McCord v. Time Ins. Co.
This text of 521 So. 2d 558 (McCord v. Time Ins. Co.) 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.
Opinion
Rives McCORD
v.
TIME INSURANCE COMPANY.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*559 William G. Yates, Houma, for plaintiff and appellee, Rives McCord.
Fred Trowbridge, Thibodaux, for defendant and appellant, Time Ins. Co.
Before COVINGTON, C.J., and SAVOIE and LeBLANC, JJ.
SAVOIE, Judge.
Plaintiff, Rives McCord, filed suit against Time Insurance Company (hereinafter Insurer) seeking to recover benefits under a major medical insurance policy issued by Insurer, as well as to recover penalties and attorney's fees. McCord sought benefits for the hospitalization of his then sixteen year old son, Robert McCord, at the Baton Rouge Adolescent Chemical Dependency Unit (ACDU) from December 6, 1983 through January 2, 1984.
After trial on the merits, the trial court ruled in favor of Rives McCord, awarding him $10,738.68 for medical benefits and penalties, and $2500.00 in attorney's fees. From this ruling, Insurer appeals.
Insurer urges three assignments of error, which can be summed up as follows: 1) the trial court erred in finding that Robert's treatment for drug and alcohol abuse was covered under the policy on the basis that the drug and alcohol abuse did not manifest itself prior to the policy's effective date; and 2) the trial court erred in awarding Rives McCord penalties and attorney's fees.
COVERAGE UNDER THE POLICY
Under the policy definition of "sickness," Insurer claims that Robert had symptoms of alcohol and drug abuse prior to the effective date of the insurance policy, September 30, 1983. "Sickness" is defined under Insurer's policy as follows:
... Sickness as used in this policy means sickness which first manifests itself more than fifteen days after this policy is in force. A sickness manifests itself if you receive medical treatment or consultation for it or have symptoms of it. (Emphasis ours)
*560 The insurer bears the burden of proving that the sickness is excluded from coverage. Dorsey v. Board of Trustees, State Employees Group Benefits Program, 482 So.2d 735 (La.App. 1st Cir.1985), writs denied, 486 So.2d 735, 736 (La.1986). The insurer must establish that the sickness predated the coverage by a preponderance of the evidence. Dear v. Blue Cross of Louisiana, 511 So.2d 73 (La.App. 3rd Cir.1987). The evidence must be "certain and decisive, leaving no room for speculation or assumption." Dorsey, 482 So.2d at 737.
The trial court found that Insurer did not meet this burden, stating that Insurer showed a history of drug and alcohol use as distinguished from abuse: "However, the mere use of drugs and alcohol does not necessarily constitute a chemical dependency requiring treatment. The burden the defendant must meet is a showing that Robert McCord had symptoms of a chemical dependency and not merely symptoms of drug and alcohol usage."
Insurer mainly relies on the testimony of Dr. Ellis DeVille, a medical and chemical dependency expert. Dr. DeVille diagnosed Robert as suffering from alcohol and chemical abuse, which he defined as "problems in social or occupational functioning" due to alcohol or drugs. He opined that symptoms of this abuse would have been present in Robert some years before his admittance for treatment at ACDU in December, 1983. He based this opinion entirely on Robert's statement when giving his medical history that he had been abusing drugs and alcohol for six yearssince he was ten.
Dr. DeVille testified that he only based his initial diagnosis upon the history Robert gave because there were no objective, physical signs of drug and alcohol abuse. Robert's physical examination "was remarkable only for its normalcy." Furthermore, the blood test and urinalysis test given to Robert were both negative for the presence of drugs or alcohol. Dr. DeVille said that adolescent abusers generally exhibit no visible signs of abuse other than intoxication. Some of the signs of intoxication are red eyes and a flushed face. Dr. DeVille described the physical signs of the use of other drugs: profuse sweating, dilated pupils, and rapid speech for stimulants; and slurred speech, slowed movements, drowsiness, and lethargy for depressants. Again, he saw none of these symptoms on examination of Robert. Further symptoms given by Dr. DeVille were hallucinations and blackouts.
Robert did inform Dr. DeVille that he had experienced blackouts; that he drank to the point of intoxication when he drank; and that he had experienced red eyes due to drinking or drugs. Robert also told Dr. DeVille that his problems "had gotten worse recently, prior to admission." When asked by plaintiff's counsel what Robert may have meant by recently, Dr. DeVille said, "[m]y understanding is it was in the weeks or months prior to presentation [admission into ACDU]...." We note that this was the only specific reference to chronology of the symptoms which took place during the examination of Robert by Dr. DeVille. Further, Dr. DeVille also said that Robert gave no time or date as to his experience with blackouts.
Dr. DeVille also testified as to the psychological signs of drug and alcohol abuse:
[o]ppositional type behavior, anger, outbursts of rage, defiance of rules and authority to the extreme. There would be impulsiveness and erraticness in the behavior. There would probably be significant problems at school, both in conduct and academic performance, and there would certainly be problems at home as a result of all this."
According to Dr. DeVille, based on statements made by Robert, Robert had all of these problems except those with school. However, Dr. DeVille also stated that these behavior problems might have been there without the drugs, and that many adolescents who are not abusing chemicals also have the same behavior problems.
Dr. DeVille concluded his testimony by telling the court that during Robert's twenty-seven day stay at ACDU, his initial diagnosis that Robert was abusing drugs and alcohol was confirmed. Dr. DeVille said: *561 "his entire life style was consumed with drug use and the culture that revolves around drug use."
The medical records from Robert's treatment at ACDU contain a nurse's notes which show that Robert indicated to her that he drank for the past six years with heavy drinking occurring in 1983; that he had blacked out; that he used a quarter-ounce of pot per week; that he used twenty milligrams of Valium each day of the weekend and had used the Valium since the summer; that he experimented with paper acid, cocaine, speed, and downers. This history coincides with the history given Dr. DeVille.
Rives McCord testified on his own behalf, along with his wife Linda. Both McCords stated that they never had observed their son intoxicated and that they had no reason to believe that he had been abusing drugs. Both parents did state that they had seen Robert with red eyes, which Robert told them were due to allergies. However, both parents also stated that Robert had been experiencing allergic reactions since he was a toddler. Both parents said that they had never found drugs or alcohol in Robert's room, or seen him use alcohol or drugs. They said that he had experienced hallucinations once at age ten, for which they took him to a psychiatrist. According to Linda McCord, the psychiatrist said Robert was fine, but prescribed Ritalin for his hyperactivity.
Based on the McCords' testimony, it appears that Robert was a problem child from his childhood into his adolescence.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
521 So. 2d 558, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 602, 1988 WL 15853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccord-v-time-ins-co-lactapp-1988.