J.P. Morgan Chase v. Louis

12 So. 3d 440, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 829, 2009 WL 1313277
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 2009
Docket44,309-WCA
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 12 So. 3d 440 (J.P. Morgan Chase v. Louis) 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
J.P. Morgan Chase v. Louis, 12 So. 3d 440, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 829, 2009 WL 1313277 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

| ,The employer, J.P. Morgan Chase, and its insurer, Liberty Mutual, appeal a judgment finding that the claimant, Angela Louis, sustained a work-related injury resulting in a protruded disc in her neck, ordering them to provide surgery, and assessing a penalty of $2,000 and attorney fee of $5,000. For the reasons expressed, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

Factual Background

Ms. Louis was employed at a Chase office in Monroe at an average weekly wage of $546.02. She had worked at Chase since 1998; in 2006, she was a “team leader,” charged with distributing and processing large boxes of mortgage documents. She testified that she had to move boxes weighing from 25 to 40 lbs.

For several months in 2004 she saw a chiropractor, Dr. Michael Harvey, for neck and lower back pain; she also described symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome and ulnar compression in her right hand, but she ascribed none of these problems to her job at Chase. In April 2006, she was in an auto accident resulting in neck pain bad enough that she took off work for about two months. She received adjustments from Dr. Harvey and other treatment from her family doctor, and testified that her neck pain had resolved by June. Meanwhile, however, the pain in her wrist got so bad that she had carpal tunnel surgery at E.A. Conway Hospital on June 22. In a visit to Conway for an unrelated complaint on October 12, Ms. Louis told the physician’s assistant that she had no complaint with her neck.

In late September or early October, Chase had a reduction in force (“RIF”) with the result that Ms. Louis had to handle more boxes than before. |2In late *443 October or early November — she could not recall the exact date — she was taking a box from a coworker and removing boxes from the gondola when she felt a sharp pain in her neck, followed by dull pain going down her shoulders, arm and back. She knew she was hurt, but not bad enough to take off work; she testified mentioning this event to several coworkers, notably Dawn Wiggins, but admitted not reporting it to her manager, Wayne Jefferson.

E.A. Conway’s records showed that she phoned on October 29, telling the operator her neck “started hurting again,” but that she received no further medical treatment for her neck. She testified that she continued to work in pain; when Dawn and other coworkers asked her why she could not turn her head, she said she’d hurt herself at work. She went to her chiropractor, Dr. Harvey, on December 1, and to her family doctor, who ordered an MRI on January 11, 2007. After seeing the results, he referred her to a neurosurgeon, Dr. Bernie McHugh.

On the initial visit in February 2007, Dr. McHugh’s physician’s assistant noted, “She returned to work in September 2006; since November, she has experienced cervical pain with radiation” — no mention of work-related. Dr. McHugh testified that the MRI showed “moderate to severe sten-osis” at C-4/5, for which he recommended pain management and epidural injections. He described stenosis as purely degenerative, likely aggravated by the auto accident. On cross-examination, he agreed that lifting boxes at work was a “reasonable assumption” to explain some exacerbation. On a second visit, March 1, he discussed intracervical Rdiskectomy and fusion at C — 1/5. She agreed, and they scheduled the surgery for April 9.

Ms. Louis then went to her manager, Wayne Jefferson, and told him she would need time off for the surgery. According to Ms. Louis, he advised her that she would have to contact the compensation carrier, Liberty Mutual, which she did; the adjuster emailed her forms to fill out, which she did; and she agreed to put off the operation until Liberty Mutual approved the procedure. She also testified that Liberty Mutual sent her to a Dr. Puaranton in Shreveport, who agreed that she needed the operation, but the insurer had still not approved it. Neither Jefferson, nor the insurance adjuster nor Dr. Puaranton was called to testify.

Ms. Louis also described a subsequent incident, on April 9, 2007, when she fell down a short flight of stairs as she was leaving work. She testified that she promptly reported this to the security office. The incident hurt her left hand, neck and knees, but is not part of the instant claim. She has continued to work.

Procedural History

Chase filed the instant disputed claim on August 20, 2007, stating that Ms. Louis “alleges” a neck injury on November 1, 2006, and that they had a bona fide dispute over occurrence, causation, disability, medical treatment and preexisting conditions. Ms. Louis then filed her own disputed claim, which was consolidated with Chase’s claim; her Form 1008 is not included in the consolidated appellate record. She demanded approval of the surgery with Dr. McHugh, weekly benefits of $420 during her recovery, |4and a penalty and attorney fee. Chase raised an exception of prescription which it apparently withdrew.

At trial in May 2008, Ms. Louis testified as noted above. She admitted not reporting the injury to her manager until March 2007, as she was not aware of the reporting requirement until then. She insisted that she had told several coworkers about it, and maintained that even though Dr. McHugh’s office records did not reflect it, *444 she advised him the injury occurred at work. Dawn Wiggins, another team leader, testified that Ms. Louis told her her neck started hurting after she lifted some boxes. Coworkers Rosemary Thomas and Wanda Crockhom confirmed that Ms. Louis said she had hurt her back, but they could not recall her saying how it happened. Courtney Burrell, another coworker, corroborated that Ms. Louis stumbled down the stairs in April 2007. Ms. Burrell stated that Chase provided no training for reporting accidents, and Ms. Crockhom agreed that not all supervisors relayed this information to new hires. As exhibits, Ms. Louis introduced her Louisiana Pain Care record and Dr. McHugh’s records and deposition.

Chase called two witnesses. Chad Ellis, a coworker, testified that Ms. Louis never reported an accident and never told him her injury was work-related. Amy Squyres, a warehouse supervisor, testified that in November 2006, Ms. Louis had no immediate supervisor other than the branch manager, Jefferson. She also testified that Chase’s policy of reporting work-related injuries to a supervisor was part of the full FMLA notice given to all new hires, available on the website and posted on a placard | ¡¡downstairs. On cross-examination, Ms. Wiggins and Ms. Burrell testified that Chase’s attorney had interviewed them in May 2006 about Ms. Louis’s accident. As- exhibits, Chase introduced Dr. Harvey’s office notes and Ms. Louis’s complete E.A. Conway record.

Action of the WCJ

Ruling from the bench in August 2008, the WCJ recapped the evidence, finding that Ms. Louis’s neck pain from the auto accident had completely resolved by October 12, 2006. The WCJ noted Dr. McHugh’s diagnosis of a preexisting degenerative condition aggravated by the auto accident, but accepted his concession that lifting heavy boxes could further exacerbate this: “It added to her symptomolo-gy which led its way to surgical intervention.” Because of the recent RIF, Ms. Louis had to process more boxes and hurt herself removing them from the gondola; the incident and injury were corroborated by Ms. Wiggins and others.

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 3d 440, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 829, 2009 WL 1313277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jp-morgan-chase-v-louis-lactapp-2009.