Lee v. Schumpert

836 So. 2d 1214, 2003 WL 183807
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 2003
Docket36,733-WCA
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 836 So. 2d 1214 (Lee v. Schumpert) 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
Lee v. Schumpert, 836 So. 2d 1214, 2003 WL 183807 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

836 So.2d 1214 (2003)

Deborah LEE, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Christus SCHUMPERT, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 36,733-WCA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 29, 2003.

*1216 Mayer, Smith & Roberts by John C. Turnage, Shreveport, Kelly J. Workman, for Defendant-Appellant.

Alex S. Lyons, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

Before WILLIAMS, CARAWAY and HARRISON (Pro Tempore), JJ.

HARRISON, Judge Pro Tempore.

Both the claimant and the employer appeal various aspects of a judgment that awarded the claimant supplemental earnings benefits but denied other benefits allegedly arising from occupational diseases. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual and procedural background

The claimant, Deborah Lee, went to work for Shumpert Medical Center (now known as Christus Schumpert, but referred to herein as "Schumpert") in late 1986; in 1994 she was transferred to health information management. She described her position as an "abstractor": pulling outpatient charts, gathering lab and other clinical reports, entering them on the charts by hand, and then keypunching the data for a final printout. She testified that she had a daily quota of 20 (later she said 24) charts to complete.

In about March 1999, she began having pain in her right elbow. In May 1999 her family doctor, Dr. Sreedevi Yarrapraggada ("Dr.Sree") referred her to an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Ryan Bicknell. According to Dr. Bicknell, Ms. Lee complained that work activities made her elbow hurt, and in his report he related her pain to her employment. Conservative treatment (use of a splint and anti-inflammatory drugs) yielded only marginal results. He found evidence of lateral epicondylitis and carpal tunnel syndrome ("CTS") in the right arm; however, a nerve conduction study showed positive for radial nerve entrapment. In deposition, Dr. Bicknell was "certain" that he discussed with her that her problems were work-related, but he gave her nothing in writing to this effect. Dr. Bicknell performed surgery to release the radial *1217 nerve on August 30, 1999. He found that the operation cleared up her symptoms, but told her to stay home for about five weeks. He then authorized her to return to work with no repetitive activity, prolonged writing or heavy lifting with the right hand.

Ms. Lee worked until the day before this operation, which she claimed on her group health insurance, provided by Am Care at Schumpert. Pursuant to Dr. Bicknell's release, she reported back to work on October 11. However, Human Resources advised her that her job was being terminated. She received a 16-week severance pay package, and then applied for and received unemployment compensation for the maximum period, six months.

In the meantime, however, Ms. Lee continued having pain which she described as radiating down from her shoulder and making her fingers tingle. In late December 1999, she was involved in a rear-end auto accident that gave her severe whiplash and back pain; she said it also aggravated her elbow. In January 2000, she returned to Dr. Bicknell, who noted that she "continued to have" evidence of lateral epicondylitis in the right elbow and mild CTS. In deposition, Dr. Bicknell said he advised her that all her problems—epicondylitis, radial tunnel entrapment and CTS—were related to work duties.

Ms. Lee retained an attorney, Alex Lyons, for her auto accident claim. Feeling that she might have a compensation claim, he asked Dr. Bicknell for a written opinion. By letter of February 29, 2000, Dr. Bicknell replied that all the problems in Ms. Lee's right arm were related to her employment. She contended at trial and on appeal that this was the first time she knew that her injuries were work-related. She filed the instant disputed claim on May 31, 2000.

By this time, Ms. Lee had grown dissatisfied with her lack of progress with Dr. Bicknell. Without consulting Schumpert, she asked her primary care physician, Dr. Sree, to refer her to Dr. John Knight, another orthopedic surgeon. In May and June 2000, he diagnosed medial neuropathy and probable radial tunnel syndrome, all related to her work. He performed surgery to correct these on June 12, 2000.

Ms. Lee's unemployment benefits ended in late August 2000. She was still under restrictions against heavy lifting and excessive writing. She got two temporary jobs in medical records for local doctors, but testified that pulling and writing on charts made her elbow really hurt, about a "5." She also worked a few part-time jobs in retail at Mall St. Vincent.

As noted, Ms. Lee filed this disputed claim on May 31, 2000. She sought temporary total disability benefits, supplemental earnings benefits, reimbursement for Dr. Bicknell's surgery, authorization for Dr. Knight's surgery, plus penalties and attorney fees. Schumpert filed an exception of prescription, urging that the action was filed more than six months after the occupational disease manifested itself. La. R.S. 23:1031.1 E.

A hearing on the exception was held in June 2001. After receiving evidence, the WCJ ruled orally that all three of Ms. Lee's conditions manifested "as early as May 1999," but she received no written confirmation that they were work-related until Dr. Bicknell's letter of February 29, 2000. Nevertheless, the WCJ found that just prior to the first surgery in August 1999, Dr. Bicknell advised her that the radial nerve entrapment was work-related, so her action for that occupational injury was prescribed. By contrast, nobody advised her that the other two conditions, epicondylitis and CTS, were work-related until February 2000, so her claim for those *1218 injuries was timely. The WCJ rendered a judgment sustaining the exception in part and denying it in part.[1]

The matter went to trial on the merits in November 2001. The parties stipulated that Ms. Lee's average weekly wage was $450, and that the cost of Dr. Knight's operation (covered by Am Care with Ms. Lee's co-payments) was $9,155.58. The deposition of Dr. Bicknell and various medical records were offered. The only live witness was Ms. Lee, who described her medical history and sequence of temporary jobs.

Without giving reasons, the WCJ rendered judgment:

(1) Finding that Ms. Lee's CTS and epicondylitis were work-related.
(2) Awarding her certain outstanding medical expenses.
(3) Denying her claim for temporary, total disability benefits.
(4) Awarding supplemental earnings benefits starting September 1, 2000, subject to specified credits.
(5) Denying the claim for medical expenses paid by Am Care.
(6) Finding that Ms. Lee changed her treating orthopedic surgeon without Schumpert's approval, and thus denying her claim to recover the cost of Dr. Knight's operation.
(7) Denying the claim for penalties and attorney fees.
(8) Casting Schumpert with costs.

Schumpert appealed, raising three assignments of error. Ms. Lee answered the appeal, raising two.

Discussion: Prescription

By their first assignments, both sides contest the WCJ's ruling on the exception of prescription. Schumpert urges that Ms. Lee filed this claim more than six months after she learned that her CTS and epicondylitis were work-related. In support, Schumpert urges that Dr.

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