Liberty Insurance Corporation v. Anthony Lee Tutor

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedOctober 29, 2019
DocketNO. 2018-CA-00091-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Liberty Insurance Corporation v. Anthony Lee Tutor (Liberty Insurance Corporation v. Anthony Lee Tutor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liberty Insurance Corporation v. Anthony Lee Tutor, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-00091-COA

LIBERTY INSURANCE CORPORATION APPELLANT

v.

ANTHONY LEE TUTOR APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/21/2017 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. LEE SORRELS COLEMAN COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CLAY COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: CLIFFORD KAVANAUGH BAILEY III GREGG A. CARAWAY ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: LANCE L. STEVENS RODERICK D. WARD III NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - INSURANCE DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND RENDERED - 10/29/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Anthony Lee Tutor filed a complaint against Liberty Insurance Corporation (Liberty);

United Parcel Service Company and United Parcel Service Inc. (collectively UPS); UPS

business manager April Dallas; and UPS supervisor Bonnie King seeking extra-contractual

compensatory damages and punitive damages for the alleged bad-faith handling of Tutor’s

prior workers’ compensation claim.

¶2. After a trial on the matter, the jury awarded Tutor extra-contractual damages in the

amount of $100,000. The jury also returned a verdict finding in favor of Tutor on his claim

for punitive damages, but the jury did not assess a monetary award against Liberty for punitive damages. After the trial, UPS and Tutor reached a confidential settlement of Tutor’s

claim against UPS. UPS is not a party in this appeal.

¶3. Liberty now appeals, arguing that the evidence presented at trial was insufficient to

support the jury’s verdict that Liberty is liable to Tutor for extra-contractual damages and that

the evidence was insufficient to support the punitive damages award. Liberty also argues that

the trial court erred in admitting Lydia Quarles’s expert testimony.

¶4. We find that in applying precedent to this case, Tutor failed to meet his burden to

prove extra-contractual damages because the record reflects that Liberty possessed an

arguable good-faith basis for its delay in paying Tutor’s claim.1 Accordingly, the evidence

presented at trial was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict. We therefore reverse the

jury’s verdict and render a verdict in favor of Liberty.

FACTS

¶5. Tutor worked as a package driver for UPS. At the time, Liberty was the workers’

compensation carrier for UPS. On September 1, 2011, Tutor injured his back while walking

upstairs to deliver a package.

¶6. After the injury occurred, Tutor immediately called his UPS business manager, April

Dallas, and informed her that he injured his back and would not be able to finish his route.

Dallas advised Tutor that she would bring another UPS supervisor Gary Bishop to meet Tutor

and help him with the remainder of his route. Dallas also advised Tutor to call her when he

returned to the UPS facility.

1 See United Servs. Auto. Ass’n (USSA) v. Lisanby, 47 So. 3d 1172, 1178 (¶18) (Miss. 2010).

2 ¶7. When Bishop and Tutor returned to the Columbus facility that evening, they called

Dallas to discuss what happened. During the phone call, Bishop and Tutor informed Dallas

about the circumstances regarding Tutor’s injury—that Tutor was carrying a box up some

stairs to make a delivery when a dog startled him and he twisted and hurt his back.2 Dallas

advised Tutor to seek medical treatment and informed him that due to the late hour, he would

need to go to the emergency room because medical clinics would be closed. Tutor told

Dallas that he would prefer to seek treatment from his personal physician the next day. Tutor

also told Dallas that prior to this injury, he had been receiving treatment from a chiropractor.

Dallas testified that based on this second phone conversation with Tutor, she determined that

Tutor was suffering from a previous injury and that the injury he suffered after the dog

startled him was not work related. As a result, Dallas did not report Tutor’s injury to Liberty.

¶8. The record contains extensive medical evidence from various physicians regarding

Tutor’s injury as well as evidence of the medical treatment Tutor received for back pain he

suffered prior to this injury. On September 2, 2011, the day after his injury, Tutor sought

treatment from his family-medicine doctor, Dr. Brad Crosswhite. At his appointment, Tutor

informed Dr. Crosswhite that he sustained back pain “when he was walking up a flight of

stairs . . . while he was carrying a box and heard a dog bark and he twisted his back[,]

immediately feeling pain in his back.” Dr. Crosswhite also noted that Tutor “is seeing a

2 There is conflicting testimony regarding whether Tutor told Dallas what happened or Bishop repeated to Dallas what Tutor had told him.

3 chiropractor weekly for [a] problem in the same spot in this thoracic vertebrae.”3 Dr.

Crosswhite referred Tutor to receive an MRI of his thoracic spine and recommended that

Tutor stay off of work from September 15–30, 2011.

¶9. Despite Tutor’s complaint of back pain, the MRI results revealed no objective injury.

Dr. Crosswhite testified that the MRI results were normal and that “the only thing out of the

normal” on the MRI results were degenerative changes to Tutor’s thoracic spine. Dr.

Crosswhite explained that “degenerative” means “wear or tear or arthritic changes.”4 Dr.

Crosswhite clarified that “[t]here is no objective finding anatomically on this MRI that . . .

would explain the cause of [Tutor’s] pain or the degree of his pain.” Dr. Crosswhite

cautioned, however, that “MRI findings are not always consistent with a patient’s physical

3 However, Dr. Crosswhite’s records from Tutor’s January 16, 2012 appointment reflect that Tutor “[s]ays he was previously seeing a chiropractor but for different type of back pain.” 4 The record reflects that Tutor received an MRI of his thoracic spine on September 2, 2011. The MRI findings show the following:

Findings: Normal alignment. Vertebra have normal height and signal except for an incidentally noted T6 hemangioma and a few tiny lower thoracic degenerative Schmorl’s nodes within the endplates. Lower thoracic disc degeneration is mild. Thoracic cord signal is normal. Is no disc herniation, canal stenosis, or neural foraminal stenosis.

Impression: Negative thoracic spine MRI other than minimal lower thoracic disc degeneration and degenerative endplate change.

(Dr. Crosswhite’s records from Tutor’s November 2, 2011 visit also reflect that Tutor’s MRI results were “normal.”) The record reflects that Tutor continued receiving treatment from Dr. Crosswhite for his back pain.

4 complaints.”5

¶10. Tutor testified that he attempted to return to work on September 6, 2011 and

September 12, 2011, shortly after his injury, but he was unable to work due to his back pain.

Tutor testified that on approximately September 15, he received a call from Dallas.

According to Tutor, Dallas informed him that he was not going to be able to continue

working partial days. Instead, Tutor would either have to come back to work full time or file

for short-term disability. Tutor testified that he told Dallas that “you and I both know this

should be [workers’ compensation].” Tutor said that Dallas responded, “No, this is previous

injury,” and she again told him that he could return to work full time, call the union, or file

for short-term disability.

¶11. Tutor testified that he then called Rhonda Rutherford at the union hall in Jackson,

Mississippi, and informed Rutherford about his injury. According to Tutor, Rutherford

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