Donald Tanks v. Cb&i, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 2019
DocketWCA-0019-0369
StatusUnknown

This text of Donald Tanks v. Cb&i, Inc. (Donald Tanks v. Cb&i, 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
Donald Tanks v. Cb&i, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

19-369

DONALD TANKS

VERSUS

CB&I, INC., ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION, DISTRICT 3 PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 18-00674 DIANNE M. MAYO, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION JUDGE

PHYLLIS M. KEATY JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Phyllis M. Keaty, and D. Kent Savoie, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Tobin James Eason Kenneth B. Givens Weiss & Eason, L.L.P. Post Office Box 8597 Mandeville, Louisiana 70470 (985) 626-5358 Counsel for Defendants/Appellants: CB&I, Inc. XL Specialty Insurance Company

Gregory S. Unger Workers’ Compensation, LLC 3045 Ridgelake Drive, Suite 201 Metairie, Louisiana 70002 (504) 838-8811 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee: Donald Tanks KEATY, Judge.

The employer, CB&I, and its workers’ compensation insurer, XL Specialty

Insurance Company (collectively CB&I), appeal a judgment rendered in favor of the

claimant, Donald Tanks, on the grounds that the Workers’ Compensation Judge

(WCJ) erred in failing to find that Tanks forfeited his claim for benefits by being

untruthful on his employment application. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On the morning of January 8, 2018, Tanks arrived at his worksite and attended

a routine safety meeting with the other riggers working on a CB&I project in

Hackberry, Louisiana (the Hackberry project). It had rained all weekend, and the

area was muddy. As he was walking toward his crane to begin working, he stepped

into a flooded hole and sunk down to his waist. Tanks was taken by ambulance to

the emergency room at West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital where he was diagnosed

with “acute lumbosacral strain.” He began treatment with chiropractor, Dr. Michael

Haydel, on January 10, 2018. Tanks’ chief complaints were of low back pain and

right shoulder pain that began immediately after the accident. An X-ray of Tanks’

lumbar spine taken that day revealed “[n]o abnormality.” Dr. Haydel diagnosed

Tanks with a “lumbar sprain/strain with associated neuritis/radiculitis” and with

right shoulder sprain/strain . . . with muscle spasms,” and he restricted Tanks from

work.

Tanks filed a Form 1008 Disputed Claim for Compensation (Form 1008) with

the Office of Workers’ Compensation on January 31, 2018, alleging that he injured

his back in the January 8, 2018 accident. He alleged that CB&I had not paid any

wage benefits nor had it authorized any medical treatment. Tanks sought treatment

from his choice of neurosurgeon and chiropractor, as well as statutory penalties and

attorney fees for CB&I’s failure to reasonably controvert his claim. In its initial answer to Tanks’ claim, CB&I denied that he was injured and/or disabled in a work-

related accident. By way of an amended answer, however, CB&I asserted that Tanks

forfeited his right to collect benefits in violation of La.R.S. 23:1208.1 (hereafter

sometimes referred to as “the Forfeiture Statute”).

The matter proceeded to trial before the WCJ on February 20, 2019. After

both parties submitted exhibits 1 without objection, they stipulated “as to the

occurrence of an accident on January 8, 2018, in the course and scope of Mr. Tanks’

employment” and to Tanks’ average weekly wage of $1,640.87 with a corresponding

“max comp rate.” The only two witnesses to testify at trial were Tanks and Joel

Denison, the safety manager at CB&I on the date of Tanks’ accident. After

entertaining closing arguments, the WCJ declared from the bench that it was ruling

in Tanks’ favor, denying CB&I’s argument that Tanks had forfeited benefits

pursuant to the Forfeiture Statute and denying Tanks’ claims that CB&I be cast with

penalties and attorney fees. By written judgment dated March 1, 2019, the WCJ

found that Tanks “injured his back or aggravated a pre-existing back condition in an

accident that arouse out of and within the course and scope of his employment” with

CB&I. Tanks was awarded continuing temporary total disability benefits (TTDs)

“at the weekly rate of $653.00 retroactive to the date of the accident, plus interest,

subject to a credit for short term disability benefits paid under the employer’s

disability benefit plan.” The WCJ further ordered that Tanks was “entitled to all

reasonable and necessary related medical benefits,” and it ordered CB&I to pay all

of Tanks’ “outstanding related medical expenses,” to reimburse Tanks for all of the

related medical expenses that he had paid, and to “authorize future related medical

treatment with [Tanks’] choice of physician.”

1 Tanks introduced twenty-one exhibits, and CB&I introduced nineteen exhibits. 2 CB&I now appeals, asserting in its sole assignment of error that the WCJ erred

in denying the application of La.R.S. 23:1208.1 to defeat Tanks’ request for benefits.

Tanks filed an Answer to Appeal wherein he requested that this court award his costs

and attorney fees.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

Louisiana Revised Statutes 23:1208.1, titled “Employer’s inquiry into

employee’s previous injury claims; forfeiture of benefits,” provides, in part:

Nothing in this Title shall prohibit an employer from inquiring about previous injuries, disabilities, or other medical conditions and the employee shall answer truthfully; failure to answer truthfully shall result in the employee’s forfeiture of benefits under this Chapter, provided said failure to answer directly relates to the medical condition for which a claim for benefits is made or affects the employer’s ability to receive reimbursement from the second injury fund. This Section shall not be enforceable unless the written form on which the inquiries about previous medical conditions are made contains a notice advising the employee that his failure to answer truthfully may result in his forfeiture of worker’s compensation benefits under R.S. 23:1208.1.

We are compelled to note at the outset of this opinion that CB&I, in its reply

brief to this court, clarified that “this is not a Second Injury Claim. The issue is the

direct relationship between the prior injury and the current injury.” Accordingly, we

need not determine whether Tanks’ untruthful answers impaired its ability to collect

reimbursement from the second injury fund. Nevertheless, we must mention the

second injury fund in our discussion of the history and purpose of the Forfeiture

Statute.

In Nabors Drilling USA v. Davis, 03-136, pp. 4-5 (La. 10/21/03), 857 So.2d

407, 413-14 (first emphasis added), the supreme court explained how the Forfeiture

Statute fits into the overall workers’ compensation scheme:

In order “to encourage the employment of physically handicapped employees who have a permanent, partial disability by protecting employers . . . from excess liability for workers’ compensation for disability [which may result] when a subsequent injury to such an employee merges with his preexisting permanent 3 physical disability to cause a greater disability than would have resulted from the subsequent injury alone,” the legislature created the Second Injury Fund. LSA–R.S. 23:1371(A).

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