Michael Thibodeaux v. St. Mary Parish School Board

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 2020
Docket2019CA0793
StatusUnknown

This text of Michael Thibodeaux v. St. Mary Parish School Board (Michael Thibodeaux v. St. Mary Parish School Board) 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
Michael Thibodeaux v. St. Mary Parish School Board, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2019 CA 0793

MICHAEL THIBODEAUX

VERSUS

ST. MARY PARISH SCHOOL BOARD

1UN 2. 4 2020 Judgment rendered:

On Appeal from the Office of Workers' Compensation District 9, Parish of St. Mary State of Louisiana No. 16- 08101 The Honorable Elizabeth Lanier, Works' Compensation Judge

John J. Rabalais Attorneys for Appellant Janice B. Unland St. Mary Parish School Board Rudolph C. Boeneke Covington, Louisiana

Donovan, O' Pry, II Attorney for Appellee John P. Barron Michael Thibodeaux Lafayette, Louisiana

BEFORE: McDONALD, WELCH, AND HOLDRIDGE, JJ. HOLDRIDGE, J.

In this appeal, the St. Mary Parish School Board challenges a judgment of the Worker' s Compensation Judge ( WCJ) compensation benefits, awarding

penalties, and attorney' s fees to its former employee, Michael Thibodeaux. We

affirm and issue this memorandum opinion in compliance with Uniform Rules—

Courts of Appeal, Rule 2- 16. 1B.

On March 10, 2016, Mr. Thibodeaux was punched in the chest by a high- school student while acting in the course and scope of his employment as a teacher

for the St. Mary Parish School Board ( School Board). On December 28, 2016,

following the School Board' s failure to pay him any workers' compensation

benefits, Mr. Thibodeaux filed this disputed claim in the Office of Worker' s Compensation. Mr. Thibodeaux sought to recover workers' compensation

indemnity and medical benefits, penalties, and attorney' s fees from the School

Board. The School Board acknowledged that a work accident occurred on March

10, 2016, but asserted that Mr. Thibodeaux was not disabled as a result of that work accident, and therefore, was not entitled to recover workers' any

compensation benefits.

Mr. Thibodeaux was the only witness who testified at the hearing in this matter. Considerable medical evidence, in the forms of depositions, reports,

affidavits and medical records was introduced by the parties. Thereafter, the WCJ

rendered judgment in favor of Mr. Thibodeaux and against the School Board,

specifically finding as follows:

1) Mr. Thibodeaux suffered a compensable accident on March 10, 2016 and a compensable injury when he was punched in the chest by a student;

2) Mr. Thibodeaux' s injury included an exacerbation and aggravation of a pre- existing heart condition;

2 3) The exacerbation and aggravation of Mr. Thibodeaux' s heart condition by the act of the student punching him in the chest also created Mr. Thibodeaux' s psychological injury;

4) Mr. Thibodeaux met his burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence to establish a physical/ mental injury was sustained by him on March 10, 2016;

5) Mr. Thibodeaux is currently at Temporary Total Disability Status TTD) and has been so since the date of the accident;

6) Mr. Thibodeaux is owed TTD benefits at the rate of $649. 00 per week from the date of the accident to the present and continuing;

7) Mr. Thibodeaux briefly worked with Coastal Safety and therefore the School Board is entitled to a credit for wages earned by Mr. Thibodeaux through this employment;

8) Mr. Thibodeaux is entitled to all reasonable and necessary medical treatment including continued treatment from psychologist Dr. C. Scott Eckholtd and reimbursement for out of pocket costs in the amount of $ 1, 800.00 for treatment rendered by Dr. Eckholtd;

9) All medical treatment rendered to Mr. Thibodeaux from the date of the accident to the present was reasonable and medically necessary;

10) Mr. Thibodeaux is entitled to penalties in the amount of 2, 000. 00 for the School Board' s failure to authorize a choice of physician in the field of psychology/psychiatry, attorney' s fees in the amount of $ 10, 000. 00, costs, and judicial interest on the judgment amount.

The School Board appealed the judgment, asserting that the WCJ erred in the following respects: ( 1) finding that Mr. Thibodeaux suffered an exacerbation

and aggravation of a pre- existing heart condition and that he was entitled to past

and future medical benefits for the same; ( 2) finding that the exacerbation and

aggravation of Mr. Thibodeaux' s pre-existing heart condition by the action of the student punching Mr. Thibodeaux in the chest also created Mr. Thibodeaux' s

psychological injury and that Mr. Thibodeaux met his burden of proving a

3 physical/mental injury by clear and convincing evidence, as well as awarding past and future medical benefits for the same; ( 3) finding that Mr. Thibodeaux was

currently TTD, had been TTD since the date of the accident, and was owed back

TTD from March 11, 2016, to present and continuing thereafter; ( 4) finding that all

medical treatment rendered to Mr. Thibodeaux from the date of the accident to the

present was reasonable and medically necessary; and ( 5) ordering the School

Board to pay the $ 2, 000. 00 penalty as well as attorney' s fees, costs, and judicial

interest.

After an ex proprio motu examination of the record, this court issued a Show

Cause Order ( SCO) finding that the February 28, 2019 judgment of the WCJ was

ambiguous as to the specific relief granted because it was not possible to

determine, from the language of the judgment alone, the amount of the credit for

wages earned by Mr. Thibodeaux through his employment with Coastal Safety. On September 30, 2019, another panel of this court maintained the appeal, but

reserved the final determination of that issue to this panel. Thibodeaux v. St.

Mary Parish School Board, 2019- 0793 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 9/ 30/ 19) ( unpublished). A final judgment shall be identified as such by appropriate language. La.

Code Civ. P. art. 1918. A final appealable judgment must be " precise, definite and

certain." Laird v. St. Tammany Parish Safe Harbor, 2002- 0045 ( La. App. 1St

Cir. 12/ 20/ 02), 836 So. 2d 364, 365. In order to be appealable, a judgment must

contain decretal language, and it must name the party in favor of whom the ruling is ordered, the party against whom the ruling is ordered, and the relief that is

granted or denied. Id.; Carter v. Williamson Eye Center, 2001- 2016 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 11/ 27/ 02), 837 So. 2d 43, 44.

The judgment appealed from meets all of these criteria. It renders judgment

in favor of Mr. Thibodeaux and against the School Board on each of the elements M of Mr. Thibodeaux' s workers' compensation claim. The judgment extensively

details the relief to which Mr. Thibodeaux is entitled. Although the WCJ awarded

the School Board an employment credit, but did not specify the precise amount of that credit, we note that the employment ' credit is not at issue in this appeal.

Rather, the WCJ' s final rulings on Mr. Thibodeaux' s entitlement to workers'

compensation benefits are contested in this appeal. Additionally, we note that the

amount of the credit can easily be calculated by the parties, and should a dispute

arise, the parties can petition the OWC to resolve that issue, as the OWC retains

continuing jurisdiction over each workers' compensation case. La. R. S.

23 :1310. 8A( 1). For all of these reasons, we conclude the failure of the WCJ to

specify the amount of the employment credit does not deprive this court of

appellate jurisdiction to review the WCJ' s final judgment Mr. awarding

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