Redding v. Cade

158 So. 2d 880
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 1963
Docket971
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 158 So. 2d 880 (Redding v. Cade) 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
Redding v. Cade, 158 So. 2d 880 (La. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

158 So.2d 880 (1963)

Kerlin REDDING, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
S. H. CADE et al., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 971.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

December 3, 1963.
Rehearing Denied January 7, 1964.

*882 Hall & Coltharp, by L. H. Coltharp, Jr., DeRidder, Holloway & Baker, by William H. Baker, Jonesboro, J. Edwin Bailey, Jr., Shreveport, for defendants-appellants.

Gerard F. Thomas, Jr., Natchitoches, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before TATE, FRUGE, and CULPEPPER, JJ.

TATE, Judge.

This is a suit for workmen's compensation. The trial court held the plaintiff to be totally and permanently disabled.

The defendants appeal, and the plaintiff answers the appeal.

The plaintiff Redding was directly employed by the defendant Brewton, who was a pulpwood producer performing work under sub-contract for the defendant Cade. Cade was a pulpwood dealer in the business of buying, cutting, selling, and hauling pulpwood. The plaintiff Redding was injured in operations of Cade and Brewton conducted on lands owned by the Continental Can Company ("Continental"), which is also joined as a co-defendant.

The trial court held all of these defendants (Cade, Brewton, and Continental), as *883 well as their insurers, liable in solido to the plaintiff for compensation benefits. In addition, the Southern Casualty Insurance Company ("Southern"), the insurer of Cade and Brewton, was held liable for penalties for the arbitrary non-payment of compensation.

There is virtually no conflict in the evidence. We see little need to repeat the trial court's analysis of it, which in our opinion is correct. We will simply state that the record reflects without substantial dispute that the plaintiff was injured at work on July 17, 1962, and that the injury was shortly thereafterwards reported to Brewton and Cade and their insurer, Southern. Without any contradiction whatsoever, the medical evidence shows that, as a result of his work injury, the claimant is totally and permanently disabled from a return to the heavy duties of his employment by reason of a back (herniated disc) condition.

The record further shows: Southern received notice of the accident and undisputed medical reports indicating the plaintiff's disability, yet without any justification whatsoever this insurer failed to pay the claimant workmen's compensation benefits, despite repeated demands by his attorney. See, e. g., testimony of Southern's general manager to this effect at Tr. 165-166. Southern is thus undoubtedly liable for penalties under the jurisprudence, which holds that "a failure to pay or to tender an amount for which the employer is undoubtedly liable under the compensation act is arbitrary or unreasonable so as to require the imposition of statutory penalties whenever such failure is without legal basis and there is no serious question upon the merits that the employee is entitled to payment of such compensation benefits * * *. [Many citations omitted]", Fruge v. Hub City Iron Works, Inc., La.App., 3 Cir., 131 So.2d 593, 599, certiorari denied.

The principal remaining issues of this appeal requiring discussion are: (1) Southern's contention that the assessment of penalties was premature and, alternatively, that a reduction should be made in penalties awarded by the trial court; (2) The contention of Continental and its insurer that Continental should not be held liable as a principal (i. e., a statutory employer under LSA-R.S. 23:1061) for injuries sustained by employees of Cade and Brewton, since allegedly Continental merely sold to Cade the timber with which the Cade-Brewton operations were concerned and merely bought the pulpwood manufactured from such timber, and thus was only in a buyer-seller not a principal-contractor relationship with Cade in such operations.

1. Southern's Penalty Liability.

(a) Alleged Prematurity.

At the oral argument of this appeal, able counsel for Southern contended that the issue as to penalties was premature and not ripe for adjudication, since the trial court had refused a continuance and had incorrectly heard the case on the merits. Counsel contends that penalties should therefore be disallowed.

Aside from referring to the completely distinguishable case of Glover v. Schuylkill Products Co., La.App. 1 Cir., 138 So. 2d 15, counsel bases such contention upon the circumstance that, due to the failure of the defendant insurer to file an answer, the plaintiff had obtained a preliminary judgment against such insurer on December 14, 1962, which ordered the defendant to pay compensation, and pursuant to which Southern was paying weekly compensation at the time of trial.

The preliminary judgment was obtained under LSA-R.S. 23:1315 and 1316 of the compensation act. These provisions relate to "a preliminary judgment [obtained by the plaintiff when the defendant has failed to answer,] for payment of such compensation as is claimed to be payable until such time as the hearing of the issues on the merits is fixed by an order of court at the request of the defendant * * *", LSA-R.S. 23:1316.

*884 Such preliminary judgment is "in the nature of a penalty against the defendant for delaying the trial on the merits by his failure to file an answer within ten days or within an extension thereof granted at the discretion of the trial judge." Fontenot v. Great American Indemnity Co., La.App. 3 Cir., 127 So.2d 822, 831. The Fontenot decision also notes that "[t]he obvious purpose of the above statutory provisions is to obtain an early trial on the merits in workmen's compensation cases * * *." 127 So.2d 831.

In our opinion, the granting of a preliminary judgment does not prevent the claimant thereafter from setting the case for trial and obtaining a judgment on the merits, since its primary statutory purpose is to expedite the trial on the merits in workmen's compensation cases.

Further, the defendant insurer filed an answer of general denial on January 7, 1963.[1]

In view of the defendant insurer's denial of any liability at all in the premises, the plaintiff is entitled to have the defendant's liability for compensation fixed. D'Antoni v. Employers' Liability Assurance Corp., 213 La. 67, 34 So.2d 378; Washington v. Independent Ice & Cold Storage Co., 211 La. 690, 30 So.2d 758. A justified suit for compensation is not rendered premature because a defendant resumes the payment of compensation which, previously, it had arbitrarily failed to pay. Boss v. Marquette Cas. Co., La.App. 3 Cir., 150 So.2d 67, certiorari denied.

The plaintiff's demand for penalties is therefore not premature.

(b) Amount of Penalties.

Southern's counsel next contends that the trial court was in error in assessing 12% penalties against the entire amount of compensation awarded by the judgment, instead of only against that compensation which was or will become overdue for more than sixty days. In our opinion, there is merit to this contention by Southern.

Under LSA-R.S. 22:658, the arbitrary failure of an insurer to pay, within 60 days after demand, amounts due by it "* * * shall subject the insurer to a penalty, in addition to the amount of the loss, of 12% damages on the total amount of the loss * * *, together with all reasonable attorney's fees for the prosecution and collection of such loss * * *." (Italics ours.)

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158 So. 2d 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redding-v-cade-lactapp-1963.