Jeremy J. Lebouef v. Rpc, Inc. D/B/A Cudd Energy Services

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 2017
DocketWCA-0016-0945
StatusUnknown

This text of Jeremy J. Lebouef v. Rpc, Inc. D/B/A Cudd Energy Services (Jeremy J. Lebouef v. Rpc, Inc. D/B/A Cudd Energy Services) 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
Jeremy J. Lebouef v. Rpc, Inc. D/B/A Cudd Energy Services, (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

16-944 consolidated with 16-945

JEREMY J. LEBOUEF

VERSUS

RPC, INC. D/B/A CUDD ENERGY SERVICES

16-945 consolidated with 16-944

**********

APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS‟ COMPENSATION - DISTRICT 4 PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. 15-00967 C/W 15-00970 ADAM C. JOHNSON, WORKERS‟ COMPENSATION JUDGE

MARC T. AMY JUDGE

Court composed of Marc T. Amy, Billy Howard Ezell, and Shannon J. Gremillion, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Mark L. Riley The Glenn Armentor Law Corporation 300 Stewart Street Lafayette, LA 70501 (337) 233-1471 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Jeremy J. LeBouef Scott F. Higgins Jeansonne and Remondet Post Office Box 91530 Lafayette, LA 70509 (337) 237-4370 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: RPC, Inc., d/b/a Cudd Energy Services AMY, Judge.

The workers‟ compensation claimant sought benefits from his employer in

connection with injuries he allegedly sustained in two work-related accidents. The

employer defended the claims by noting that the claimant‟s medical records

indicated that the second accident was caused by a possible opiate overdose and

arguing that the claimant‟s alleged injuries predated both accidents. The employer

also filed a reconventional demand against the claimant, alleging that the claimant

had willfully made false statements and misrepresentations in order to obtain

benefits, and that accordingly, the employer was due restitution pursuant to La.R.S.

23:1208. The workers‟ compensation judge dismissed both claims as well as the

employer‟s claim for restitution. Both parties appeal these consolidated matters.

For the following reasons, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

According to the record, on February 12, 2015, Jeremy J. LeBouef filed two

disputed claims for compensation (Form 1008s) against his employer, RPC, Inc.

d/b/a Cudd Energy Services (Cudd). The first Form 1008, bearing Office of

Workers‟ Compensation (OWC) docket number 15-00967, stemmed from an

alleged accident that occurred on March 6, 2014, in which the claimant asserted

that, while attending a safety meeting at his employer‟s Broussard office, the chair

in which he was sitting broke, “causing him to fall and injure his thoracic and

lumbar spine.”

The second Form 1008, bearing OWC docket number 15-00970, stemmed

from an alleged accident that occurred in Pennsylvania on January 23, 2015, in

which the claimant asserted that, while loading his truck to travel from the

bunkhouse to a job site, he slipped on icy ground and fell, hitting his head. He testified that he has no memory of what occurred after the fall and that he only

remembers waking up in the hospital. He further alleged that he was unconscious

for approximately three hours until a coworker found him in the bunkhouse and

that he suffered “head injuries, an injury to the hip leading to necrosis with hip

replacement, and an aggravation of the prior back injury from the March 6, 2014

accident.”

Cudd denied liability for both claims.1 Upon Cudd‟s motion, the workers‟

compensation judge consolidated the claims. By an Amended Answer and

Reconventional Demand, Cudd asserted that the claimant “violated [La.R.S.]

23:1208 by willfully making misrepresentations and false statements about his past

history of medical treatment, how the accidents occurred, and his injuries from the

accidents[,]” and that “such misrepresentations and false statements were made

intentionally and for the purpose of obtaining worker‟s [sic] compensation

benefits.” Accordingly, Cudd sought forfeiture of benefits paid, as well as

restitution of costs and attorney fees.

At trial, Cudd asserted that the 2015 accident resulted not from slipping on

icy ground, but from an opiate overdose, such that the claimant should be barred

from receiving compensation per La.R.S. 23:1081.2 In support of this assertion,

1 Cudd has not paid any benefits to date relative to the alleged 2015 accident. Both parties stipulated at trial that “no compensation has been paid as a result of either 1008.” However, and although Cudd specifically denied liability for the 2014 claim, the claimant testified that he missed two weeks of work following the alleged 2014 accident with no interruption in pay. Additionally, a nurse from Axiom Medical Consulting, who spoke with the claimant following the 2014 accident, testified that he told her that he “would prefer to use first aid measures” as opposed to seeking professional medical treatment. When asked at trial if he was “aware of any medical records, other than the Axiom records a week following [his] incident, which relate any injuries or any treatment [he] received to the March 6, 2014 accident[,]” the claimant replied, “Not that I know of, no.” 2 Louisiana Revised Statutes 23:1081 provides, in pertinent part:

(1) No compensation shall be allowed for an injury caused:

2 Cudd pointed to records from emergency medical services and hospital records

immediately following the accident. The hospital records provide an assessment of

“[u]nresponsiveness and hypothermia in the setting of suspected narcotic

overdose” and indicate that there was “[n]o established cause albeit with suspicion

of medication overdose as a basis for present circumstance.” The records further

indicate that the claimant regained consciousness after being administered Narcan,

which, according to the deposition testimony of Cudd‟s emergency medicine

expert, Dr. Michael Odinet, is “a reversal agent for opioids -- opiates.” Dr. Odinet

also testified that Narcan “won‟t do anything” unless the person is suffering from

an opiate overdose. Additionally, emergency medical services records indicate

that the claimant was “unresponsive,” that his “pupils were noted as constricted”

and that he had “red „frothy‟ liquid coming from his mouth[,]” symptoms which

Dr. Odinet described as consistent with opiate overdose.

The hospital records further indicate that his urine tested positive for opiates,

and that emergency medical services had reported that he had a “fresh needle mark

to the left forearm[,]” but that the claimant denied “injecting himself with

anything” and denied drug use. When asked at trial why the hospital records

indicated that he had opiates in his system at the time of the accident, he replied, “I

think I took one earlier in the day[,]” thereafter clarifying that he had taken the

pain medication Norco, for which he had a prescription, because he was “in pain.”

When asked at trial why the hospital records indicated that there had been a fresh

....

(b) by the injured employee‟s intoxication at the time of the injury, unless the employee‟s intoxication resulted from activities which were in pursuit of the employer‟s interests or in which the employer procured the intoxicating beverage or substance and encouraged its use during the employee‟s work hours[.]

3 injection mark in his arm, he stated that he had “never injected any medications

before” and that he had “splatter marks” on his arms from welding.

Dr. Odinet, who did not personally examine the claimant but evaluated his

medical records, testified that he believed an opiate overdose was “definitely, the

most likely cause” of the 2015 accident. He pointed out in his testimony that,

despite the claimant‟s allegation that he had a “knot” on his head, none of the

hospital records indicate that the claimant suffered any head injuries, as a physical

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Bluebook (online)
Jeremy J. Lebouef v. Rpc, Inc. D/B/A Cudd Energy Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeremy-j-lebouef-v-rpc-inc-dba-cudd-energy-services-lactapp-2017.