Roberts v. D & J Construction Co.

969 So. 2d 811, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 2089, 2007 WL 3357396
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 2007
DocketNo. 42,510-WCA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 969 So. 2d 811 (Roberts v. D & J Construction 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
Roberts v. D & J Construction Co., 969 So. 2d 811, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 2089, 2007 WL 3357396 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

PEATROSS, J.

L Claimant Jon Roberts appeals from a judgment of the Office of Workers’ Compensation (“OWC”) dismissing his demand for compensation benefits. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm.

FACTS

After his employer denied his claim for indemnity and medical benefits, Jon Roberts filed a formal claim for workers’ compensation on June 17, 2005, seeking those benefits plus penalties and attorney fees. The employer answered the claim, denying that there was an accident and further alleging that Mr. Roberts had forfeited his right to benefits by falsely denying a prior injury. Mr. Roberts filed an amended claim for compensation in June 2006 asking additionally for mileage reimbursement; the employer again denied the occurrence of an accident and asserted fraud on the part of the claimant. The matter went to trial before the OWC on July 20, 2006; and, on December 29, 2006, the OWC dismissed the employee’s claim.

Mr. Roberts worked as a laborer for D & J Construction (“D & J”). Mr. Roberts has an eighth-grade education and has worked as a mechanic or laborer most of his life. On April 13, 2005, Mr. Roberts was working for D & J at a jobsite near U.S. Highway 167 in Bernice, Louisiana. He and fellow workers rode together in a crew truck to and from the job site. According to Mr. Roberts:

I’d used a sledgehammer all that day, bending over steel rods about — about five, six inches or so tall, about as big around as my finger, with a sledgehammer bending them over in a drain system. And I was hot and tired. I sat the hammer down at the — run it might-near all day on both sides of the road. And jumped in [crew leader Charles “Little Brother”] Scott’s truck, 12went up the street, went up the road there a little piece. He said, “Jon, jump out and get that road closing sign.” I said, “Okay.” So I got out and walked over— over there and reached down on the bottom of the road closing sign down toward the bottom of it, and it had three [814]*814or four, like eighty-pound sacks of sand on it. I pulled up, and when I pulled up I heard something snap in my back two or three times.

Mr. Roberts said that he immediately told his co-workers what had happened:

I told them that I had something wrong with me, that I didn’t feel right — something wasn’t right with me.

Charles Scott, who was driving the truck, said “Not to my knowledge” when asked if Mr. Roberts had told him that day at the job site that he had been hurt picking up a sign. Mr. Scott also testified that Mr. Roberts did not tell him of any injury later that evening when the crew returned to the D & J office. Mr. Scott said that he would have made a report of the incident had Mr. Roberts reported it.

Mr. Roberts did not go to work the next day, April 14, but instead, went to E.A. Conway Medical Center in Monroe. A hospital record in the form of a letter dated April 18, 2005, states that Mr. Roberts was at E.A. Conway on April 14, 2005, “to schedule an appointment with the Orthopedics Clinic.”

Mr. Scott testified that, when Mr. Roberts did not show up for work, he called him to find out why he did not come in. Mr. Roberts did not have a telephone in his house, but his next-door neighbor, Carolyn King (who is also Mr. Roberts’ sister), had a telephone that Mr. Roberts used for his calls. Mr. Scott reached Mr. Roberts’ brother-in-law on the morning of April 14, but was unable to speak with him.

| oMr. Roberts testified that he finally spoke to Mr. Scott on the phone later in the day on April 14. According to Mr. Roberts:

I told [Scott] that I had went to Charity Hospital and I pulled — I pulled some stuff loose in my back, and you know — I was letting him know. I asked him what I — what he thought I needed to do. He said, “You need to call Jerry Lynn.”

Jerry Lynn Hackworth was the D & J superintendent in charge of work crews that included Mr. Roberts’ crew. Mr. Roberts’ sister testified that she heard Mr. Roberts tell Mr. Scott “that he had gotten hurt and that was why he was not at work.”

Mr. Scott initially testified that he spoke with Mr. Roberts on April 14, but later explained that he had actually spoken with Mr. Roberts on Friday, April 15. Mr. Scott further testified that he did not at that time ask Mr. Roberts what was wrong with him. Mr. Scott testified that Mr. Roberts told him that “something was wrong” with him, but testified that Mr. Roberts did not tell him that Mr. Roberts had gone to the hospital.

Mr. Roberts testified that, after speaking to Mr. Scott, he then called Mr. Hack-worth:

I told Mr. Hackworth that I had went to E.A. Conway, down there at the charity hospital, and that I pulled something loose in my back, and something wasn’t right with me.

Mr. Roberts said that Mr. Hackworth responded this way:

He turned around and told me-he said, “Well, I’ve got to decide if I’m going to fire you or if I’m going to let you go,” like that. He said, “I’ll call you back in a couple of days.”

Mr. Hackworth said that he talked to Mr. Roberts on April 15, not April 14, and that Mr. Roberts said that “he had something wrong with him” and was going to the hospital. Mr. Hackworth said he did not ask Mr. Roberts what |4was wrong with him and said that Mr. Roberts did not volunteer any information. Mr. Hack-worth had been at the jobsite all day on April 13, 2005, and testified that Mr. Rob[815]*815erts never said anything about being hurt that day.

Mr. Roberts further testified that Mr. Hackworth called him back on April 15:

He called me back ..., said something about he talked with a Mr. Jerry Wyatt, or something to that effect, and said, “They say I can’t just lay you off, that I’ve got to fire you. So I think I’m just going to go that route.” [He said], “We’re just going to fire you.”

Mr. Hackworth agreed that he discharged Mr. Roberts from employment, but asserted that it was a “disciplinary layoff” because Mr. Roberts had not shown up for work. Mr. Hackworth recalled that D & J’s company policy is to terminate an employee when the employee has two unexcused absences in one year, and he recalled that Mr. Roberts had several unexcused absences in the year before he was fired. D & J is also an at-will employer. Mr. Hackworth recalled the absences because, at another jobsite, he often picked Mr. Roberts up to drive him to work and “a couple of times,” he did not show up at the pick-up point. After informing Mr. Roberts that he was going to be discharged, Mr. Hackworth called the company’s human relations director, Pam Shockley, for guidance and also contacted the company’s chief financial officer, Terry Baugh. After conferring with those people, Mr. Hackworth called Mr. Roberts back and fired him.

| fjAfter he had been fired, Mr. Roberts attended his previously scheduled appointment at E.A. Conway Medical Center on April 18, 2005. The medical record from that date states in part:

Chief Complaint: C/O chronic back pain — wants pain shot
[[Image here]]
Back problems off & on since '98 accident This incident since he “pulled something” Tuesday moving signs (road closure signs)

The doctor administered anti-inflammatory medicine, muscle relaxants and painkillers and made Mr.

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Related

Turner v. Chi. Bridge & Iron Co.
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Bluebook (online)
969 So. 2d 811, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 2089, 2007 WL 3357396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-d-j-construction-co-lactapp-2007.