Gaspard v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.
This text of 483 So. 2d 1037 (Gaspard v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.) 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
Matilda GASPARD, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
ST. PAUL FIRE & MARINE INSURANCE CO., Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*1038 Provosty, Sadler & Delaunay, Albin A. Provosty, Alexandria, for defendant-appellant.
Darrel D. Ryland, Marksville, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before FORET, YELVERTON and KING, JJ.
FORET, Judge.
This is a suit for worker's compensation. Plaintiff, Matilda Gaspard, filed suit against defendant, St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, the worker's compensation carrier of her former employer, Central Louisiana Home Health Agency, Inc. In addition to worker's compensation benefits, plaintiff sought penalties and attorney's fees. The trial court found that plaintiff was totally and permanently disabled and awarded her benefits in accordance with this determination. The trial court denied plaintiff's claim for penalties and attorney's fees. Defendant appealed, asserting that the trial court erred when it found that plaintiff was permanently and totally disabled.
FACTS
Plaintiff, Matilda Gaspard, was employed by Central Louisiana Home Health Agency, Inc. as a licensed practical nurse. Plaintiff's employment required her to make house calls at the homes of patients in the parishes of Rapides and Grant. Plaintiff would check the patient's vital signs, draw blood, check to see if the patients were taking their medications correctly and eating a proper diet. She would also dress wounds if necessary and perform exercises with those patients confined to bed.
On July 3, 1983, while on her first call of the morning, plaintiff turned an ankle stepping out of her car. Plaintiff's ankle was swollen and painful when she left the home of her first patient. She visited her second patient but then called her supervisor to tell her that she was injured and needed to go home and elevate her leg. Her supervisor, however, was sick, and plaintiff had to finish seeing four other patients. At the end of her workday, plaintiff went to the emergency room at Doctors' Hospital in Marksville. Plaintiff's leg was x-rayed, but no fracture was found. The following day was a holiday, and plaintiff stayed home. Although plaintiff called in sick the next day, she was told that she would have to see her patients. Plaintiff worked until 3:00 P.M., when she went to a doctor's appointment. Plaintiff returned to the doctor's the next day, and the doctor put a cast on her right leg. She returned to the emergency room several days later because her foot was swollen and her toes had turned blue. The cast was cut off and, later that day, plaintiff was admitted to the hospital with a suspected case of deep vein thrombosis. Plaintiff was hospitalized for six days, from July 10 to July 16, 1983. During her hospitalization, plaintiff was administered pain medication and an anticoagulant. Plaintiff continued to take the anticoagulant after her release from the hospital.
Plaintiff returned to work on August 8, but worked only four hours because of pain in her right leg. Several days later, on August 12, during a meeting with her supervisor, Sharon Ourso Cupples, plaintiff requested a more sedentary job. Mrs. Cupples informed plaintiff that there was no *1039 such position open and that if she were not able to perform the duties of her job, she would have to let her go. When plaintiff told Mrs. Cupples that she was not capable of performing her former duties, Mrs. Cupples informed plaintiff that she was fired. Plaintiff has not returned to work since and has earned no wages.
Defendant paid temporary total compensation benefits to plaintiff until December 6, 1983. It terminated benefits at this time based on the medical opinion of Dr. L. Donovan Perdue, who, after examining plaintiff, determined that she was able to return to work.
WAS PLAINTIFF TOTALLY AND PERMANENTLY DISABLED?
The worker's compensation statutes were extensively amended in 1983. One result of these amendments was to make it more difficult for an injured employee to qualify for permanent and total disability benefits. As amended, the section dealing with permanent and total disability not only places the burden of proving disability on the injured employee, but requires that such proof be made by clear and convincing evidence. The employee must show that he is unable to engage in any employment or self-employment, regardless of the nature of the employment or self-employment, including "any and all odd-lot employment, sheltered employment, or employment while working in any pain, notwithstanding the location or availability of any such employment or self-employment." LSA-R.S. 23:1221(2)(c). With these amended provisions, the legislature has prohibited the use of the jurisprudentially created odd lot doctrine and working in pain doctrines. Any pain suffered by an injured employee while working is irrelevant to a determination of total permanent disability except perhaps in those instances where it can be shown that the injured employee's pain renders him physically unable to engage in any employment.
In the present case, plaintiff was injured after the effective date of the amendment. Given the stringent standards which govern the award of total and permanent disability benefits, we must conclude that the trial court erred when it awarded plaintiff such benefits. Plaintiff clearly failed to carry her burden to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that she was totally and permanently disabled as defined by the statute. All of the medical experts, including those testifying on behalf of plaintiff, indicated that plaintiff would be able to engage in employment with certain limitations, namely that the employment should not involve heavy lifting or lengthy periods of time sitting or standing without being able to change positions.
Plaintiff did complain that substantial pain would prevent her from engaging consistently in any type of employment. However, plaintiff did not claim, nor did she prove, that her pain rendered her physically unable to perform any work. In fact, the medical testimony indicated that it would be therapeutic for plaintiff to engage in employment provided that the duties of her employment met with the few restrictions mentioned above. Plaintiff clearly failed to carry her burden of proof, and the trial court should not have awarded her benefits for total and permanent disability.
SUPPLEMENTAL EARNINGS BENEFITS UNDER 1983 ACTS REVISING WORKER'S COMPENSATION PROVISIONS
Although plaintiff is not entitled to total and permanent disability benefits, she is entitled to supplemental earnings benefits. In order to be entitled to these benefits, an injured employee must be unable to earn 90% or more of the wages he received at the time of his injury. LSA-R.S. 23:1221(3). Since no burden of proof is specified, by implication, the applicable burden of proof is a preponderance of the evidence, the customary burden of proof in a civil case. In determining if an injured employee has made out a prima facie case of entitlement to supplemental earnings benefits, the trial court may and should take into account all those factors which might bear on an employee's ability to earn *1040 a wage. In the present case, one such factor is the substantial pain which plaintiff will suffer while working.
Plaintiff testified that following her injury she had been unable to perform the duties of her former employment because of pain in her right leg.
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483 So. 2d 1037, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 10436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaspard-v-st-paul-fire-marine-ins-co-lactapp-1985.