Regan v. Eunice Superette, Inc.
This text of 884 So. 2d 1209 (Regan v. Eunice Superette, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
Darrell REGAN
v.
EUNICE SUPERETTE, INC.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*1210 Michael B. Miller, Miller & Miller, Crowley, LA, for Plaintiff/Appellee/Appellant, Darrell Regan.
Christopher R. Philipp, Attorney at Law, Lafayette, LA, for Defendant/Appellant/Appellee, Eunice Superette, Inc.
Court composed of JOHN D. SAUNDERS, MICHAEL G. SULLIVAN, and ELIZABETH A. PICKETT, Judges.
SULLIVAN, Judge.
In this workers' compensation matter, Darrell Regan and Eunice Superette, Inc. appeal factual findings and awards made by the Workers' Compensation Judge (WCJ). For the following reasons, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
Facts
The facts of this matter are essentially undisputed, and we adopt the facts as outlined by the WCJ.
Regan was employed with the employer, Eunice Superette, Inc., "The Superette [,]" making sausage and boudin. Regan managed the Superette's smokehouse. His job duties included loading and unloading trucks with boxes of meat, putting the boxes of meat on racks, taking the boxes off the racks, loading them into a cart to bring to the grinder, then grinding, mixing and stuffing the meat. Another co-worker who sometimes helped in the smokehouse was Willie Burson, the owner's nephew.
On February 23, 2001, the claimant was stuffing sausage. [Easton] Rollins [,another Superette employee who worked in the smokehouse,] was also in the smokehouse, cutting meat. Willie Burson came in the smokehouse and slapped the claimant on the back of the neck as a practical joke. Burson testified that this joke was done so often *1211 they gave it a name, "giving a red neck." Burson demonstrated the slap at trial, and it was a good, hard slap. Burson testified that on this particular day Regan said he was hurting, so Burson "stopped it right there."
A couple of days later Regan reported an accident to the employer. An employer report of injury/illness, form 1007, was completed on February 28. Regan told the employer that he injured himself "loading a delivery truck [and] picked up a 90 lb. hindquarter & hurt his shoulder." Regan gave a similar history to all of his treating physicians. He was found to have a herniated cervical disc, and eventually surgery was performed. He was released to light duty December 11, 2001 by his treating physician, Dr. Ricardo R. Leoni. A vocational counselor was assigned to work with the claimant, and benefits were terminated in March 2002 based upon a light duty job offer by the Superette.
The employer had filed a disputed claim form 1008 in February 2002 to compel the claimant to attend a medical examination. In March of that year, the employer filed a motion to compel cooperation with vocation rehabilitation. In May the claimant filed a disputed claim form 1008 due to the termination of benefits and requesting penalties and attorney fees. The claims were later consolidated.
The claimant was deposed on October 8, 2002. At the deposition the claimant disclosed for the first time the true nature of the accident. The employer subsequently amended its pretrial questionnaire to set forth the "horseplay" exclusion per La.R.S. 23:1031(D), and later amended to allege that the claimant had violated La.R.S. 23:1208 by misrepresenting the manner in which the accident occurred.
Additional facts pertinent to specific assignments of error are set out in the context of the discussion of each assignment of error.
After trial of the matter, the WCJ rendered judgment in favor of Mr. Regan, awarding him supplemental earnings benefits (SEB) as of March 18, 2002, the date the Superette discontinued those benefits. The WCJ also determined that Mr. Regan was not engaged in horseplay at the time he was injured and, therefore, not excluded from receiving benefits, and that Mr. Regan's initial description of how he was injured, while incorrect, did not merit forfeiture of his benefits. The WCJ denied Mr. Regan's request for penalties and attorney fees as a result of the Superette's discontinuation of his benefits on March 17, 2002, and did not award attorney fees for the Superette's failure to reimburse Mr. Regan for mileage requested on April 8, 2003.
The Superette assigns three errors: 1) the WCJ erred when it reinstated Mr. Regan's SEB; 2) the WCJ erred when it did not find that Mr. Regan's injury was caused by his engaging in horseplay which arose out of his employment with the Superette; and 3) the WCJ erred when it concluded that Mr. Regan did not willfully make a false statement or representation for the purpose of obtaining benefits or defeating its horseplay defense in violation of La.R.S. 23:1208. Mr. Regan assigns two errors: 1) the WCJ's denial of attorney fees for the Superette's arbitrary and capricious failure to pay Mr. Regan's weekly compensation benefits after March 18, 2002 and 2) the WCJ's failure to award penalties and attorney fees for the Superette's failure to pay mileage requested on April 8, 2003.
Discussion
Supplemental Earning Benefits
The Superette argues that Mr. Regan refused to return to work when it had a *1212 position available for him which was within the physical restrictions established by his treating physician. Randall Moore, owner of the Superette, and a vocational rehabilitation counselor testified that the position made available for Mr. Regan to return to work in March 2002 was a light duty position as required by Dr. Leoni. This light duty position was the same position Mr. Regan had with the Superette before he was injured; however, a helper was to do all the lifting over the twenty-five pound maximum weight restriction established by Dr. Leoni.
Mr. Regan testified that, when he reported to work on March 17, 2002, he was informed that he would be performing his old job. He further testified that he was not told that his job was being modified and that he would not have to lift the heavy loads he lifted before his injury. Bobby Taylor, the Superette's plant manager, testified that he met with Mr. Regan the day he went to the store to return to work and that he informed Mr. Regan he would not have to lift heavy loads as he did before his injury. However, Mr. Taylor testified in his deposition that he told Mr. Regan that his job "would have been basically what he was doing before." When questioned in his deposition whether there would have been any difference between Mr. Regan's duties at that time and his duties before he was injured, Mr. Taylor stated, "I don't really know of any difference." Further, he agreed that Mr. Regan was told that he would be doing the same work he did before his injury, explaining that he did not want Mr. Regan to feel that he was being demoted.
It is undisputed that Mr. Regan's job duties before his injury required heavy lifting and that without modification of his position, it did not meet the physical restrictions established by Dr. Leoni. Mr. Taylor's deposition testimony justifies Mr. Regan's refusal to return to work in March 2002. This assignment is without merit.
Horseplay
In its second assignment of error, the Superette complains that the WCJ erred in determining that Mr. Regan's injury was not the result of his engaging in horseplay. La. R.S. 23:1031(D) provides:
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
884 So. 2d 1209, 4 La.App. 3 Cir. 0227, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 2287, 2004 WL 2181047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regan-v-eunice-superette-inc-lactapp-2004.