Mike D. Leger v. Sonnier Exterminating

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 2006
DocketWCA-0005-1291
StatusUnknown

This text of Mike D. Leger v. Sonnier Exterminating (Mike D. Leger v. Sonnier Exterminating) 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
Mike D. Leger v. Sonnier Exterminating, (La. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

05-1291

MIKE D. LEGER

VERSUS

SONNIER EXTERMINATING COMPANY

**********

APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION, DISTRICT 4 PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. 05-0397 SHARON MORROW, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION JUDGE

JAMES T. GENOVESE JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Sylvia R. Cooks, and James T. Genovese, Judges.

REVERSED.

Christopher J. Piasecki L. Bianca Chretien Post Office Drawer 2908 Lafayette, Louisiana 70502 (337) 237-1660 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Sonnier Exterminating Company

Mike D. Leger In Proper Person Post Office Box 4 Milton, Louisiana 70558 (337) 856-1792 PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE GENOVESE, Judge.

In this workers’ compensation case, Sonnier Exterminating Company (Sonnier)

appeals the judgment denying its peremptory exception of prescription pertaining to

medical and supplemental earnings benefits. The trial court ruled that payments made

by Plaintiff’s uninsured/underinsured motorist insurance carrier interrupted

prescription on the basis that it was a solidary obligor with the workers’

compensation carrier. Finding that the uninsured/underinsured motorist insurance

carrier and the workers’ compensation carrier are not solidary obligors, we reverse.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff, Mike D. Leger (Leger), was involved in an automobile accident on

January 21, 2002, wherein he sustained personal injury. At the time of the accident,

Leger was traveling home in a vehicle owned by his employer, Sonnier. The accident

occurred due to the fault of Delores McGee; however, Ms. McGee was uninsured.

After the accident, Sonnier’s automobile uninsured/underinsured motorist

(UM) insurance carrier, State Farm Automobile Insurance Company (State Farm),

made payments to Leger and to his medical providers pursuant to Sonnier’s UM and

medical payments (med-pay) coverage. The last payment to Leger by State Farm was

for med-pay benefits on January 21, 2004.

Leger filed a disputed claim for compensation, commonly referred to as a 1008,

on January 14, 2005. Sonnier filed a peremptory exception of prescription asserting

that Leger’s claim was barred because it was not filed within the one-year prescriptive

period set forth in La.R.S. 23:1209. Leger argued that his claim was not prescribed

since it was filed within one year of the last payment made to him by State Farm, and

as solidary obligors, State Farm’s payments interrupted prescription as to his workers’

1 compensation claim against Sonnier.

At the hearing on the exception of prescription, Sonnier introduced into

evidence letters from State Farm to Leger which state that State Farm was paying

Leger’s medical bills pursuant to his UM coverage. Sonnier argued that he neither

paid nor agreed to pay Leger any workers’ compensation benefits following the

January 21, 2002 accident. Sonnier introduced into evidence the policy of insurance

issued by State Farm which covered the truck Leger was driving. The policy agrees

to pay UM and med-pay benefits, but not as a substitute for workers’ compensation

benefits. Specifically, the UM policy provides:

THERE IS NO COVERAGE:

1. TO THE EXTENT IT BENEFITS:

a. ANY WORKERS[’] COMPENSATION OR DISABILITY BENEFITS INSURANCE COMPANY.

b. A SELF-INSURER UNDER ANY WORKERS[’] COMPENSATION, OR DISABILITY BENEFITS OR SIMILAR LAW.

The Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) granted Sonnier’s exception in part

and denied it in part. In deciding the issue of whether Sonnier and State Farm were

solidary obligors, the WCJ stated:

I am going to find that the payments by State Farm, as Mr. Sonnier’s and the company’s uninsured motorist payments, were made in lieu of compensation . . .. [B]eyond the fact that the UM carrier is making payments as a solidary obligor with the employer responsibility [sic] for those items of loss, there’s also the additional fact that they’re not completely strangers as solidary obligors. Payments were made on behalf of Mr. Sonnier, though through a different vehicle than a workers’ compensation policy. So, I am making a finding that they were payments in lieu of compensation.

After ruling that Sonnier and State Farm were solidary obligors, the Workers’

2 Compensation Judge (WCJ) concluded that the payments made by State Farm to

Leger had interrupted prescription as to Leger’s claim against Sonnier for

supplemental earnings benefits and medical expenses. The WCJ reasoned:

[S]upplemental earning benefits are still payable within a three-year period under [La.R.S.] 23:1209. So, a claim may be maintained for supplemental earning benefits and medical expenses, there being payments made of the medical expenses. [La.R.S. 23:]1209, again, gives a three-year prescriptive period. But, actually suit was filed within a year of the last medical payment, so really there is no problem for the medical payment.

The WCJ interpreted La.R.S. 23:1209 to mean that since Leger filed his 1008 claim

within three years of the last med-pay benefits paid by State Farm, Leger’s claims for

supplemental earnings benefits and medical expenses had not prescribed. Thus, the

WCJ denied Sonnier’s peremptory exception of prescription as to Leger’s claim for

supplemental earnings benefits and medical expenses.

With regard to Leger’s claims for wage benefits, the WCJ stated:

[t]he last wage payment was made in December of !03. So, it being more than a year of [sic] the last payment of wage benefits, any claims to total temporary disability, partial permanent disability, and permanent and total disability, would have prescribed as the last payment has to be made, or the suit needs to be filed within a year from the last payment made.

Because the last wage payment from State Farm to Leger was made in December of

2003, and since more than one year had passed before filing his 1008 claim, Leger’s

claims for temporary total disability, partial permanent disability, and permanent and

total disability were barred by prescription1. Thus, the WCJ granted Sonnier’s

peremptory exception of prescription as to Leger’s claims for wage and disability

benefits. Sonnier appeals the judgment denying its peremptory exception of

prescription as to supplemental earnings benefits and medical expenses.

1 Sonnier agrees with this finding and does not challenge same on appeal.

3 ISSUES

The following issues are presented by Sonnier for our review:

I. Whether the WCJ erred in concluding that Sonnier and State Farm were solidary obligors.

II. Whether the WCJ erred in ruling that Leger’s claims for medical benefits and supplemental earnings benefits were not prescribed.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

Standard of Review

Ordinarily, when an appeal involves a ruling on a peremptory exception with

contested issues of fact and “[w]hen evidence is introduced and evaluated in the trial

court on a peremptory exception, the appellate court must review the entire record to

determine whether the trial court manifestly erred with its factual conclusions.” Egle

v. Egle, 01-927, p.4 (La.App. 3 Cir. 2/6/02), 817 So.2d 136, 139 (quoting Parker v.

Buteau, 99-519, p. 3 (La.App. 3 Cir. 10/13/99), 746 So.2d 127,129). However, in a

case in which there are no contested issues of fact and the only issue is the application

of the law to the undisputed facts, as in the case at bar, the appellate court must

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