Kevin R. Scott v. Performance Contractors, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 6, 2020
Docket2019CA1225
StatusUnknown

This text of Kevin R. Scott v. Performance Contractors, Inc. (Kevin R. Scott v. Performance Contractors, 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
Kevin R. Scott v. Performance Contractors, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL FIRST CIRCUIT

2019 CA 1225

KEVIN R. SCOTT

VERSUS

PERFORMANCE CONTRACTORS, INC.

Judgment rendered AUG 0 6 2020

On Appeal from the Office of Workers' Compensation, District 5 State of Louisiana No. 17- 04016

The Honorable Jason Ourso, Workers' Compensation Judge Presiding

Kevin R. Scott Pro Se

Phillip E. Foco Attorneys for Defendant/ Appellee Patrick H. Hunt Performance Contractors, Inc. Colin P. O' Rourke Baton Rouge, Louisiana

BEFORE: MeCLENDON, WELCH, AND HOLDRIDGE, JJ. HOLDRIDGE, J.

In this workers' compensation case, Kevin R. Scott, Sr. appeals a summary

judgment rendered in favor of Performance Contractors, Inc. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

On July 3, 2017, Mr. Scott filed this disputed claim in the Office of

Workers' Compensation ( OWC) seeking to recover wage and medical benefits

from his former employer, Performance Contractors, Inc ( Performance). Mr.

Scott claimed that on March 17, 2017, he was exposed to a chemical while

working as a laborer for Performance at Dow Chemical' s facility in Plaquemine,

Louisiana. Mr. Scott alleged that he sustained injuries to his head and neck as a

result of this chemical exposure.

Performance filed a motion for summary judgment in which it asserted that

Mr. Scott could meet his burden of proving that his injuries were caused by the

alleged exposure on March 17, 2017. In support of the motion, Performance

offered the following evidence:- ( 1) the disputed claim for compensation; ( 2) Mr.

Scott' s deposition testimony; ( 3) the deposition testimony of one of Mr. Scott' s

treating physicians; ( 4) a choice of physician form executed by Mr. Scott

identifying Dr. Douglas Swift as his designated physician; and 5) Dr. Swift' s

clinical notes.

Mr. Scott testified that around 5: 00 a.m. on the morning in question, while

using a portable bathroom, a bad smell came through the vents of the bathroom,

which " almost took the wind" out of him. Although Mr. Scott was unable to

identify the source of the smell, he stated that his eyes began to water, his head

started hurting, and he became dizzy. Mr. Scott reported the incident to Dow

safety personnel and a Performance worker. At approximately 6: 00 a. m., Mr. Scott

2 had a meeting with Dow and Performance personnel during which he was told that

the area in question was checked and nothing was found.

Later that day, Mr. Scott went to a Dow trailer and wrote a statement, then

he went to see an on- site medical professional. Mr. Scott reported that he had

been exposed to chemicals, had a headache, and was dizzy. He returned to work

that day and the following day, but did not return to work on March 20, 2017, his

next scheduled work day, and left his job with Performance on March 22, 2017.

Mr. Scott stated that he could not work with Performance because he had

headaches and was dizzy all of the time. He also stated that he had not worked any

other jobs since the exposure incident. Mr. Scott testified that he did not

experience headaches prior to the March 17, 2017 exposure incident.

Following the incident, Mr. Scott was treated for headaches by his primary

care physician, who referred Mr. Scott to Dr. Dariusz Gawronski, a neurologist.

Dr. Gawronski first saw Mr. Scott on April 18, 2017, at which time Mr. Scott' s

chief complaints were headaches and neck pain. Dr. Gawronski conducted

neurological tests on Mr. Scott; none of those tests were abnormal. An MRI of

Mr. Scott' s brain revealed white matter changes. Dr. Gawronski admitted that he

was unable to relate the changes in Mr. Scott' s brain to a limited chemical

exposure. However, he was able to state firmly that the types of changes reflected

on Mr. Scott' s scan occur very frequently in unexposed persons over the age of 60.

X-rays of Mr. Scott' s neck showed some spondylosis throughout his cervical spine,

which Dr. Gawronski stated is probably a result of age- related degenerative

changes and not very likely to be related to environmental exposures. Dr.

Gawronski could not causally relate Mr. Scott' s chronic headaches to a chemical

exposure, admitting he does not know if the headaches are, more probably than.

not, related to any chemical exposure. Dr. Gawronski stated he would defer to a

3 different expert to make that decision, and his office referred Mr. Scott to a

toxicologist, Dr. Douglas Swift.

On May 14, 2018, Mr. Scott chose Dr. Swift as his treating physician.

According to Dr. Swift' s July 3, 2018 clinical notes, Dr. Swift conducted an

overall evaluation of Mr. Scott, during which he performed a physical examination

and reviewed Mr. Scott' s history and medical records. Dr. Swift' s records indicate

Mr. Scott' s chief complaints related to the claimed chemical exposure were daily

headaches regular medication, dizziness, and the inability to tolerate heat, causing

headaches and dizziness with any heat exposure. After reviewing Mr. Scott' s

history, medical records, and conducting an examination of Mr. Scott, Dr. Swift

concluded that it was " difficult to say one way or the other" whether Mr. Scott' s

headaches and dizziness were caused by a chemical exposure as there was no agent

identified in the documents he was given to review. He further noted that Mr.

Scott' s pattern of intractable headaches for the past fifteen months with minimal

improvement did not fit a toxicological pattern, that is, a dose response relationship

in which one would expect diminution of symptoms once removed from exposure.

Dr. Swift concluded that at the present time, he was unable to relate Mr. Scott' s

current complaints to his reported exposure incident at a level of probability of

more likely than not. He indicated that Mr. Smith provided him with an incident

report of a release at the Dow facility occurring on March 17, 2017, and that he

would try to get more information as to the exact nature of the possible chemical in

question and inquire whether the reported release from that date was from a unit

near the area where Mr. Scott' s claimed exposure occurred.

On October 18, 2018, Mr. Scott' s attorney withdrew from the case.

Following that date, a series of letters written by Mr. Scott were filed into the

record in the OWC, some of which were written to the Workers' Compensation

19 Judge ( WCJ) assigned to the case. In the letters, Mr. Scott offered details

surrounding his claimed chemical exposure. The record also contains two pictures

of numerous medication bottles. Additionally, Mr. Scott submitted the Louisiana

Department of Environmental Quality Incident Report referred to by Dr. Swift in

his clinic notes. This report detailed an incident at the Dow Chemical facility on

March 17, 2017 at 12: 41, described as a mild plant upset at a hydrocarbons plant,

during which a valve failure caused the plant to vent to a ` BH" flare. The report

stated that there was no chemical release and everything went to the flare. Mr.

Scott also filed into the record the deposition testimony of Dr. Gawronski and a list

of witnesses.

On December 13, 2018, a hearing on Performance' s motion for summary

judgment was held, during which Mr. Scott represented himself. Performance

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