Johnson v. Manitowoc Co.

256 So. 3d 463
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 26, 2018
DocketNo. 52,264-WCA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 256 So. 3d 463 (Johnson v. Manitowoc 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
Johnson v. Manitowoc Co., 256 So. 3d 463 (La. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

GARRETT, J.

The claimant, Rhonda Johnson, appeals from a judgment dismissing her claims for workers' compensation benefits against her employer, Manitowoc Co., d/b/a Frymaster Co., and its insurer, Sentry Insurance, A Mutual Company. In written reasons, the workers' compensation judge ("WCJ") concluded that the claimant, who suffers from de Quervain's tenosynovitis ("DQT"), failed to prove that she suffered from an occupational disease caused by her job. We affirm.

FACTS

Frymaster builds commercial frying equipment for companies like McDonald's, Burger King, and Wendy's. It operates two plants in Shreveport and employs about 550 people.

The claimant was employed by Frymaster in 1999. She worked in several different positions, all of which required typing for several hours per day. After being an order processor for two to three years, the claimant worked as a Customer Service Representative I for about two years and a Customer Service Representative II for seven to eight years. She testified that she spent about four hours per day typing in these positions. She was promoted to Customer Service Representative III in April 2015. She testified that this job required *465typing between four and five hours per day. This job was described at trial by Frymaster's representative as a "customer interfacing position." It involved taking calls from dealer groups, taking orders, preparing orders, and making copies for files. It required her to utilize email, the telephone, and the fax machine.

In about 2002, she was successfully treated for carpal tunnel syndrome ("CTS") in both hands with conservative measures that did not include surgery. She did not make a workers' compensation claim for her CTS. She testified that in July 2015, she developed pain in her right thumb, wrist, and hand. She was treated by Dr. Gordon Mead, an orthopedic surgeon, for these complaints along with claims of knee and foot pain. In January 2016, he diagnosed her as suffering from DQT. Her employment with Frymaster was terminated in early February 2016, shortly after she contacted the human resources department about her wrist issue.

In March 2016, the claimant filed a disputed claim for compensation with the Office of Workers' Compensation. She asserted that, due to repetitive keyboard operation during the last 16 years, she had developed DQT in her right hand and wrist. She claimed that she had been diagnosed in August 2015 and was fired when she inquired about workers' compensation benefits in January 2016. She sought penalties and attorney fees for the employer's failure to authorize medical treatment and pay weekly indemnity benefits. The employer and its insurer answered with a general denial in April 2016.

Trial was held on July 26, 2017. In addition to the claimant's medical and personnel records, the parties submitted the depositions of Dr. Mead, the claimant's treating physician, and Dr. Kenneth Odinet, the physician chosen by the employer. Additionally, the claimant testified, as did John Leslie Baker, Frymaster's human resources director and its representative at trial.

In her testimony, the claimant stated that she began feeling pain in her right thumb in July 2015, that she could not move it, and that it kept locking up on her. She also described tenderness that went from over her knuckles on her right hand to midway between her wrist and elbow. She was referred to Dr. Mead by a coworker and saw him for the first time in August 2015. She testified that she last worked at Frymaster on December 18, 2015, and was on vacation until she saw Dr. Mead for the second time on January 4, 2016. She testified that, after her appointments on January 4 and 11, 2016, Dr. Mead had her take a week off of work.

The claimant asserted that she never realized that she had a workers' compensation claim until January 18, 2016, when it was mentioned by a receptionist at the occupational therapy clinic to which she had been sent by Dr. Mead. When the claimant turned in her paperwork, the receptionist asked, for billing purposes, whether she was there for a workers' compensation matter. The claimant then made inquiries to her claims examiner at Matrix Absence Management, a third-party company used by Frymaster to process matters arising under the Family and Medical Leave Act. Next, she contacted Frymaster's human resources department. Subsequently, she received a letter terminating her employment with Frymaster in early February 2016.

Baker explained the steps of Frymaster's progressive disciplinary process, which required two written warnings, a suspension, and then termination. He testified that the claimant had received written warnings for minor matters and had been suspended without pay for the first week *466of December 2015 for her role in running an illegal football betting pool at work. (The other two participants, who had larger roles in the enterprise, were fired.) Thus, he testified, when it was learned that she had violated company policy by failing to properly report her thumb/wrist issue in July 2015, the next step of discipline was termination.

In his deposition, Dr. Mead testified that he first saw the claimant on August 18, 2015, at which time she complained about foot pain, right knee pain, and right wrist pain. As to the wrist, he made no specific diagnosis at that time. He noted some swelling of the wrist; he prescribed a splint and an oral steroid and excused her from work for a week. He next saw her on January 4, 2016, for a complaint of right hand and wrist pain which she rated as eight out of ten on a pain scale of one to ten. He noted swelling and tenderness of the wrist and diagnosed DQT, an inflammation around the tendons that go through a particular area of the wrist, specifically over the radial styloid, which is the thumb side of the wrist. He gave her an injection of cortisone and anesthetic. This treatment was repeated when she returned on January 11, 2016. At her appointment on January 18, 2016, she reported a decreased pain level of five out of ten; Dr. Mead opined that this was probably due to the injections. Dr. Mead then started her on occupational therapy ("OT"). At her appointment on February 8, 2016, she was improved due to the OT. He recommended a surgical release procedure, which she declined.1 Thereafter, he continued to see her periodically. When he last saw her on February 27, 2017, she reported her pain level as two out of ten. Dr. Mead testified that, in his opinion, there is no cause for DQT. He noted that he saw it in "all types of people," usually those aged 40 and above. In his experience, it was not confined to just people who did repetitive work. He also stated that it was more likely than not that her occupation as a customer service representative aggravated her DQT and probably restricted her ability to perform her job.

Dr. Odinet testified that he was board certified in otolaryngology, head and neck surgery, and plastic and reconstructive surgery. His expertise in hand surgery was part of his plastic surgery training. Hand surgery comprised 20% to 30% of his practice; early in his career, it had been closer to 90%. He estimated that he performed about 20 DQT correction surgeries per year. After examining the claimant and reviewing her medical records, he concluded that she had DQT, which had been treated for quite some time without much significant long-term success. He too recommended a surgical release procedure, which he estimated to have a 90% success rate. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
256 So. 3d 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-manitowoc-co-lactapp-2018.