Morgan v. Glazers Wholesale Drug Co.

147 So. 3d 295, 2014 WL 3933594, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 1964
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 2014
DocketNo. 49,209-WCA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 So. 3d 295 (Morgan v. Glazers Wholesale Drug 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.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Glazers Wholesale Drug Co., 147 So. 3d 295, 2014 WL 3933594, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 1964 (La. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

PITMAN, J.

| Claimant Lynn Morgan appeals the judgment of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (‘WCJ”) which denied his demands against his employer, Glazers Wholesale Drug Company (“Glazers”), for psychiatric treatment and workers’ compensation indemnity benefits on the basis that he failed to prove the treatment was medically necessary or that indemnity benefits were owed. For the following reasons, we affirm.

[297]*297 FACTS

In July 2002, Claimant injured his lower back while working for Glazers. He began receiving temporary total disability (“TTD”) benefits as a result of the accident and subsequently underwent a microdis-cectomy surgery of one disc in his lumbar spine in 2003. He received benefits for more than 520 weeks.

Claimant continued to experience pain in the years following his back surgery, suffered from depression and, in 2005, began seeing Dr. Kathleen Majors, a pain management specialist, who prescribed pain medication for him. Claimant subsequently admitted to once abusing his pain medication. In 2008, Dr. Majors referred him to Dr. R. Kent Dean, a psychologist whose specialty is addiction medicine. Dr. Dean performed a psychological evaluation and reported that Claimant “does acknowledge a personal history of depression.” Dr. Dean also stated, “Affect is anxious and mood is only mildly depressed, but it is appropriate to the thought content of the need for this assessment.”1

| {.Claimant also saw psychiatrists at LSUHSC from 2008 through 2010 until the last treating physician left the facility. These visits to the psychiatric outpatient clinic at LSUHSC are documented by reports found in Claimant’s medical record.

During the time of his psychiatric treatment at LSUHSC, Claimant was taking the antidepressant Effexor. In 2011, after taking Effexor for ten months, Claimant suffered a seizure and was taken off that medication. Since no new psychiatrist had been assigned to Claimant after the first one left LSUHSC, Dr. Majors continued to treat him for his pain and depression. Claimant was not prescribed antidepressants for approximately a year and seemed to experience no change in his psyche. Eventually, he complained to Dr. Majors that he was depressed, at which time she prescribed Cymbalta for him. She did not believe Claimant was suicidal and, in fact, believed he was seeing positive results from the Cymbalta regimen.

At the request of Glazers, Claimant was examined by Dr. Randall Brewer, a pain management physician. In addition to physical symptoms, Dr. Brewer’s notes indicated that Claimant suffered from sleep disruption, depression and anxiety. Dr. Brewer recommended that Claimant undergo individual and group psychotherapy to optimize coping strategies, illness behavior, disability role status and supportive psychotherapy.

THE FIRST CLAIM

Approximately seven years post accident, Claimant filed an initial disputed claim for compensation, contending that his injuries were so severe |ahe was permanently and totally disabled. Glazers opposed the claim, conceding that Claimant’s injuries were permanent, but denying that they produced total disability. After trial, the WCJ found that Claimant had failed to prove that his injuries entitled him to permanent total disability benefits. The WCJ dismissed his claim since the overwhelming evidence revealed that chronic pain, not total disability, was the reason he could not work. The judgment, in which the WCJ declined to rule on the issue of [298]*298Claimant’s entitlement to supplemental earnings benefits (“SEBs”), was appealed to, and affirmed by, this court. See Morgan v. Glazers Wholesale Drug Co., 46,692 (La.App.2d Cir.11/2/11), 79 So.3d 417.

In that appeal, Claimant contested the WCJ’s ruling finding he was unable to work solely because of his chronic pain, without considering the effects of his accident-related mental injury, as manifestly erroneous and clearly wrong. In affirming the judgment of the WCJ, this court noted that Claimant had failed to argue the alleged mental injury to the WCJ as a basis, for permanent disability. Despite this fact, the court discussed the relevant evidence found in the record concerning his depression secondary to his chronic pain, which included the records from the Psychiatry Outpatient Clinic at LSUHSC.

After discussing the law concerning mental injury sustained by employees, and the evidence in the record regarding this claimant, this court stated as follows:

There is no dispute, and the WCJ acknowledged, that Mr. Morgan suffers from depression to some degree stemming from his injury and resulting disability. The record, however, contains no evidence that depression is the cause of |4Mr. Morgan’s alleged inability to reenter the work force. Indeed, Mr. Morgan’s above-quoted testimony placed the cause of his alleged inability to work on his pain. Neither of the vocational evaluations cited a mental injury or condition as a basis for concluding that Mr. Morgan was unable to find employment. Finally, Mr. Morgan presented no medical opinion that a mental injury was causing his alleged inability to work. Furthermore, there was no evidence presented that Mr. Morgan’s diagnosis meets the criteria of the American Psychiatric Association. Morgan v. Glazers Wholesale Drug Company, 79 So.3d at 424.

This court concluded that Claimant was not entitled to permanent and total disability benefits.

THE SECOND AND CURRENT CLAIM

After the above appeal opinion was rendered, Claimant and his attorney approached Dr. Majors and requested that she recommend psychiatric treatment for his depression. In her follow-up with Claimant, she determined that he was not suicidal and that his agreed-to trial of Cymbalta had given him some beneficial results. Dr. Majors declined to order the psychiatric treatment on the basis that she did not believe it was medically necessary.

Despite this fact, in 2012, Claimant filed a second disputed claim for compensation seeking to compel Glazers to approve and pay for his choice of physician in the field of psychiatry and for the continued payment of TTD benefits during any period in which he was disabled as a result of his psychiatric condition. He claimed his psychiatric condition and depression resulted from his pain and his disability from his failed back surgery. He also sought penalties and attorney fees for the insurer’s failure to approve | Bhis choice of physician and/or for the arbitrary and capricious discontinuation of reasonable and necessary medical treatment.

Claimant filed a motion to compel the approval of his choice of physician and requested an expedited hearing. He requested that Glazers be ordered to show cause why it should not be compelled to authorize and pay for the examination and any reasonable and necessary treatment by Dr. Kyle Runnels, a psychiatrist, and why it should not be ordered to pay penalties and attorney fees. Alternatively, Claimant prayed that his right to bring a [299]*299claim for statutory penalties and attorney fees be reserved to him.

The request for expedited hearing was granted. At the hearing, Claimant introduced the same evidence regarding his alleged mental injury as he had at his previous trial, including the depositions of Drs. Majors and Brewer ánd the notes from the LSUHSC Psychiatric Outpatient Center. He also introduced a newer deposition of Dr.

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147 So. 3d 295, 2014 WL 3933594, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 1964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-glazers-wholesale-drug-co-lactapp-2014.