent visit that he had obtained some relief through use of the TENS unit, Dr. Ioppolo recommended to Mr. Daugherty that he undergo a functional capacities assessment and a work-hardening program. Dr. Ioppolo also placed Mr. Daugherty on a muscle relaxant at this time.

On November 24, 1989, Mr. Daugherty underwent a functional capacities assessment at the Occupational Performance Center ("Center") in Baton Rouge. This assessment resulted in a recommendation that Mr. Daugherty undergo a weight loss program as well as a work hardening program designed to recondition muscles to ameliorate the pain in his lower back. The assessment also determined that Mr. Daugherty's functional *950 abilities did not correlate with the requirements of his former job, i.e., that due to his physical condition, he would not be able to return to his job at Domino's Pizza as a delivery truck driver.

Mr. Daugherty began the work hardening program at the Center in Baton Rouge, but was unable to complete the program for the same reason that he had been unable to continue working at the light-duty position at the Domino's Pizza facility in Baton Rouge— he continued to suffer from spasms in his left leg during the thirty mile drive from his home in Baker to the Center in Baton Rouge. In this regard, the evidence adduced at the compensation hearing shows that after complaining to Center personnel about the spasms in his leg and his concern as to his resultant driving ability, the Center placed his program on "hold" and referred him back to Dr. Ioppolo. When Mr. Daugherty went to see Dr. Ioppolo on December 12, 1989, Dr. Ioppolo discussed the matter with a therapist at the Center, instructed Mr.

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