Kampen v. Conway Southwest Exp.

655 So. 2d 380, 1995 WL 215078
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 1995
Docket95-CA-45
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 655 So. 2d 380 (Kampen v. Conway Southwest Exp.) 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
Kampen v. Conway Southwest Exp., 655 So. 2d 380, 1995 WL 215078 (La. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

655 So.2d 380 (1995)

Ralph KAMPEN
v.
CONWAY SOUTHWEST EXPRESS.

No. 95-CA-45.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

April 12, 1995.

*381 B. Gerald Weeks, New Orleans, for plaintiff/appellant, Ralph Kampen.

Dale W. Poindexter, Ruston, for defendant/appellee, Conway Southwest Exp.

Before BOWES, GAUDIN and GOTHARD, JJ.

*382 BOWES, Judge.

The plaintiff, Ralph Kampen, appeals from a judgment denying reinstatement of his worker compensation benefits. We affirm.

FACTS

On September 5, 1992, at about 7:00 a.m., plaintiff was involved in a one-vehicle accident in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana. Kampen was driving a tractor-trailer truck when he lost control of the rear trailer, causing the rig to go off the road. The truck landed on its side, facing the wrong way, when it came to rest. Kampen testified at trial that when the accident happened, he hit his head on the left side of the door post and he was thrown under the dashboard and "knocked around" the cab of the vehicle. Kampen did not receive medical treatment at the scene of the accident, however, he did seek medical treatment at Lallie Kemp Hospital in Independence, Louisiana, later that same day. Kampen testified that he received treatment for his knee, which was swollen. The emergency room personnel also cleaned his scrapes and bruises, and performed x-rays. There is no mention of any head trauma in the emergency room treatment report.

Kampen testified that a few days after the accident, he sought treatment with Dr. John Cazale, an orthopaedist. In addition to his knee injury, he was experiencing pain in his neck and back.

Kampen also testified that within a week of the accident he experienced his first seizure and that he has had several more since that time. Dr. Cazale referred him to Dr. Roy Fleming, a neurologist. Dr. Fleming prescribed Dilantin to control the seizures, however, at the time of trial he was not seeing Dr. Fleming or taking the Dilantin because worker's compensation would no longer pay for the appointments or prescriptions.

At trial, it was stipulated that Kampen was employed by Conway South Express and that he was in the course and scope of his employment at the time of the accident on September 5, 1992. Compensation was paid through January 14, 1994 at the rate of $286.52 per week.

Kampen testified that, as a result of the accident and the resultant seizures, he can no longer work as a commercial driver. Furthermore, because of pain in his neck and back, he cannot work in that he cannot load and unload the trucks, he cannot go places because he aches all the time and because he is afraid. He can no longer do what he used to do and earn what he earned as a truck driver. This has caused him to become severely depressed. In September of 1993, one year post-accident, both Dr. Cazale and Kampen's attorney sent him to consult with Dr. Oliver Sanders, a psychiatrist. At trial, Kampen testified that Sanders had set up a regime of treatment to begin after the trial for his depression.

Evidence was adduced to show that plaintiff was forty-five years old at the time of trial. He had been in the military for eleven months; five and one-half of those months involved active duty in Vietnam. While in the Army, he obtained the skills necessary to be a commercial truck driver. Prior to the accident, he was employed by Conway. His duties involved driving the trucks, and loading and unloading cargo. He had no difficulty in performing these duties.

During the trial, Kampen testified that he had never hurt his back, shoulders or neck prior to the accident. Kampen also testified that he had never been treated for any epilepsy or any kind of seizure disorder as a child or as an adult and he had never been diagnosed or treated for any psychiatric problems.

During the cross-examination of Mr. Kampen, defendants introduced hospital records to show that he had been treated on five different occasions, from 1986 to 1990, for various injuries to his shoulders, neck and back. The defendants also introduced medical records of Baptist Hospital, which reflected that Kampen had been admitted to the hospital when he was ten years old after experiencing a seizure, possibly as a result of an allergic reaction to penicillin. In addition, the defendants introduced the medical records of the Veterans Administration Hospital, which showed that Kampen was having seizures and psychiatric problems, including violent episodes of behavior, in 1974. Kampen *383 denied that he was treated for epilepsy/seizures or for any psychiatric disorder while at the Veterans Administration Hospital. However, he stated that he was treated for adjustment problems after his return from Vietnam. Kampen admitted that, as a child, he had been hospitalized for ten months at Southeastern Louisiana Hospital which he was told was for psychiatric treatment. However, he said his parents sent him to Southeastern because they did not want him around anymore and boarding school was too expensive.

Subsequent to the accident, plaintiff was underneath a car when the jacks holding the car up failed and the car fell on him causing him to sustain fractures of both clavicles (collar bones).

Plaintiff's wife, Katherine Kampen, testified that she met Kampen in May of 1971, that they were married in March of 1972 and that Kampen had never been diagnosed or treated for any epileptic or seizure disorder. She said she remembered talking to the doctors at the Veterans Administration Hospital and at that time Kampen was showing signs of stress because they had just had a baby and he was having difficulty adjusting to civilian life.

All other testimony in this matter was submitted via deposition.

In his deposition, Dr. Cazale testified that he first saw Kampen on September 14, 1992. At that time, Kampen gave a history of the accident and related that he was experiencing pain in his right ankle, left knee and back. Kampen denied any prior injury to his back and neck. Dr. Cazale diagnosed multiple contusions and abrasions, along with contusions of the left ankle, and lumbar strain, and requested that a bone scan and CAT scan be performed.

Dr. Cazale next saw Kampen on September 22, 1992. The results of the bone scan were normal, however the CAT scan reflected that Kampen suffered from a pre-existing significant degenerative disc disease of the lumbar spine, which could have been aggravated by the accident. Dr. Cazale testified that, at this time, Kampen was disabled and could not work.

Dr. Cazale saw Kampen approximately seven more times over the course of the next year. Cazale opined that Kampen suffered soft tissue injury to his back and his knee which had resolved over the year. It was Cazale's opinion that the accident caused an aggravation of his pre-existing degenerative disc disease, which resolved itself over time, placing Kampen in the same physical condition as before the accident. He also said that Kampen should not return to truck driving because of the effect of the vibration on his pre-existing degenerative disc disease. Dr. Cazale also stated that Kampen never told him about any prior back or neck injuries and did not mention any seizures after 1970.

Dr. Roy Fleming, and expert in neurology, testified that he first saw Kampen on September 17, 1992, twelve days after the accident. Kampen related to Dr. Fleming that he had been in a truck accident and that he was flipped inside the truck and knocked unconscious. When he regained consciousness, he was in a dazed state with a large lump on his left temple. He was evaluated by a local hospital and then sent home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
655 So. 2d 380, 1995 WL 215078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kampen-v-conway-southwest-exp-lactapp-1995.