Green v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company
This text of 184 So. 2d 801 (Green v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company) 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
Edrick GREEN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*803 Robert E. Turner, Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellant.
Hall, Raggio & Farrar, by C. Barry Hillebrandt, Lake Charles, for defendant-appellee.
Before FRUGE, SAVOY, and HOOD, JJ.
FRUGE, Judge.
The plaintiff filed suit against his employer's insurer for workmen's compensation benefits. An exception of prematurity was filed to this suit. It was based upon the plaintiff's refusal to submit himself to a medical examination. The trial court sustained this exception and dismissed the plaintiff's suit, and he appeals.
The question posed by this appeal is whether an employer may suspend workmen's compensation payments to a disabled employee if he fails to appear for a medical examination which the employer has arranged for informally, without court order, and without consulting the employee or his attorney as to the time, date, place, examining physician, or traveling expenses necessary to report to the place of examination in another city?
Under the allegations of the petition, accepted as true for purposes of the exception, the plaintiff was injured on October 28, 1964, in the course of his employment with the defendant's insured. He was and is disabled by his injury and was still under medical treatment at the date this suit was filed on May 13, 1965, two days after the defendant insurer terminated the payment of workmen's compensation.
Such termination occurred in the following relevant factual context: On April 14th, without prior consultation, the defendant's claim adjuster notified plaintiff's attorney by mail that the plaintiff, a resident of Calcasieu Parish, was to report for medical examination by a neurosurgeon in Beaumont, Texas, at 10:00 A.M. on Tuesday, May 6th. On April 22nd, the plaintiff's attorney wrote to his client's attending physician to request information concerning any examination by a neurosurgeon, and to the attorney was transmitted by letter written May 5th (i. e., the day before the Beaumont appointment) an earlier report of this physician to the insurer which recommended evaluation by "a neurosurgeon".
On May 11, 1965, without (so far as the record shows) further consultation between the parties, the defendant's claim supervisor wrote the plaintiff's attorney that:
"You were advised by letter of April 14, 1965 that an appointment had been made for your client to be examined by Dr. Faulk on Tuesday, May 6, 1965. Dr. Faulk's office advises that your client failed to keep this appointment. Under the circumstances we are suspending your client's weekly benefits until which time he is examined by a doctor of our choice.
"In the event that your client is now ready to be examined by a doctor of our choice, please contact Mr. Victor G. Hemme at Hemlock 6-0992 in Lake Charles and he will arrange for an appointment."
At issue is the application of LSA-R.S. 23:1124, which provides:
"If the employee refuses to submit himself to a medical examination as provided in this Subpart or in anywise obstructs the same, his right to compensation and to take or prosecute any further proceedings under this Chapter shall be suspended until the examination takes place. When a right to compensation is suspended no compensation shall be payable in respect to the period of suspension."
This provision must be interpreted in the light of the other provisions of the Louisiana workmen's compensation act pertaining to medical examinations. (For convenience *804 of reference, these are set forth in full as Appendix A appended to this opinion.)
An injured employee must submit himself to examination by duly qualified medical practitioner as soon as demanded after the accident, and "thereafter" as often as may be "reasonably necessary" at "reasonable hours and places." LSA-R.S. 23:1121. If the employer fails to have the examination made, the employee may have an examination made and shall forward the report to the employer, which report either of the employer or the employee shall be prima facie evidence of its contents. LSA-R.S. 23:1122. If there be any dispute thereafter as to the condition of the employee, the court upon application of either party may order an examination made. LSA-R.S. 23:1123. And finally, if the employee refuses to submit himself to a medical examination as provided for by the previous statutory provisions, then the employer is entitled to suspend the payment of workmen's compensation benefits to an employee claiming benefits under the compensation statute.
In dismissing the plaintiff's suit because he did not report for the ex parte medical examination, our learned trial brother did not have the benefit of our subsequently rendered decision in Abshire v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., La.App., 179 So.2d 508. This case concerned the closely related question of whether an employer may obtain ex parte a court order for medical examination under Section 1123 (see Appendix A). In holding that a court order for medical examination should be obtained only after contradictory hearing, we pointed out, 179 So.2d 511:
"* * * The determination of the reasonable necessity of the examination, as well as of the reasonableness of the hours and place of examinations, is not one that properly should be left to the unilateral suggestion of the employer, without any consultation whatsoever of the employee as to his availability and personal opposition to a given medical examination at a given hour and given place. This is especially so in view of the drastic penalty to the employee of being denied compensation if what he feels to be a justified refusal to submit to unreasonable medical examination, in the final event is not sustained by the courts."
Our ruling in Abshire is determinative of the present question.
As we there pointed out, 179 So.2d 512:
"* * *, as Professor Wex Malone noted in his authoritative treatise, Louisiana Workmen's Compensation (1951), Section 382, p. 485: `* * * the examination must be a reasonable one. The employee cannot be compelled to submit to anything that is likely to be dangerous or extremely painful; nor can he be forced to submit to treatment under the guise of examination. In order to obtain the benefit of a specialist's examination, the court may require that the plaintiff make inconvenient or even lengthy trips for this purpose; but when a satisfactory examination can be made easily without an extended journey the worker will not be compelled to submit to an examination by some particular specialist located at a distance.'
"If the parties cannot agree upon these matters (as of course they do in the vast preponderance of cases), the remedial compensation enactment does not warrant the interpretation that the injured claimant must be bound by his employer's unilateral determination of the time and place and extent of medical examination, upon penalty of losing his compensation for the period in which he seeks judicial review of the employer's ex parte order for medical examination, if ultimately the court agrees that the medical examination ordered is reasonable as initially demanded by the employer."
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
184 So. 2d 801, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-liberty-mutual-insurance-company-lactapp-1966.