Mullen v. Daigle Towing Service, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 8, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-11954
StatusUnknown

This text of Mullen v. Daigle Towing Service, LLC (Mullen v. Daigle Towing Service, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullen v. Daigle Towing Service, LLC, (E.D. La. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

MARK MULLEN CIVIL ACTION

v. NO. 19-11954

DAIGLE TOWING SERVICE, L.L.C., ET AL. SECTION "F"

ORDER AND REASONS

Before the Court is the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment to compel payment of maintenance and cure. For the reasons that follow, the motion is DENIED without prejudice as premature. Background This Jones Act litigation arises from a seaman’s claim that he injured his lower back falling on the deck of a barge sometime in early December 2018. He did not report the incident or seek treatment until months later. In February 2019, when he was diagnosed with cancer, he quit his job to undergo chemotherapy treatment. It was then -- months after the alleged slip and fall -- when he first sought treatment for an alleged back injury; since in remission and undergoing conservative treatment for the alleged 1 employment-related injury, he now seeks to compel his former employer to pay maintenance and cure. In 2018, Daigle Towing Service, LLC employed Mark Mullen as

a deckhand aboard the M/V MISS LAURIE. “[S]omewhere in the beginning of December” of that year -- Mr. Mullen does not recall the date of the alleged incident1 -- Mr. Mullen alleges that he slipped and fell on the wet deck of a barge in the tow of the MISS LAURIE at Tiger Fleet in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.2 He did not report the incident. Nor did he seek medical attention in the

1 Although he alleges in his complaint that the incident occurred on December 1, 2018, Mr. Mullen admitted in his deposition that he does not know which day he was injured. 2 During his deposition, Mr. Mullen indicates that his injury occurred after the MISS LAURIE had returned six empty barges (owned by LaFarge North American, Inc.) to Tiger Fleet in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Whichever day the incident occurred, it was around 2 o’clock in the morning, Mr. Mullen testified, and Omar Craighead was the captain on watch; others on the vessel, James Johnson (lead captain) and Bruce Ronquille (deckhand), were asleep in their bunks. (Daigle Towing points to the vessel logs to dispute that these four worked together during the month of December 2018; counsel for plaintiff concedes that the logs “seem to confirm defendant’s assertion that captain Johnson, captain Craighead and deckhand Mullen were never on the vessel together”). Upon arrival at Tiger Fleet, Mr. Mullen says he began to tie up the lead barge using a line owned and provided by Lafarge. After he had secured the line around the bits on the deck of the barge, Mr. Mullen claims, the line broke. It was when he got out of the broken line’s way and went to grab a replacement line that he allegedly slipped and feel backwards. He testified that the deck of the barge was slippery due to frost as well as a lack of nonskid. He testified that Omar Craighead, the captain on watch, saw him fall. According to Mr. Mullen, Capt. Craighead then woke up Ronquille to assist Mullen with tying off the barges. 2 days (or weeks) after the fall. The onset of back pain, he alleges, was not immediate. Mr. Mullen testified that his back began hurting days after

he finished his shift, while he was off the boat staying in a hotel.3 Notwithstanding his alleged back pain -- while performing his regular duties, he alleges his back would worsen; while off, it would improve -- he says he continued to work his regular hitches (14 days on/7 days off).4 In February 2019, Mr. Mullen says he sought medical attention for the back pain he attributed to his alleged fall.5 After some

3 Mr. Mullen does not recall whether he disembarked the vessel on the same day he fell or the following day. By the end of his week off after the alleged incident, he testified that he decided to take off another week; he called Daigle Towing to advise that he was taking an extra week, but he did not report that the extra week off was due to back pain. Daigle Towing points to the vessel logs to dispute this: the vessel logs indicate that Mr. Mullen never took off 14 consecutive days during the month of December 2018. Rather, vessel logs for the MISS LAURIE show that Mr. Mullen worked from December 5, 2018 through December 11, 2018, then took seven days off before returning to work from December 19, 2018 through December 31, 2018. Daigle Towing submits rough vessel logs showing that the MISS LAURIE was on standby on December 1 and part of December 2, 2018, and that the vessel was not working at Tiger Fleet (where Mullen says the incident occurred) any time during December 1, 2, or 3, 2018. Although the vessel logs show that the MISS LAURIE was working at Tiger Fleet on December 4, 2018, the logs do not indicate that Mr. Mullen was working. 4 In the plaintiff’s Statement of Uncontested Facts, he states that he worked “two weeks on and two weeks off” but he testified that that he worked “14 on and 7 off[.]” 5 Daigle Towing disputes this timing, and submits medical records indicating that Mr. Mullen did not report back pain during his visits to East Jefferson General Hospital on February 4 or 25, 3 x-rays and lab work, on February 25, 2019, Mr. Mullen was diagnosed with cancer, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He stopped working that same month,6 underwent treatment, and is now in remission. However, he

claims that his back pain persists and prevents him from performing any type of manual labor. In May 2019, Mr. Mullen was evaluated by Dr. Pedro Romaguera, who recommended an MRI of his lumbar spine. Dr. Romaguera also recommended an orthopedic consultation and determined that Mr. Mullen was not able to work. Mr. Mullen continues under the care of Dr. John Logan, an orthopedic surgeon, who has instructed Mullen not to return to work, recommended that he undergo (and performed) facet injections at L4-5 and L5-S1 bilaterally, and opined that he has not reached maximum medical improvement from the alleged work- related injury. On May 15, 2019, Mr. Mullen’s attorney, by letter to Daigle

Towing, demanded payment of maintenance and cure benefits. Five

2019; rather, on those dates in February, he reported intermittent leg pain, lower abdominal pain, flank pain, and groin pain leading up to his cancer diagnosis. Daigle Towing submits that the medical records indicate that Mr. Mullen did not report any back pain to any medical professional until March 21, 2019, during one of his chemotherapy sessions when he stated that he fell sometime “in the fall.” 6 In February 2019, Mr. Mullen told Albert Daigle that he was resigning from Daigle Towing because he had cancer and needed to undergo chemotherapy treatment. Mr. Mullen did not tell Mr. Daigle that he had injured his lower back working on the MISS LAURIE. 4 months after the alleged incident occurred, this was the first notice to Daigle Towing that Mr. Mullen was claiming to have suffered a work-related injury sometime in “December of 2018.”

Twice more since then, Mr. Mullen’s attorney has demanded maintenance and cure. Daigle Towing propounded discovery and launched an investigation into Mr. Mullen’s claim for maintenance and cure. That investigation is ongoing. On July 31, 2019, Mullen sued Daigle Towing Service, LLC, asserting Jones Act negligence, unseaworthiness and seeking to recover maintenance and cure as well as punitive damages associated with Jones Act negligence, unseaworthiness, and arbitrary failure to pay maintenance and cure.7 In November 2019, Mullen was granted leave to amend his complaint to add Lafarge North America, Inc. as a defendant; Mullen alleges that Lafarge’s negligence and the unseaworthiness of its barge contributed to his injury.

To date, Daigle Towing has not paid maintenance or cure. Mr. Mullen now seeks summary judgment compelling payment.

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