Marcus Strother v. City of Marksville - Police Department

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 2015
DocketWCA-0014-0581
StatusUnknown

This text of Marcus Strother v. City of Marksville - Police Department (Marcus Strother v. City of Marksville - Police Department) 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
Marcus Strother v. City of Marksville - Police Department, (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

14-581

MARCUS STROTHER

VERSUS

CITY OF MARKSVILLE - POLICE DEPARTMENT

**********

APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION, DISTRICT 2 PARISH OF AVOYELLES, NO. 11-03914 JAMES L. BRADDOCK, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION JUDGE

PHYLLIS M. KEATY JUDGE

Court composed of Shannon J. Gremillion, Phyllis M. Keaty, and John E. Conery, Judges.

Conery, J., concurs in part and dissents in part and assigns reasons.

AFFIRMED. Christopher R. Philipp Law Office of Christopher R. Philipp Post Office Box 2369 Lafayette, Louisiana 70502-2369 (337) 235-9478 Counsel for Defendant/Appellant: City of Marksville – Police Department

Anthony F. Salario Salario Law Firm, LLC Post Office Box 503 Marksville, Louisiana 71351 (318) 240-7123 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee: Marcus Strother KEATY, Judge.

Employer appeals a judgment rendered by the workers’ compensation judge

(WCJ) in favor of the claimant, its former employee. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The facts in this matter are not in dispute. Marcus Anthony Strother applied

for a job with the City of Marksville Police Department (the City) on October 25,

2010. According to the minutes from a December 14, 2010 special meeting of the

Mayor and Board of Aldermen, Strother was appointed as a patrol officer for the

City. He submitted to a pre-employment physical with family practice physician

Dr. Vincent Goux, during which he disclosed that he had previously undergone a

lumbar facet fusion. On February 15, 2011, Strother injured his lower back while

boxing during a training exercise at the police academy, and he sought treatment at

the Avoyelles Hospital Emergency Room. He continued to treat with his choice of

physician, Dr. Bryan McCann, a family practitioner, until he was returned to full

duty after an April 4, 2011 office visit. Thereafter, he returned to work at the

police department where he was assigned to light duty/office work. The City

terminated Strother, who was a probationary cadet, on May 11, 2011, after it

learned that he had undergone a low-back facet fusion surgery as the result of an

injury he incurred prior to his employment on the police force. Thereafter, the City

did not provide Strother with any additional workers’ compensation benefits.

Strother filed a Form 1008 Disputed Claim for Compensation against the

City on May 26, 2011, alleging that he was discharged and his worker’s

compensation benefits were arbitrarily and capriciously terminated following his

training injury. He sought penalties and attorney fees against the City for its

termination of his indemnity benefits and its failure to approve medical treatment. On January 17, 2012, Strother filed a motion to consolidate this matter with

a 1008 he had filed against the State of Louisiana, Avoyelles Correctional Center

(the ACC) involving an injury he sustained on May 26, 2009,1 on the basis that

both actions were related to the same injury. The WCJ signed an order

consolidating the two matters on February 6, 2012.2 We note, however, no copy of

the 1008 Strother filed regarding his claims against the ACC appears in the record

on appeal nor in the exhibits filed at the trial of this matter. According to

Strother’s trial testimony, he was injured on May 26, 2009, when a horse that he

was riding in conjunction with his duties as a field officer at the ACC, a state

prison, got spooked and bucked, causing his back to “pop.” He was treated by

Dr. Lawrence Drerup, a neurosurgeon, and eventually underwent a bilateral facet

fusion at L3-4 and L4-5 on May 26, 2010. Dr. Drerup released Strother to return

to work on October 12, 2010, at which time Strother had complaints of intermittent

mild low-back pain/achiness.

The City filed a supplemental and amending answer and cross claim on

May 22, 2013, alleging that in the event Strother was found to be entitled to any

additional workers’ compensation disability benefits and medical treatment as a

result of the February 15, 2011 accident, the City would be entitled to indemnity

and/or contribution from the ACC and to a credit for the disability benefits paid to

Strother by the ACC in settlement of his claim against it due to the solidary

liability between them as Strother’s employers. On July 1, 2013, Strother and the

ACC filed and the WCJ signed an order approving a joint petition to compromise 1 According to the motion to consolidate, Strother’s claim against the ACC was filed in District 2 of the Office of Workers’ Compensation and was assigned Docket Number 11-3913. 2 While a signed order of consolidation appears in the record on appeal, neither the record on appeal nor the exhibits filed at the trial of this matter contain the 1008 nor any other pleadings regarding the claim Strother filed against the ACC.

2 wherein Strother agreed to accept $25,000.00 to settle his claims arising out of his

May 26, 2009 injury while employed at the ACC. Strother’s rights to proceed

against the City were specifically reserved in the settlement order.

Although it had filed a pre-trial statement before this matter was

consolidated with the ACC matter, the City filed a second supplemental pre-trial

statement wherein it stated that an issue to be litigated at trial was whether any

additional benefits found to be owed to Strother by it should be reduced by

Strother’s settlement with the ACC because of their solidarity liability to him.

Strother then filed a supplemental pre-trial memorandum wherein he claimed that

the medical evidence proved that the injury he suffered while working for the City

was “a separate and distinct injury from his prior injury” such that “the burden for

payment of [any additional] benefits should be found to fall squarely on the City.”

Trial took place on November 27, 2013, after which the matter was taken

under advisement and the WCJ requested that the parties file post-trial briefs. Oral

judgment was rendered on February 18, 2014, and a written judgment was signed

on March 13, 2014, in favor of Strother and against the City, ordering the City to:

1) reinstate payment of Temporary Total Disability Benefits (TTDs) to Strother retroactive from the date of his appointment with Dr. Lawrence Drerup on April 10, 2012;

2) pay all unpaid medical expenses incurred on behalf of Strother, including but not limited to those incurred with Dr. McCann on December 7, 2011, January 30, 2012, and March 26, 2012, along with any other related medical expenses;

3) reinstate payment of Strother’s medical benefits, including the physical therapy prescribed by Dr. Drerup and any other reasonable and necessary medical treatment prescribed by Strother’s treating physicians;

4) pay penalties in the amount of $2,000.00 for failure to reinstate TTDs after being provided sufficient proof;

3 5) pay penalties in the amount of $2,000.00 for failure to reinstate medical benefits after being provided sufficient proof; and

6) pay the Salario Law Firm $8,500.00 in attorney fees.

The City now appeals asserting that the WCJ committed: 1) manifest error in

awarding Strother TTDs; 3 and 2) legal error in failing to rule on the issue of

solidary liability of the ACC and the effect of ACC’s settlement as it relates to the

City’s liability to Strother.

DISCUSSION

Factual findings in workers’ compensation cases are subject to the manifest error or clearly wrong standard of appellate review. Smith v.

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