Kortz v. Colt Energy Services, Inc.

698 So. 2d 460, 97 La.App. 5 Cir. 159, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 1996, 1997 WL 420764
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 29, 1997
Docket97-CA-159
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 698 So. 2d 460 (Kortz v. Colt Energy Services, 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
Kortz v. Colt Energy Services, Inc., 698 So. 2d 460, 97 La.App. 5 Cir. 159, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 1996, 1997 WL 420764 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

698 So.2d 460 (1997)

Thomas F. KORTZ
v.
COLT ENERGY SERVICES, INC.

No. 97-CA-159.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

July 29, 1997.

*462 Hortence M. Patterson, Metairie, for Defendant/Appellant, Colt Energy Services, Inc.

Joel Levy, Marrero, for Plaintiff/Appellee, Thomas F. Kortz.

Before BOWES, DUFRESNE and GOTHARD, JJ.

BOWES, Judge.

Appellant, Colt Energy Services Inc. ("Colt"), appeals a judgment of the worker's compensation court awarding benefits, penalties and attorney fees to appellee Thomas Kortz. We amend, and then affirm, as follows.

Appellee filed a claim for compensation on March 27, 1995 for injuries to his foot which he alleged to have suffered on October 10, 1994. In the petition, Kortz stated that he stepped into a pothole or uneven surface on grounds owned by Murphy Oil, and that he reported that injury to his supervisor, Anthony Blanchard, on that same date. At the time of the accident, plaintiff was an employee of Colt, which denied that plaintiff had sustained a compensable accident.

At trial, the parties stipulated that the average weekly wage was $549.44; that the compensation rate to which plaintiff would be entitled was $323.00 per week; and that Kortz was an employee of Colt at the time he was injured. Various medical reports and wage records were also stipulated to at trial.

Mary Kortz, former wife of the plaintiff, testified that she usually dropped her husband off on Engineers Road where he would catch a ride on the ferry with other employees. When she picked him up on the day of the accident, Kortz was limping. He told her that on his way to "punch out" after work the truck (with which he customarily left the *463 grounds) was pulling out and running to catch the truck he stepped in a hole, hurting his foot. The next day he called his employer, and they told him to go to a doctor at Primary Care. The doctor there told him he could go back to light work, and he worked thereafter for 15-20 hours per week. She said that her husband called for this light work every day, and that sometimes he was called, and sometimes he was told he was not needed.

Plaintiff testified he was a mechanic who worked offshore, or sometimes in the shop. On the day of the accident, after work, he stopped to make a telephone call; he noticed that the company truck on which he usually rode to the ferry was pulling away from the building and he started trotting after it. He had to check out from two doors and had not at that time clocked out; as he ran for the truck, he stepped into a hole and "came out limping."

His ankle began to swell, but because he had sprained his ankle in the past, he did not worry about it. He told the driver, his supervisor, Anthony Blanchard, that he had twisted his ankle, and needed to "walk it off"; however, he was driven to the second door to clock out. He was limping at this point. He also told several people that he "twisted his ankle," including co-workers Joie Alexie and David Braud.

The next morning he could not put any weight on the foot. He wrapped it tightly and drove to the ferry to tell his supervisor of the problem. Then he went to the office, and was subsequently sent to Dr. Richard at Primary Care. Dr. Richard diagnosed a broken (bone in the) foot and he was referred to an orthopedist. His foot was put in a cast and he was told he could walk, but could not go offshore because he could not get a safety boot on his foot. He made himself available to work at the company, but was often told there was nothing for him to do.

To make ends meet, he cleaned shops for people he knew. He also worked building up electrical systems for engines at the electrical division of Colt. He did some maintenance on a forklift for a total of two days and for which he got paid.

In early December 1994, the doctor took the cast off and told him to take it easy for another week. Then plaintiff was released to go back to work.

On cross-examination, he stated that during the period of his disability, he worked the odd jobs mostly for food.

Anthony Blanchard testified that he was plaintiff's supervisor at Colt. At the end of the day in question, he drove the truck out of the vehicle gate at the work site and picked up the men whom he usually drove to the ferry. The others had to exit through a personnel gate, and Blanchard did not see plaintiff chase after his truck, nor did he see plaintiff limping. Kortz did not tell him that he had twisted his ankle. Plaintiff got out of the truck and walked across the street to get a beverage; he stopped and stood visiting with a friend, and then stood outside the truck for several minutes until the ferry arrived. The next morning plaintiff indicated that his foot was hurting, but Blanchard did not recall that plaintiff told him any details. Blanchard knew that the company authorized plaintiff to see Dr. Richard on the day after the accident.

The witness further testified that plaintiff had been offered full time employment in the shop until he was able to return to the field doing painting, cleaning, and other light tasks. Blanchard stated that plaintiff came in sometimes, and sometimes did not, and such was a voluntary choice on plaintiff's part. Kortz was never told that there was not enough work for him to do. Eventually, plaintiff just stopped coming to work. However, Blanchard admitted that he was not involved in the worker's compensation management of the company.

Martha Ronsonet, of the Louisiana Worker's Compensation Corporation, investigated the accident. Two statements were taken from two employees, Joie Alexie and Louis Braud, and the company determined from these that the accident did not take place at work. A recorded statement was also taken from Alexie one year after the accident which indicated that nothing unusual happened to plaintiff until the next morning (after the alleged accident), and that there was no indication that plaintiff had complained of an *464 accident the night before. Dr. Richard's bill had been paid, but the other medicals were outstanding.

A number of exhibits were stipulated to at trial. The recorded statement by Alexie, referred to hereinabove, evidenced that he did not see the incident involving Mr. Kortz. He did not think that plaintiff had told him about the ankle the same day it happened, but did remember Kortz complaining "in the evening, when he got off, that his leg, he said his ankle hurt, you know, the day he got off, uh that was it, you know, late evening....we was knocking off of work and he said he twist his ankle, you know." Copies of other written statements from Mr. Alexie and from Lewis Braud indicated that they worked with plaintiff, but did not see him get injured on the day in question.

The initial employer's report, which was not taken until April 4, 1995, indicated that the details of the injury were unknown. The doctors' reports (both from Primary Care and from the consulting orthopedist, Dr. Mark Juneau), taken the on the day following the accident shows that on both occasions the plaintiff reported the accident as having occurred when he was running after a truck and stepped into a hole.

JUDGMENT

The court found that Kortz was injured in the course and scope of his employment, and awarded SEB benefits from October 11, 1994 through November 22, 1994. The court further ordered payment of all medical bills and expenses from October 10 through July 19, 1995, with credit for all expenses and benefits previously paid.

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Bluebook (online)
698 So. 2d 460, 97 La.App. 5 Cir. 159, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 1996, 1997 WL 420764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kortz-v-colt-energy-services-inc-lactapp-1997.