Kerry Anderson Doumite v. Kvhp - Fox 29

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 2004
DocketWCA-0004-0427
StatusUnknown

This text of Kerry Anderson Doumite v. Kvhp - Fox 29 (Kerry Anderson Doumite v. Kvhp - Fox 29) 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
Kerry Anderson Doumite v. Kvhp - Fox 29, (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

04-427

KERRY ANDERSON DOUMITE

VERSUS

KVHP - FOX 29

********** APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION DISTRICT 03, PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 02-08593 HONORABLE SAM LOWERY, PRESIDING **********

SYLVIA R. COOKS JUDGE

**********

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Marc T. Amy and John B. Scofield,* Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Mark Zimmerman 910 Ford Street Lake Charles, LA 70601 (337) 433-1414 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE: Kerry Anderson Doumite

Robert J. May Juge, Napolitano, Guilbreau, Ruli & Frieman 3838 N. Causeway Blvd., Suite 2500 Metairie, LA 70002 (504) 831-7270 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT-APPELLANT: KVHP - Fox 29

* John B. Scofield participated in this decision by appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court as Judge Pro Tempore. COOKS, Judge.

The employer, KVHP - Fox 29, appeals the judgment of the Office of Workers’

Compensation awarding the claimant, Kerry Anderson Doumite, disability benefits,

penalties and attorney fees for a work-related accident. For the following reasons, we

affirm.

FACTS

From July 12, 1999 through August 14, 2002, Kerry Anderson Doumite

worked as the news director and weeknight anchor for KVHP - Fox 29 in Lake

Charles. Part of her work duties involved script writing and editing of stories for the

newscasts.

In March of 2002, Doumite began experiencing pain in her right shoulder and

arm. On May 24, 2002, KVHP’s personnel director noticed Doumite’s physical

problems and recommended she seek medical treatment. Doumite was seen that day

at Hunter McGuire Medical Center for right arm pain. She was treated on a number

of occasions at Hunter McGwire by Dr. Kenneth Burton. Dr. Burton advised

Doumite to take time off from work to allow her physical problems to improve. He

also recommended that the employer take steps to improve her work station which he

believed was not ergonomically efficient and was overly stressful on her physically.

Doumite did not take time off from work and received weekly injections to help her

cope with the pain. The employer did not improve Doumite’s work station as

recommended by Dr. Burton.

On August 2, 2002, Doumite sent a letter of resignation to her supervisor

stating “the work environment at KVHP has become so hostile that it is impossible

for me to manage effectively and efficiently.” She also requested in her letter of

resignation that she be allowed to “continue with the medical treatment in my arm,

-1- which was injured on the job, that my workers’ compensation will continue to pick

up the costs of medical care until my arm and shoulder are healed.” However, before

the effective date of her resignation, Doumite resigned her employment on August 14,

2002, stating she could no longer work through the pain.

After her resignation, Doumite was diagnosed by Dr. Kevin Gorin, a pain

management specialist, with thoracic outlet syndrome. He felt Doumite was capable

of working, but she could not perform her previous duties. Dr. Gorin felt Doumite’s

shoulder and arm problems were work-related. At the employer’s request, Doumite

was examined by Dr. James Perry, an orthopedic specialist. He disagreed with Dr.

Gorin’s finding of thoracic outlet syndrome, and found Doumite suffered from a

cervical strain which he associated with her work duties. Dr. Perry released Doumite

to return to full-duty work.

Doumite sought workers’ compensation benefits. A report from Dr. Burton

was sent to the medical case manager for the employer. In the report, Dr. Burton

noted the poor arrangement of Doumite’s work station and its effect on Doumite’s

physical condition. Doumite was denied benefits by the claims adjuster. A 1008

disputed claim form was filed with the Office of Workers’ Compensation (OWC) on

November 15, 2002.

It was stipulated at trial that no indemnity benefits were paid, with the

employer paying some medical expenses until July, 2003. The employer denied that

a work injury occurred under the Louisiana Workers’ Compensation Act, because

Doumite could not identify an actual, identifiable, precipitous event that caused her

symptoms. The workers’ compensation judge determined that Doumite established

a compensable work-related accident, finding as follows:

The defendants cite a long and impressive list of cases, all which stand for the proposition that a gradual onset of symptoms do not

-2- provide the requisite element of accidental injury under the statutes. The defendant’s interpretation of events is that the claimant’s condition slowly, gradually deteriorated and got progressively worse to the point that her employer suggested she seek medical treatment.

Both counsel, although they never said so in so many words, seem to argue that gradual deterioration is not an accident as defined by the statute; and the court would certainly agree. But the claimant’s attorney does not concede that this was a gradual deterioration. Indeed, he insists that it was not. He urges that in line with Third Circuit reasoning, that the plaintiff identified with particularity the time, place, and manner in which she was injured.

Ms. Doumite, under lengthy examination and sharp cross- examination, was unwavering and steadfast in her insistence that her inability to continue to work was triggered by a definable, singular event or circumstance; notably, the dramatically increased workload which required her to function at a speed, pace, and duration which she had heretofore not done.

Counsel argues there was nothing gradual about this. Because of the corporate decisions involving the television station where she was an anchor woman and news editor, she simply did more than she had done before and was required to do it in a fashion that did not accommodate the required new pace and load.

Her testimony was that she just continued to get worse and worse; it was that the singular acceleration of her duties, indeed the expansion of the duties, caused what she termed near total incapacitation. True, she could not point to a single moment, a precise nanosecond or a shining moment in time when her current condition began; but she does state with clarity the time period involved; namely, a two-week period of unprecedented increase in workload. She was equally clear that part of the cause of her disability was the configuration of her computer set up. Her testimony was that a combination of excessive work, coupled with a very awkward arrangement of the computer system, was the direct cause of her condition.

Nobody from the television station contradicted her description of the workplace. Nobody from the television station contradicted her description of the workload.

Both examining physicians, while not in total agreement as to the diagnosis and duration of the disability, are in essential agreement that the work stress precipitated the problem.

-3- This case necessarily involves the evaluation of the credibility of the claimant. She presents herself as a 44-year-old TV anchor woman, news director, with impressive credentials and resume. Her answers were clear and to the point, and I detected no effort on her part to equivocate or mislead in any way. She was forthcoming in her responses, even those which were related to circumstances surrounding her resignation. And, clearly, there were activities in the corporate atmosphere which may have clouded matters here; but they don’t detract from the issue at hand and are certainly not disposit[ive] of the issue of whether the claimant suffered a work related injury and disability.

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