Kendrick v. Hercules Concrete Pumping Service of Mississippi, Inc.

216 So. 3d 261, 2017 WL 655907, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 233
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 2017
DocketNo. 51,190-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 216 So. 3d 261 (Kendrick v. Hercules Concrete Pumping Service of Mississippi, Inc.) 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
Kendrick v. Hercules Concrete Pumping Service of Mississippi, Inc., 216 So. 3d 261, 2017 WL 655907, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 233 (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

DREW, J.

liHurchel Kendrick1 appeals from a summary judgment dismissing his claim for wrongful termination. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings, rejecting the demand of the appellee, Hercules Concrete Pumping Services of Mississippi, Inc. (“Hercules”), for damages for frivolous appeal.

FACTS

Mr. Kendrick was employed with Hercules for many years as a concrete pump truck operator.2 On March 18,2013, he was washing out the hopper of the pump truck when a gust of wind jerked the wooden board he was holding out of his hand. That incident injured Kendrick’s left shoulder and required medical treatment, including surgery. Hercules paid Kendrick over $30,000 in medical benefits and over $6,000 in workers’ compensation indemnity benefits. Since the operation was successful, Kendrick returned to work at his old job.

In December 2014, Hercules’ workers’ compensation insurance adjuster began negotiating a final settlement of this claim with the unrepresented Kendrick. The insurer offered Kendrick $8,500 for a release, and Kendrick accepted the offer. At his deposition, Kendrick explained that during the negotiation, the insurer put no other conditions on the settlement. Specifically, Kendrick said that the parties did not discuss his resignation from work at Hercules as a condition of the settlement. Because the | .¿lump-sum settlement had to be approved by the Office of Workers’ Compensation, the parties set the matter for a hearing on January 29, 2015.

In the meantime, on January 28, 2015, while working on a Hercules pump truck, Kendrick fell off the back of the truck. Kendrick’s foot got caught on the truck’s ladder, and he claimed that the fall caused him to injure his leg and back. At his deposition, Kendrick explained the following events:

I called Paul [Shelley, the president and CEO of Hercules] and told him that I had fallen off the truck, that I was just trying to let him be aware of the incident, because when I had hurt my left shoulder I didn’t report it immediately. I tried to not—was thinking I wasn’t hurt. And I was just basically letting him be aware of the incident, that I had—that I had fallen and I wanted to make the report.
[[Image here]]
Paul went into—actually, he kind of went to raising sand with me about safety and that we had to, you know, be careful, and this and that and the other, and more or less going over his safety issues, and that he had—he had a bunch of people already getting hurt on the job, had workmen’s comp injuries, and he couldn’t afford any more claims, and that if I was hurt he was going to have to cut me loose.
[[Image here]]
Well, I told Paul, I said, “I’m on my way home. I’m not trying to be hurt. I understand that, you know, we don’t need any more claims, and I was just letting you be aware of the—not the injury, but the fall, that I didn’t know how—how bad I [263]*263was hurt or not, but I wanted to let you be aware that I had fallen.

Kendrick clarified what Shelley told him:

Paul told me, bottom line what you’re asking was that he had ... too many workmen’s comp claims against his company already, that he couldn’t afford any more workmen’s comp, that if I was hurt, he was going to have to cut me loose. He could not afford to have anybody else on his workmen’s comp.

Kendrick said that after he got home, Shelly called and told him to go to the doctor for X-rays and an examination. Shelly instructed Kendrick to send the results to him before returning to work. Kendrick went to the Inhospital, where he met a Hercules representative who paid Kendrick’s personal health insurance deductible. He was seen by a doctor but not treated, and the doctor would not provide him a work release because Kendrick required no treatment.

Kendrick took the next day off to con-fect the settlement of his 2013 workers’ compensation claim. He went to the office of the law firm representing Hercules where he signed several documents pertinent to the settlement. Kendrick admitted, “I didn’t read these documents. I briefed over them.”

One of the documents, titled “RELEASE,” contained the following paragraph:

In further consideration and as part and parcel of this settlement, the undersigned does hereby voluntarily resign from his employment with HERCULES CONCRETE PUMPING SERVICES OF MS, INC. and does further hereby release HERCULES CONCRETE PUMPING SERVICES OF MS, INC. from any and all liability, of any nature or kind whatsoever, arising out of his employment with HERCULES CONCRETE PUMPING SERVICES OF MS, INC. including, without limitation, any and all claims HURSCHEL KENDRICK may have under federal and state labor or employment laws and under federal and state tort laws.

This document is in authentic form, notarized in the presence of two witnesses. That same day, Kendrick and the Hercules attorneys went before Judge Brenza Irving Jones, who approved the settlement. The Hercules attorney gave Kendrick a check for $8,500. Later that day, Shelley called Kendrick and instructed him to have the X-rays sent to the company, where Shelley could look at them. Kendrick said that Shelley told him not to return to work until Shelley had the X-rays.

The next day, Kendrick went to the company’s Louisiana office and faxed the doctor’s report to the Mississippi office. Kendrick said:

|4When I got back later that afternoon when [Shelley] got the papers in his hand, he called me back and told me that he would no longer be able to use me, that he was going to lay me off because we were slow at work, which was a complete lie. We were not slow at work. We had plenty of work.

Kendrick said that there was no discussion of his voluntary resignation, and that his supervisor, Mark Knopp, told him that the company very much needed his services and could not believe that Kendrick had been fired.

In July 2015, Kendrick filed a tort action against Hercules in district court. Kendrick alleged that he was fired from Hercules because he was exercising his right to workers’ compensation. Kendrick asserted that this action was illegal under La. R.S. 23:1361, et seq., and demanded a year’s salary along with his attorney fees.

After discovery, including Kendrick’s deposition, which is partially quoted above, [264]*264Hercules filed a motion for summary judgment. Hercules urged that Kendrick had no claim for wrongful discharge because he had voluntarily resigned from his employment as a part of the settlement of his March 2013 compensation claim. In support, Hercules offered Kendrick’s deposition, the settlement documents including the release containing Kendrick’s resignation, and the affidavit of Paul Shelley. Shelley’s affidavit stated, in part:

[A]s part of the consideration for agreeing to the lump sum settlement, Kendrick voluntarily terminated his employment with Hercules; that on January 29, 2015, Kendrick executed documents agreeing to voluntarily terminate his employment with Hercules; [and] that neither I nor anyone else associated with Hercules retaliated against Kendrick due to his assertion of his workers’ compensation claims[.]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tarver v. Walmart Inc
W.D. Louisiana, 2024

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 So. 3d 261, 2017 WL 655907, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendrick-v-hercules-concrete-pumping-service-of-mississippi-inc-lactapp-2017.