Davis v. Home Depot
This text of 690 So. 2d 208 (Davis v. Home Depot) 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
Sherlena M. DAVIS
v.
The HOME DEPOT.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*209 John O. Braud, Brenda Braud, Independence, for Plaintiff/Appellant Sherlena M. Davis.
M. Blake Monrose, Lafayette, for Defendant/Appellee The Home Depot.
Before BOWES, GRISBAUM and CANNELLA, JJ.
BOWES, Judge.
Appellant, Ms. Sherlena Davis, appeals a judgment of the Office of Worker's Compensation, maintaining the exception of res judicata filed by her employer, Home Depot Inc. We reverse.
Ms. Davis filed a petition for worker's compensation benefits in 1994, alleging that she was disabled due to an accident suffered in the course and scope of her employment as head cashier at Home Depot. She averred that she injured her back while picking up heavy drawers from cash registers, and that she now suffers from two herniated discs in her back.
The employer responded with an exception of res judicata, alleging that a compromise agreement made in connection with an earlier accident in 1990 precluded the instant claim. The Administrative Law Judge sustained the exception. In an unpublished opinion, a panel of this Court reversed the decision and remanded the case, finding that the court had refused to consider all the medical evidence and that from the record then before the court, it did not appear that the trial judge's inquiry was sufficient.
Another hearing on the exception was held, at which time the claimant amended her petition to reflect an accident date of October 22, 1994. Following the hearing, the judge again sustained the exception of res judicata, and again, claimant appeals.
EVIDENCE AND TESTIMONY
Ms. Davis testified that she was injured on October 22, 1994 when she lifted up a cash drawer and felt a pain in her back. She further testified that she was insured under a disability insurance policy through Home Depot, with an effective date of October 1, 1994, and that the policy contained an exclusion for pre-existing conditions. Subsequent to the accident, she was ordered by that disability insurer to be examined by an independent medical examiner, Dr. Victor Chisesi; she is presently collecting under that policy. She testified further that she has been diagnosed as having herniated discs at L4-5 and L5-S1. Prior to October 22, 1994, she had never been diagnosed as having a herniated disc. Mrs. Davis was the only witness who testified. Admitted into evidence at the hearing were medical reports from her treating physician, Dr. Stuart Phillips, Dr. Chisesi, and Dr. Thor Borensen of the Culicchia Neurological Clinic.
On her petition, claimant does state that she was "re-injuried(sic) from 1990 (Oct.1994 see attached)." She also filed a handwritten *210 narrative explaining that she had been injured in September of 1990 and diagnosed as having a cervical and lumbar strain. She was restricted to light duty work and was a phone operator until November 1, 1993, when she was made a head cashier. In October, 1994 she went to Dr. Phillips to see about her low back pains and leg pain. She was put on light duty status, but her employer told her there was no light duty work and she would have to take medical leave. She stated that on her last visit to her doctor (Dr. Borensen) in August of 1993, prior to being made cashier, she was not having much significant pain and was doing well. However, in October of 1994 when she went to Dr. Phillips, she had back pain and muscle spasm. She was restricted to light duty only, and defendant put her back on cashier's duty.[1]
MEDICAL EVIDENCE
The medical report from Dr. Kishner of Gulf States Rehabilitation Associates contained in the record[2] states that as of August 9, 1993, claimant was not having any significant pain and "she is not really having many problems at all."
The report of Dr. Chisesi dated March 8, 1995, stated that Ms. Davis claimed to have injured her back lifting cash drawers at work. Regarding her former injury, the physician found that her past history included a lumbosacral strain "and she did well therefrom and recovered completely." Dr. Chisesi diagnosed a herniated disc at the L5-S1 level and recommended a laminectomy. He found her to be (temporarily) totally disabled.
The report of Dr. Borensen, dated January 15, 1993, stated that the claimant had suffered from cervical and lumbar strains in the 1990 accident. A mildly bulging disc, within normal limits, was found at the L5-S1 level in 1991 and at the time of the examination, claimant complained of chronic pain in her neck and low back, as well as severe headaches. Dr. Borensen felt that objectively, her injuries from that fall were trivial and that her pain had no underlying physical cause. In his opinion, there was a temporal relationship to the onset of her symptoms and her injury, although he felt that her underlying depression significantly contributed to the persistence of her symptoms.
The report of Dr. Phillips dated November 25,1994, relied upon by both the defendant and the trial court stated, in relevant part:
... [Claimant] has two bad discs, 4-5 and 5-1. They both reproduce the pain down into her leg. 3-4 is normal.
I went back over the history of this. This lady hurt her back. She had light duty until October 1993. When she went back to regular duty, she had recurrence of pain, so this is a continuum. She has never really had a significant symptom free episode, so she still has her problems from her original injury.
Dr. Phillips also recommended surgery and noted that a facet joint denervation did not work. Claimant was found to be totally disabled from heavy manual labor.
The compromise or settlement relied upon by the defendant as the basis for its exception was entered into between Ms. Davis and Home Depot as the result of an intervention, filed by the latter, in a third party tort suit between Ms. Davis and John Amato.[3] Claimant and defendant settled the workers compensation claim and reduced the settlement to judgment, which reads in pertinent part as follows:
IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the agreement of settlement and compromise contained in the foregoing Joint Petition be approved and made the judgment of the Court, and accordingly, it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that Home Depot, Inc, waive its legal interest in the sum of $42,138.65 representing its total intervention in plaintiff's third party tort suit, case no. 422-483; *211 and additionally pay to Sherlena Davis the sum of $14,000.00, $2000.00 of which constitutes attorney fees, in exchange for which and according to applicable law, Home Depot Inc. shall forever be discharged from any and all liability of Sherlena Davis under the Louisiana Worker's Compensation Act, which in any way relates or arises out of the accident and injury occurring on September 22, 1990, sustained while petitioner was employed by Home Depot, Inc., including any claims for past, present and future worker's compensation benefits and/or medical benefits, penalties or attorneys' fees, ...
Following the hearing on the present exception, the court took the matter under advisement and subsequently granted the exception of res judicata. In its reasons for judgement the trial court stated:
What puzzles this court is claimant's statements in her 1008, "re-injuries from 1990".
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
690 So. 2d 208, 1997 WL 78180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-home-depot-lactapp-1997.