Richard J. Borja v. Fara St. Bernard Parish Government

218 So. 3d 1, 2016 WL 6123579, 2016 La. LEXIS 2094
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 19, 2016
Docket2016-C -0055
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 218 So. 3d 1 (Richard J. Borja v. Fara St. Bernard Parish Government) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard J. Borja v. Fara St. Bernard Parish Government, 218 So. 3d 1, 2016 WL 6123579, 2016 La. LEXIS 2094 (La. 2016).

Opinion

*3 ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH CIRCUIT, OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION DISTRICT 7

GUIDRY, J.

| ,We granted the claimant’s writ application to review the decision of the court of appeal that affirmed the workers’ compensation court judgment sustaining the employer’s exception of prescription and exception of res judicata. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the lower court’s judgment and remand the matter to the Office of Workers’ Compensation for further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The claimant, Mr. Richard J. Borja, was employed by St. Bernard Parish Government (“St. Bernard”) as a firefighter beginning in July 1973. In March of 2004, the claimant filed a disputed claim for compen- *4 satioii alleging that he had injured his right knee and right thumb in an accident on June 2, 2002, and he also alleged he had an occupational disease. He described his injuries on the 2004 disputed claim for compensation as a “torqued knee,” caused by “carrying [a] spine board down steps to stretcher and picking up syringes” and “Heart and Lung,” indirectly referencing the Fireman’s Heart and Lung Act. 1 In the disputed claim, |2the claimant asserted he had reported the accident on June 3, 2002. After the accident, the claimant began receiving maximum workers’ compensation benefits, which continued until St. Bernard terminated them on June 3, 2003. In the meantime, the claimant had taken disability retirement in January 2003. The specific nature of the dispute as identified on the 2004 disputed claim form was that his wage benefits had been terminated or reduced on June 3, 2003, and that medical treatment was not being paid. The disputed claim form was filed within one year of the termination of the benefits.

' St. Bernard answered the 2004 litigation by admitting the claimant had sustained an injury to his right knee on June 2, 2002. However, it disputed the thumb injury as well as any heart and lung claims as being related, to his employment, stating that it “ha[d] no knowledge as to plaintiffs claim for an alleged right thumb injury of 6-2-02 nor occupational disease nor heart and lung claim and alternatively, they are prescribed.” While St. Bernard conceded the claimant had been receiving the maximum benefits from the date of the accident until January 2003, it also maintained that because the claimant voluntarily retired in that month, he had removed himself from the workforce and was no longer entitled to future workers’ compensation benefits. 2

IsThroughout the 2004 litigation, the claimant had consistently argued that his heart and lung conditions were related to his employment. On May 4, 2005, the claimant’s counsel wrote: “Additionally, Mr. Borja has heart and lung conditions which were caused by his employment as well.” Further, on July 31, 2006, the claimant’s counsel wrote: ‘You will also note in his personal file that he was hospitalized twice for toxic smoke inhalation, [and] has suffered with chronic throat and lung problems since that date. He has had pneumonia on several occasions and has been actively been [sic] treated by Dr. Jeannine Parker for these lung conditions for some time.” The dispute eventually went to mediation, which resulted in a compromise that claimant would receive back compensation payments in two lump sums, bringing him current to March 24, 2008, and that “effective today, claimant *5 will receive weekly indemnity benefits of $398,” which all parties agree was the maximum the claimant could receive at that time. On October 6, 2008, the claimant filed a motion to dismiss the 2004 litigation noting “that this matter has been settled in full,” which the trial court granted on October 9, 2008.

On August 16, 2013, St. Bernard, identifying the claimant’s benefits as Supplemental Earnings Benefits (“SEBs”), gave notice that it would terminate SEBs effective August 27, 2013, on the basis that he will have received the full 520 weeks of payments as of August 26, 2013. Thereafter, on November 22, 2013, the claimant filed another disputed claim for compensation citing “knees, heart and lung” as his injuries. Specifically, he described his June 2, 2002 injury to the knee as follows: “on a medical call in Tiger Town while helping EMS carry stretcher down stairs, torqued my knee while trying to balance the stretcher due to person on other end pulling it.” He also cited “Heart and Lung— permanent disability.” He cited the particular dispute as termination of his wage benefits on August 27, 2013, Land also as follows: “Employee is totally disabled—not only [have] both knees been replaced but Employee suffers from significant heart/ lung issues which is disabling.” He contended that, because he was a fireman, his “heart/lung issues are presumed related.”

In response, St. Bernard filed exceptions of prescription and res judicata. St. Bernard’s exception of prescription alleged the 2013 claims for medical benefits were prescribed on their face pursuant to La. R.S. 23:1209(0), because more than three years had elapsed between the May 22, 2009 payment of medical benefits for his knee injury and the November 22, 2013 filing of the disputed claim for compensation. Also, St. Bernard asserted the 2013 claim for an occupational injury under the Firefighter’s Heart & Lung Act had prescribed pursuant to La. R.S. 23:1031.1, because the claimant admitted that: (1) he had heart and lung issues on his 2004 disputed claim for compensation; (2) on May 4, 2005, he acknowledged that he had “heart and lung conditions which were caused by his em--ployment;” and (3) he took disability retirement in 2003. Further, St. Bernard’s exception of res judicata asserted the November 2013 claims were previously the subject of litigation between the same parties in 2004, and were resolved through a settlement and dismissal of the litigation in 2008.

The claimant opposed the exceptions of prescription and res judicata arguing there had always been a dispute over his disability classification and that he “has always contended that he is permanently and totally disabled, while defendant [St. Bernard] still classified him as temporarily, totally disabled.” According to his opposition, the 2008 settlement and dismissal of litigation pertained only to his dispute for back pay and reinstatement of benefits and that “[t]he parties agreed to fight this battle [of whether the claimant was temporarily or permanently disabled],at another date when needed, because [the claimant was] ^already receiving the maximum benefits available and had received his back pay.” Mr. Borja also argued that, even though his “SEB benefits may have expired, a claim for total and permanent benefits has not because this claim was filed shortly after his weekly compensation was discontinued.”

After a hearing on the motions, the workers’ compensation judge signed a written judgment on December 1, 2014, which granted the exception of res judica-ta for the knee injury, and granted the exception of prescription as to the claim under the “Heart and Lung Statute.” In her reasons for judgment, the workers’ *6

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218 So. 3d 1, 2016 WL 6123579, 2016 La. LEXIS 2094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-j-borja-v-fara-st-bernard-parish-government-la-2016.