Joseph Adams v. Georgia Gulf Lake Charles, LLC

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2018
DocketWCA-0017-0723
StatusUnknown

This text of Joseph Adams v. Georgia Gulf Lake Charles, LLC (Joseph Adams v. Georgia Gulf Lake Charles, LLC) 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
Joseph Adams v. Georgia Gulf Lake Charles, LLC, (La. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

17-723

JOSEPH ADAMS

VERSUS

GEORGIA GULF LAKE CHARLES, LLC, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION – District No. 3 PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 15-03654 DIANNE MAYO, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION JUDGE

CANDYCE G. PERRET JUDGE

Court composed of John D. Saunders, Billy H. Ezell, John E. Conery, Van H. Kyzar, and Candyce G. Perret, Judges.

Ezell, J., dissents and assigns written reasons.

JUDGMENT AMENDED AND, AS AMENDED, AFFIRMED. Thomas A. Filo Cox, Cox, Filo Camel & Wilson, LLC 723 Broad Street Lake Charles, LA 70601 (337) 436-6611 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE: Joseph Adams, Jr.

H. Alston Johnson, III Gregory T. Stevens J. Alan Harrell Phelps Dunbar, LLP P. O. Box 4412 Baton Rouge, LA 70821-4412 (225) 346-0285 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS: Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. Georgia Gulf Lake Charles, LLC PERRET, Judge.

This is a workers’ compensation claim for indemnity benefits based on an

alleged occupational hearing loss. Georgia Gulf Lake Charles, LLC and its insurer,

Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (hereinafter collectively referred to as

“Georgia Gulf”), appeal the decision of the workers’ compensation judge (“WCJ”)

awarding Joseph Adams supplemental earnings benefits (“SEB”), penalties, and

attorney fees for hearing loss caused by his employment. Mr. Adams answered the

appeal seeking additional attorney fees for work done on the appeal. For the

following reasons, we amend the judgment to limit Mr. Adams’ SEB payments to

104 weeks, and affirm as amended. Additionally, we render an attorney fee award

of $5,000.00 in favor of Mr. Adams and against Georgia Gulf Lake Charles, LLC

and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, jointly, severally and in solido, for work

done on this appeal.

FACTS:

Mr. Adams was employed for forty years by Georgia Gulf from February of

1971 until his retirement in January of 2011. While employed at Georgia Gulf’s

facility, Mr. Adams worked as a Construction Worker, Boilermaker, and Crane

Operator. Mr. Adams claims he began to notice some degree of hearing loss in his

left ear in the mid-1980s and in his right ear in 1997. Mr. Adams testified that he

believes his left ear experienced hearing loss much more than his right ear because

he would often remove his left earplug an average of five or six times a day in

order to communicate with his co-workers in the plant environment.

In January 2010, Mr. Adams had back surgery. Although Mr. Adams

testified that he had planned to work at Georgia Gulf until the age of seventy, he

chose to retire in January of 2011, at the age of sixty-five, after being informed by

Georgia Gulf that it was retiring him. In his supplemental appellee brief, Mr. 2 Adams concedes that “the record does establish that Mr. Adams has not sought

employment since his retirement from Georgia Gulf and that he now considers

himself retired.”

In December 2011, Mr. Adams filed a tort claim alleging occupational

noise-induced hearing loss as a result of his employment with Georgia Gulf. In

2015, the Louisiana Supreme Court held, in Arrant v. Graphic Packing

International, Inc., 13-2878, 13-2981 (La. 5/15/15) 169 So.3d 296, that

occupational noise-induced hearing loss is an occupational disease under the

Louisiana Workers’ Compensation Act (“LWCA”). Thereafter, on June 12, 2015,

Mr. Adams filed the current workers’ compensation claim, seeking SEB as a result

of his alleged occupational hearing loss.

A bench trial was held on February 7-8, 2017. On May 9, 2017, the WCJ

signed a judgment finding that Mr. Adams established entitlement to workers’

compensation medical and indemnity benefits due to occupational hearing loss; Mr.

Adams is entitled to SEB at the maximum compensation rate of $579 per week

from January 1, 2011, with interest; Georgia Gulf shall continue to pay this rate

until it either finds or offers a job to Mr. Adams paying at least ninety percent of

his average weekly wage; said job must be within the restrictions placed on Mr.

Adams by Dr. Donna Breen (“Dr. Breen”); Mr. Adams was entitled to a penalty of

$8,000.00 and attorney fees of $25,000.00 for Georgia Gulf’s failure to investigate

the claim and the arbitrary and capricious handling of the claim; and ordered

Georgia Gulf to pay medical benefits as needed by Mr. Adams.

On appeal, Georgia Gulf asserts the following four assignments of error: (1)

the WCJ erred in determining that Mr. Adams’ claim had not prescribed; (2) the

WCJ erred in concluding that Mr. Adams established a causal connection between

his hearing loss and employment at Georgia Gulf, and the corresponding 3 entitlement to medical and indemnity benefits; (3) the WCJ erred in determining

that Mr. Adams was entitled to SEB; and (4) the WCJ erred in awarding penalties

and attorney fees. Mr. Adams answered Georgia Gulf’s appeal, seeking additional

attorney fees for work done on this appeal.

STANDARD OF REVIEW:

Factual findings in workers’ compensation cases are subject to the manifest

error or clearly wrong standard of appellate review. Banks v. Indus. Roofing Sheet

Metal Works, Inc., 96-2840 (La. 7/1/97), 696 So.2d 551. In applying the manifest

error-clearly wrong standard, the appellate court must determine not whether the

trier of fact was right or wrong, but whether the fact finder’s conclusion was a

reasonable one. Id. As the Louisiana Supreme Court stated in Stobart v. State,

Through Department of Transportation & Development, 617 So.2d 880, 882

(La.1993) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted):

[T]he issue to be resolved by a reviewing court is not whether the trier of fact was right or wrong, but whether the factfinder’s conclusion was a reasonable one. Even though an appellate court may feel its own evaluations and inferences are more reasonable than the factfinder’s, reasonable evaluations of credibility and reasonable inferences of fact should not be disturbed upon review where conflict exists in the testimony. However, where documents or objective evidence so contradict the witness’s story, or the story itself is so internally inconsistent or implausible on its face, that a reasonable factfinder would not credit the witness’s story, the court of appeal may find manifest error or clear wrongness even in a finding purportedly based upon a credibility determination. Nonetheless, this Court has emphasized that the reviewing court must always keep in mind that if the trial court or jury’s findings are reasonable in light of the record reviewed in its entirety, the court of appeal may not reverse, even if convinced that had it been sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed the evidence differently.

4 DISCUSSION:

Prescription

The first issue to address is whether the WCJ correctly determined that Mr.

Adams’ workers’ compensation claim had not prescribed. Georgia Gulf argues

that Mr. Adams was clearly aware that he had occupational hearing loss as early as

the 1990s but did not file his tort suit until 2011. Thus, Georgia Gulf alleges that

Mr. Adams’ workers’ compensation claim prescribed because his untimely tort suit

cannot toll the prescriptive period.

Conversely, Mr. Adams argues that there are special prescription rules for an

occupational illness under La.R.S. 23:1031.1(E), which states that a claim must be

filed “within one year of the dates that: (1) [t]he disease manifested itself[,] (2)

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