Istre v. International Maintenance Co.

865 So. 2d 963, 3 La.App. 3 Cir. 1003, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 131, 2004 WL 205818
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 4, 2004
DocketNo. 03-1003
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 865 So. 2d 963 (Istre v. International Maintenance 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.

Bluebook
Istre v. International Maintenance Co., 865 So. 2d 963, 3 La.App. 3 Cir. 1003, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 131, 2004 WL 205818 (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

| t SULLIVAN, Judge.

International Maintenance Company (IMC) appeals a workers’ compensation judgment awarding Terrell Istre temporary total disability benefits, medical expenses and treatment, mileage expenses, $2,000.00 in penalties, and $9,000.00 in attorney fees. Finding no error, we affirm and amend to award Mr. Istre additional attorney fees of $1,500.00 for defending this appeal.

Discussion of the Record

On July 24, 2000, Mr. Istre filed a disputed claim for compensation, alleging that he injured his back on June 1, 2000, as he stretched from a scaffold to make a weld on a tank wall. IMC denied the claim, contending that Mr. Istre injured himself while operating a weed-eater at his home during the weekend before the alleged accident. After a trial on April 9, 2001, Workers’ Compensation Judge Constance Abraham-Handy ruled in Mr. Istre’s favor, awarding him temporary total disability benefits, continued medical treatment, mileage expenses, penalties of $1,500.00, and attorney fees of $8,500.00. IMC appealed, but this court remanded for a new trial when the transcript could not be completed due to the untimely deaths of both the workers’ compensation judge and the court reporter. Istre v. Turner Indus., 02-1253 (La.App. 3 Cir. 11/25/02). On January 31, 2003, a second trial was held before Workers’ Compensation Judge Sam Lowery, who also ruled in Mr. Istre’s favor. That judgment, signed on April 7, 2003, is the subject of this appeal.

At the second trial, Mr. Istre, a welder who had been with IMC for eight to ten years, testified that, on Wednesday, May 31, 2000, he worked all day pounding the floor of a tank with an eighteen-pound maul hammer. When he reported to work the next day, on Thursday, June 1, 2000, he was assigned to “clean up” the tank wall, a task that required him to grind and re-weld the wall from a scaffold. He explained |?that, after working for about three hours, a “big shock caught [his] back and shot through his leg,” producing severe pain and numbness as he reached to make a weld from the scaffold. He stated that he was able to climb down from the scaffold, which was about ten feet high, but [965]*965that he had to ask his co-workers to get his gear down. He also stated that he was limping “real bad” when he told the foreman, Les Coleman, that he had to leave work because he was in pain. He testified that Mr. Coleman asked him if he wanted to file an accident report, but when he declined to do so, Mr. Coleman brought him to punch out. Mr. Istre stated that he was not asked to make a statement at that time and that he did not want to report a work-related accident because he believed that he was not seriously injured and that he would be back on the job on Monday.

The foreman, Mr. Coleman, testified that he saw Mr. Istre limping from the job site, but he admitted that he did not specifically ask Mr. Istre if he had been injured at work. According to Mr. Coleman, Mr. Istre mentioned “something about he had been weed eating” and said he aggravated his back and wanted to go home. When Mr. Coleman told him that he should report to “safety,” Mr. Istre replied that he would rather not go there and that he would be all right in a couple of days. Mr. Coleman acknowledged that Mr. Istre was not limping that morning, testifying that he would not have assigned Mr. Istre to the scaffolding job if he were. Mr. Coleman also testified that he should have insisted that Mr. Istre report to “safety,” even though he did not want to go there.

Jack LaLanne, a welding supervisor, testified that, when Mr. Istre returned to work after the Memorial Day weekend, he said that he developed a “kink” after pulling something while weed-eating. As a result of this conversation, Mr. LaLanne |ssuggested that Mr. Istre work on the floor of the tank that day. When Mr. LaLanne saw Mr. Istre on the morning of the alleged accident, Mr. LaLanne did not notice that he was limping. According to Mr. LaLanne, Mr. Istre told him that morning that he was feeling bad and would probably see his chiropractor.

Mr. Istre testified that, after leaving the job site, his pain became so severe that he called his wife to take him to the emergency room at about 12:30 p.m. that day. West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital (Cal-Cam) records indicate that Mr. Istre “reports injured lifting at work this a[.]m[.],” but elsewhere, the records indicate that back pain started “last night” “possibly” due to a “recent injury” of “lifting.” He was given Demerol and released with instructions to follow up with his family physician, Dr. Jose Gonzales. When an MRI ordered by Dr. Gonzales on June 10, 2000 revealed protrusions at L4-5 and L5-S1, Mr. Istre was referred to Dr. Clark Gun-derson, an orthopedic surgeon.

Mr. Istre first saw Dr. Gunderson on June 13, 2000, complaining of pain, numbness in the leg, muscle spasm, joint stiffness, and muscle weakness. Dr. Gunderson’s records indicate that Mr. Is-tre reported the onset of low back pain twelve days earlier while using a sledgehammer at work. The records also describe how Mr. Istre “crawled to [his] jeep” as he left work due to pain and numbness. By June 23, 2000, Mr. Istre reported to Dr. Gunderson that his left ankle was so weak he could not control it. A myelogram of July 13, 2000 revealed anterior extradural defects at L4-5 and L5-S1, with decreased filling of the L5 and SI nerve roots bilaterally. On July 17, 2000, Mr. Istre underwent a two-level lumbar laminectomy and discec-tomy in which Dr. Gunderson removed an extruded disc fragment that compromised the L4 nerve root. Because Mr. Istre suffered a recurrent herniated disc |4at L4-5, he underwent a repeat lami-nectomy and fusion with pedicle screws from L4 through SI on December 18, 2000. A third surgical procedure, a de-[966]*966compressive laminectomy at L3-4 with removal of pedicle screws, was performed on December 10, 2001.

Mr. Istre admitted that he did not initially want to report a work-related accident because he feared for his job and because he did not believe he was seriously hurt. He testified, that after seeing Dr. Gunderson, he reported the accident to Jody Sullivan, a quality control supervisor at IMC, and to another IMC employee, Glenn Fisher. Mr. Istre also gave a written statement on June 26, 2000, in which he reported developing back pain, with numbness and shooting pain in his left leg, as he was welding on a scaffold on June 1, 2000. In describing the incident, he noted that he was pushing the scaffold in position while leaning to make welds. He also wrote in the statement that his co-workers saw him limping, that he told his foreman he wanted to go home because the pain was so bad, and that he had to call his wife one hour later to bring him to the hospital because of pain and numbness in his leg. Mr. Coleman and Mr. LaLanne also testified that they gave written statements to their “safety” division, but those statements were not introduced at trial.

In ruling in favor of Mr. Istre, the workers’ compensation judge stated that his decision was based “totally, solely, and completely on the court’s perception of the voracity [sic] of the live testimony and the review of all the medical evidence.”

Work-Related Accident and Causation

In its first assignment of error, IMC argues that the workers’ compensation judge erred in finding that Mr. Istre sustained a work-related accident, given the inconsistencies in the medical records, the delay in reporting the unwitnessed | saccident, and the testimony of others that the claimant stated that he was injured at home.

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865 So. 2d 963, 3 La.App. 3 Cir. 1003, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 131, 2004 WL 205818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/istre-v-international-maintenance-co-lactapp-2004.