Jackson Headley v. Textron Systems

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 2021
Docket2020CA1174
StatusUnknown

This text of Jackson Headley v. Textron Systems (Jackson Headley v. Textron Systems) 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
Jackson Headley v. Textron Systems, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2020 CA 1174

JACKSON HEADLEY

VERSUS

TEXTRON SYSTEMS

Decision' Rendered: APR 2 6 2021

ON APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION ST. TAMMANY PARISH, LOUISIANA DOCKET NUMBER 18- 04168 — DISTRICT 6

HONORABLE SAM LOWERY, WORKERS' COMPENSATION JUDGE

John J. Rabalais Attorneys for Defendant/ Appellant Gabriel E. F. Thompson Textron Systems Blake M. Alphonso Covington, Louisiana

Kristen Stanley -Wallace Attorneys for Plaintiff/ Appellee Amber Sheppard Jackson Headley Slidell, Louisiana

BEFORE: McDONALD, HOLDRIDGE, and PENZATO, 77.

Louisiana Revised Statute 23: 1310. 5F requires that appellate courts publish workers' compensation decisions. McDONALD, J.

In this workers' compensation case, the employer appeals from a judgment

awarding benefits, penalties, and attorney fees to its former employee. After review,

we affirm in part and reverse in part.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Textron Systems hired Jackson Headley as a welder in June 2015. On

Friday, September 8, 2017, Mr. Headley was working the night shift. Toward the end

of the shift, Mr. Headley claims he felt a sharp, burning pain in his lower back as he

stood up after completing a weld. He was able to finish his shift, after which he drove

home, showered, took pain medicine, and went to bed. Mr. Headley did not

immediately report the incident to anyone at Textron and did not seek medical attention

over the weekend.

On Monday, September 11th, Mr. Headley and his then fiancee, now wife, Anna,

called Clay Adkins, his supervisor, and told him he was not feeling well and would not

be in to work. On Wednesday, September 13th, he called Mr. Adkins again and told

him that he had hurt his back. According to Mr. Adkins, Mr. Headley did not tell him

the injury was work-related. Mr. Adkins referred him to Courtney Jarvis, Textron' s

human resources representative. When Ms. Jarvis asked Mr. Headley if his back injury

was work-related, he answered " no." Ms. Jarvis referred Mr. Headley to Metlife

Services and Solutions, LLC, ( Metlife), Textron' s short-term disability insurance provider.

According to Kathleen Wescott, the Metlife claims specialist who handled Mr. Headley' s

disability claim, the intake paperwork she received indicated that Mr. Headley's injury

was not work- related, and when she talked to him later, the issue was not mentioned.

On September 15, 2017, one week after the accident, Mr. Headley also saw Dr.

Eric Royster, a pain management doctor who had been treating him since September

2016 for a degenerative lumbar spine condition. Dr. Royster' s contemporaneous

medical records and his later deposition testimony differ as whether Mr. Headley told

him he injured his back at work.

2 At the August 2019 trial of this matter, Mr. Headley, who has an intellectual

disability and memory problem, testified that he initially did not think his injury was

work-related, because he had not been hit by a crane, run over by a forklift, or some

similar occurrence. In a September 2018 deposition, however, Mr. Headley admitted

that he knew he should have reported the incident but did not want to because he did

not want to lose his job.

Mr. Headley did not return to work at Textron after September 8, 2017. As

directed by Ms. Jarvis, Mr. Headley filed a Metlife short-term disability claim. Metlife

paid Mr. Headley disability benefits for six months, from September 2017 through

March 2018. As those benefits ended, the Headleys asked both Ms. Wescott and Ms.

Jarvis about other possible sources of income, including workers' compensation

benefits. This was the first time either Ms. Wescott or Ms. Jarvis heard that Mr.

Headley' s disability was possibly work-related. Ms. Jarvis told the Headleys that

Textron' s standard policy required that employees seeking workers' compensation

benefits do so within 21 days of the work- related accident.

At some point thereafter, Broadspire, Textron' s workers' compensation

administrator, received Mr. Headley"s claim file. Sue Major, the Broadspire claims

examiner assigned to the claim, contacted Alvin Givens, her Textron contact for

workers' compensation claims, who told her he knew nothing about Mr. Headley's claim.

Ms. Major later turned the file over to Textron' s counsel after Mr. Headley filed his

formal workers' compensation claim.

On June 25, 2018, Mr. Headley filed his disputed claim for compensation with

the Office of Workers' Compensation ( OWC), stating that he was injured while at work

on September 8, 2017, and Textron had not paid him wage benefits or his medical

expenses. He sought these items of recovery, as well as penalties and attorney fees.

Textron answered the disputed claim, denying that Mr. Headley had a work- related

injury.

During discovery, Textron acquired significant and conflicting information

regarding Mr. Headley' s medical history. The record shows Mr. Headley, 57 -years -old

3 at the time of trial, had a documented history of lumbar degenerative disc disease

dating back to 2001, about 16 years before the alleged September 2017 incident. More

recently, he injured his back in a car accident in January 2015, about five months

before beginning his Textron job. Dr. John Hardges treated Mr. Headley for low back

and leg pain for over a year after the 2015 car accident. In August 2016, Dr. Hardges

referred Mr. Headley to Dr. Royster, who then treated Mr. Headley monthly for lumbar

radiculopathy, lumbar spondylolisthesis, lumbar degenerative disc disease, and chronic

pain, up until the alleged September 2017 incident and after. Dr. Royster' s September

15, 2017 record, one week after the incident, indicates Mr. Headley reported a

significant flare" of pain but no " specific injury." In an October 2018 deposition,

however, Dr. Royster stated that, although not documented in his records, he

remembered Mr. Headley telling him about the September 2017 incident. During

discovery, Textron also discovered that, in May 2015, when Mr. Headley applied for

Textron employment, he gave inaccurate information, including a failure to disclose that

he had been in a car accident, that he was then under a doctor's care and currently

taking medication for his back condition, and that he had other pre- existing medical

conditions.

On August 23, 2019, a workers' compensation judge ( WO) held a trial on Mr.

Headley's disputed claim, at which the parties introduced considerable evidence. On

July 24, 2020, the WO signed a judgment finding Mr. Headley sustained a work- related

injury on September 8, 2017; ordering Textron to pay Mr. Headley's associated past,

present, and future medical expenses, as well as indemnity benefits from that date,

using $ 930 per week as the average weekly wage; ordering Textron to authorize Mr.

Headley's continued treatment with a physician of his choice; and, assessing Textron

with a $ 4,000 penalty and $ 14, 000 in attorney fees.

Textron appeals from the adverse judgment, asserting the WO legally and

manifestly erred in finding Mr. Headley sustained a compensable work-related injury,

was entitled to penalties and attorney fees, and had made no willfully false statements

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