Michael Adkins v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 8, 2008
Docket04-07-00750-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Adkins v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company (Michael Adkins v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Adkins v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

i i i i i i

MEMORANDUM OPINION

No. 04-07-00750-CV

Michael ADKINS, Appellant

v.

TEXAS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellee

From the 57th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas Trial Court No. 2005-CI-19774 Honorable Michael Peden, Judge Presiding1

Opinion by: Karen Angelini, Justice

Sitting: Catherine Stone, Justice Karen Angelini, Justice Steven C. Hilbig, Justice

Delivered and Filed: October 8, 2008

AFFIRMED

This appeal arises out of a worker’s compensation case. Michael Adkins, an employee of

R & L Foods, was injured at work. Adkins filed a worker’s compensation claim and prevailed at the

administrative level. R & L’s insurance carrier, Texas Mutual Insurance Company, filed suit in

district court, contending Adkins’s claim was not compensable because he was intoxicated at the

… The Honorable Michael Peden signed the final judgment. The Honorable Joe Frazier Brown, Jr., 1

presided over the trial. 04-07-00750-CV

time he sustained his injuries. The jury agreed, finding Adkins was intoxicated. Judgment was

entered in favor of Texas Mutual, and Adkins appeals. In one issue, Adkins contends the trial court

erred in denying his motion to exclude Texas Mutual’s expert testimony and in admitting the

expert’s testimony. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Adkins was a restaurant general manager, employed by R & L Foods. On the day of the

accident, which was a Friday, he reported for work shortly before 8:00 a.m. At about 4:00 to 4:30

p.m., he was retrieving a bag of potato wedges from a walk-in freezer when he slipped and fell on

some ice. The factual issue before the jury was whether he was intoxicated when he slipped and fell.

At trial, Adkins admitted that on the Tuesday before the accident he had smoked marijuana

while watching a Spurs basketball game with friends. According to Adkins, he and his friends had

shared three to five marijuana cigarettes between three people. Adkins testified that smoking

marijuana relaxes him. However, he denied being under the physical effects of marijuana on the day

of the accident. And, in response to questioning, he refused to identify the friends with whom he

smoked marijuana on the Tuesday before the accident.

In addition to Adkins, two other R & L employees testified about events occurring on the day

of the accident. David Gonzalez, an assistant manager, was present in the store on the day Adkins

was injured. Gonzalez testified that if Adkins did not have the normal use of his physical or mental

faculties, then he would not have allowed him to continue working. Sam Hernandez, a restaurant

general manager, also testified. According to Hernandez, he was called to the restaurant to pick

Adkins up and take him to the hospital. On the way to the hospital, they stopped at the bank to make

a deposit. Hernandez testified that, not being an expert, he could not say whether a person

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was intoxicated. And, based on his observation of Adkins, Hernandez testified that he had no opinion

about whether Adkins was intoxicated.

Before any testimony was offered at trial, Adkins moved to exclude the testimony of Texas

Mutual’s expert witness, Dr. Jim Kelaher. Prior to making a ruling, the trial court heard testimony

from Dr. Kelaher. Dr. Kelaher testified that, in preparation for this case, he had reviewed the drug

test report and the accident report, which included medical notes. He also considered peer-reviewed

journal and book articles involving marijuana testing and intoxication.

Dr. Kelaher’s opinion in this case focused primarily on an interpretation of the drug test

results. According to the urine drug test performed on Adkins four hours after his accident, Adkins

had a marijuana metabolite level of 1,783 nanograms per milliliter. In Dr. Kelaher’s opinion, this

level is definitely on the high side. He explained that the cutoff for a positive test result is 50

nanograms per milliliter in initial testing and 15 nanograms per milliliter in confirmatory testing.

Marijuana, according to Dr. Kelaher, has many well-known effects. It can affect cognition, mood,

perception, pupillary response, blood pressure, executive functioning, and memory. According to

Dr. Kelaher, the significance of a 1,783 level is that levels that high are not typically seen. Given that

Adkins tested at that level four hours after the accident, Dr. Kelaher opined that Adkins’s mental or

physical faculties were altered at the time of the accident. In Dr. Kelaher’s opinion, there was no

doubt that Adkins was intoxicated at the time of the accident, meaning Adkins had some alteration

in his physical and/or mental functioning. Dr. Kelaher found it implausible that the marijuana use

Adkins admitted to a few days before the accident could account for the high level indicated in his

urine.

-3- 04-07-00750-CV

Dr. Kelaher also testified that studies show that when trained individuals try to determine by

observation whether a person is intoxicated, there is an error rate of twenty to thirty percent. A drug

test, on the other hand, is much more objective. According to Dr. Kelaher, it is the use of marijuana,

and not the level in the body, that establishes intoxication. People are altered and affected at very low

levels, and a person with a level as high as 1,700 is far beyond anything typically seen. However, on

cross-examination, Dr. Kelaher admitted that he wrote a book in which he stated that a drug test

alone does not tell how impaired a person is. Following this testimony outside the presence of the

jury, the trial court ruled that Dr. Kelaher’s opinions were sufficiently reliable to allow his testimony

before the jury.

At trial, Dr. Kelaher’s testimony was similar to the testimony he gave at the hearing outside

the jury’s presence. He testified that, based on the medical literature he has reviewed, a level of 1,783

nanograms per milliliter would affect a person’s normal mental or physical faculties. In this case,

in Dr. Kelaher’s opinion, with a level of 1,783 nanograms per milliliter, Adkins could not have had

the normal use of his faculties. Dr. Kelaher stated that although he wrote in his book that a drug test

does not indicate how impaired a person is, in his opinion, the use of marijuana alone in Adkins’s

case does equate to intoxication.

INTOXICATION DEFENSE

The worker’s compensation laws prohibit the recovery of compensation where, at the time

of injury, an employee is intoxicated. TEX . LAB. CODE ANN . § 406.032(1)(A) (Vernon 2006). Thus,

an employer may defend a worker’s compensation claim on the ground that the injury was caused

while the employee was in a state of intoxication. TEX . LAB. CODE ANN . § 406.033(c)(2) (Vernon

2006); see Sanchez v. State Office of Risk Mgmt., 234 S.W.3d 96, 99 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2007, no

-4- 04-07-00750-CV

pet.). “Intoxication” means the state of (1) having an alcohol concentration to qualify as intoxicated

under section 49.01(2) of the Texas Penal Code; or (2) not having the normal use of mental or

physical faculties resulting from the voluntary introduction into the body of an alcoholic beverage

or a controlled substance as defined by section 481.002 of the Texas Health and Safety Code. TEX .

LAB. CODE ANN . § 401.013(a) (Vernon 2006).

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