Safeco Ins. Co. v. Farm Bur. Ins. Companies
This text of 490 So. 2d 565 (Safeco Ins. Co. v. Farm Bur. Ins. Companies) 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
SAFECO INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
FARM BUREAU INSURANCE COMPANIES, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*566 Carolyn Pratt Perry, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.
Fruge & Vidrine, Jack C. Fruge, Sr. and Richard Vidrine, Platte, for defendants-appellees.
Before DOUCET, LABORDE and BOND[*], JJ.
*567 W. ELLIS BOND, Judge Pro Tem.
This is an action by Safeco Insurance Company against Farm Bureau Insurance Company and its insured, J. Curtis Guidry, d/b/a Guidry Farms, Inc. (sic) to recover or to obtain contribution for workmen's compensation benefits allegedly paid in error.
Most of the facts are not in dispute. The essential dispute is causation of the workmen's compensation claimant's present disability and whether or not an accident or aggravation of a preexisting back condition caused or contributed to the necessity for claimant's third back operation. There is not known to be any suit pending by the claimant, David K. Guidry, and he is not a party to this action. We will refer to him hereinafter as Guidry, not to be confused with his father, J. Curtis Guidry, or Guidry Farms.
The evidence shows that Guidry sustained a back injury while employed by his father in December 1976, while defendant, Farm Bureau, provided workmen's compensation benefits for Guidry Farms. Conservative treatment by Dr. Rafes, a neurosurgeon of Beaumont, Texas, over a period of about four months, proved inadequate and surgery was then performed on the L5-S1 disc. Some months thereafter he reinjured his back while assisting on the farm and while still disabled. After considerable medical treatment and testing procedures, surgery was performed upon Guidry's low back by Dr. S. Henry LaRocca in New Orleans on November 15, 1978. Additional disc material was removed at the L5-S1 level and a fusion of vertebrae L4 to the sacrum was performed. Dr. LaRocca pronounced Guidry able to work as of January 29, 1980, finding that the fusion had taken and become solid.
Guidry has never filed a lawsuit against Farm Bureau and it is not known if he ever consulted an attorney. In any event, Dr. LaRocca testified he was never asked to assign a percentage of disability to Mr. Guidry, but had he been asked, he would have "put him as total permanent disability regarding physical labor."
Guidry then worked nearly a year for Oilfield Construction Company in the Eunice, Louisiana area, operating a bulldozer. He testified he never missed a day of work due to his back, but did experience some back pain after working a long day, more in the nature of tiredness. Thereafter, he worked for about four months in the Baton Rouge, Louisiana area, for B & K Construction Company, whose workmen's compensation insurer was Safeco.
It is this period of time that Guidry's condition is at issue. He has testified that he considered himself well and able to do heavy work while working from January 1980, until early January 1981. He claims that on or about January 6, 1981, he slipped on the wet track of a bulldozer and hurt his back in an effort to keep from falling. He described the pain as sharp, like a pulled muscle. He ignored it, but it continued to get worse. It was a different pain from what he experienced while working for Oilfield Construction. He states that he definitely did have an accident at that time and returned to see Dr. LaRocca when the pain kept getting worse.
Dr. LaRocca testified that he saw Guidry on July 25, 1980, at which time his notes show, "Patient is cautioned against any heavy physical activity but probably could resume some form of work." He stated he thought Guidry's disability to be permanent from the first time he saw him.
Guidry next saw Dr. LaRocca on January 14, 1981, and at that time told the doctor he had been working on a bulldozer and got pain into his back and right lower extremity without a specific injury; that he had a one month history of recurrent pain in the back and right leg, getting worse with time and activity. The doctor's findings on that date indicated a new ruptured disc, but X-ray examination showed the fusion to be intact. Guidry was told that he had to quit work, but he couldn't just then for economic reasons. Dr. LaRocca said, "We began talking about getting him off the job, and he was started on medication at that time." When asked again if Guidry related that problem to any new injury, the doctor replied, *568 "No new injury. No. It was something that developed as he worked on the job. Further, I would have thought him incapable of doing that job for any significant length of time without having problems recur and, in point of fact, that's exactly what happened, ............. a spine which has this characteristic is simply not going to hold up under physical labor."
Dr. LaRocca's office record of the January 14, 1981, visit by Guidry notes, "...... had done remarkably well getting back to work on a bulldozer until approximately one month ago when he noted increasing axial low back pain with some return of his siatic-type of right leg pain. Also, problem # 2 is right knee anterior cruciate deficit. With an old football injury history and an operation the patient was getting off his bulldozer yesterday when his knee gave way."
Dr. LaRocca treated Guidry on February 13, 1981, and March 24, 1981. He continued to have pain and was sent to Touro Infirmary on April 13, 1981, for a myelogram which turned out normal. He was seen by Dr. LaRocca on June 6, July 21, September 1, November 9 and December 21, 1981. He wore a Raney jacket, or back brace, during most of that time.
Mr. Guidry testified he first reported an accident to his employer in April of 1981.
Mr. Guidry stopped seeing Dr. LaRocca after the December 21, 1981, visit. On January 15, 1982, Dr. John D. Jackson of Metairie, Louisiana, performed surgery on Guidry's back. The doctor's discharge summary, Safeco-7 shows that he found a free fragment of bone, rounded and jagged, pressed beneath the lamina on top of the nerve root. He found some bulging disc material, but did not think it was causing a great deal of difficulty, though he removed it anyway.
Mr. Guidry remains disabled from performing any type of heavy labor and now works as a car and truck salesman. Farm Bureau paid workmen's compensation benefits to Guidry through March 24, 1980. It appears that Guidry continued to draw benefits for about two months after he went to work, apparently not having bothered to notify Farm Bureau of his employment. They received a report from Dr. LaRocca on April 1, 1980, advising that Guidry could return to work as of January 29, 1980, and discontinued weekly benefits at that time. They continued to pay medical expenses until March 13, 1981, including his visits to Dr. LaRocca after his claimed injury in January 1981. They received a report from Dr. LaRocca in early May of 1981, that alerted them Guidry was again unable to work. They then contacted Guidry and learned that Safeco was paying the medical expenses and weekly benefits. The adjuster, Mr. LeBleu, persuaded Guidry not to let Safeco know of their involvement.
Safeco learned of Mr. Guidry's prior injuries and operations in August of 1981. A letter request by Safeco to Farm Bureau on August 18, 1981, for information did not result in a response until July 30, 1982.
The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Farm Bureau and against Safeco, rejecting the plaintiff's demands. No written reasons for judgment were rendered. The preamble of the judgment states:
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490 So. 2d 565, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 7171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safeco-ins-co-v-farm-bur-ins-companies-lactapp-1986.