Sheppard v. Isle of Capri
This text of 909 So. 2d 699 (Sheppard v. Isle of Capri) 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
Cathey SHEPPARD a/k/a Cathy Sheppard, Plaintiff-Appellant
v.
ISLE OF CAPRI, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*700 Davis Law Office, LLC, by S.P. Davis, Sr., Shreveport, for Appellant.
Lunn, Irion, Salley, Carlisle & Gardner, by Walter S. Salley, Shreveport, for Appellee.
Before STEWART, PEATROSS and MOORE, JJ.
MOORE, J.
Cathey Sheppard filed a disputed claim for benefits arising from an unwitnessed accident at the Isle of Capri casino in Bossier City, where she was a cage cashier. The WCJ found a total absence of evidence to corroborate the incident. Finding no manifest error, we affirm.
*701 Factual Background
Ms. Sheppard had worked at the Isle for about a year and a half; part of her job was to pick up bags of coins after they were filled by the Jet Sort coin sorter. She testified that she had to lift bags eight to 10 times an hour, with dollar bags weighing 20 to 30 lbs. On the swing shift on March 30, 2002, she reached down to pick up a bag: "I had a pull in my back with a sharp pain[,]" a "heavy pain in my lower back." She described the pain as a "10," "like nothing I had ever had before," causing her to cry out loud. Ms. Sheppard testified that about five minutes later, she told her coworker Cassandra Jackson that she had hurt her back; at the end of the shift, she told Ms. Jackson that she probably would not come in to work the following Monday.
At trial, Ms. Jackson testified that although she worked with Ms. Sheppard, she did not see the accident. Ms. Jackson was not asked if she heard Ms. Sheppard cry out in pain. She vaguely recalled Ms. Sheppard saying "her back hurt," but not that she had just injured it.
Ms. Sheppard did not return to work at the Isle after this. She testified that she phoned in on April 3, telling her cage manager, Judy Jones, that she had hurt her back. According to Ms. Sheppard, Ms. Jones replied that she ought to apply for family leave under FMLA, and transferred her to the Isle's FMLA generalist. Ms. Sheppard further testified that Christina Coss, the FMLA generalist, told her it was probably from "lifting the coins," but nonetheless treated it as an FMLA claim.
Another cage cashier, Glenda Clark, testified that she took Ms. Sheppard's call on April 3 and wrote the call-out slip; Ms. Sheppard gave her the information noted on the slip, "Reason for absence/lateness: sick." Ms. Jones, the cage manager, testified by deposition that Ms. Sheppard never said she had been hurt on the job, only that she was sick; there was also an April 1 call-out slip listing "stomach virus" as the reason for absence. Ms. Coss, the FMLA generalist, testified by deposition that she spoke to Ms. Sheppard about her FMLA request on April 5, 16 and 26, and on those dates Ms. Sheppard never mentioned any work-related accident.
Ms. Sheppard went to a chiropractor, Dr. Patrick Peele, on April 4. She testified she was in acute pain that day and thus may not have told him about the work-related accident, only that her job involved a lot of lifting. After nearly a month of manipulations and differential current therapy, she was little improved so she went to a general practitioner, Dr. David Hudson, a physician listed in the Isle's employee handbook. She admitted that she may have likewise failed to tell this doctor about a work-related injury, but was certain she did so on a later visit.
Dr. Hudson's office records included Ms. Sheppard's handwritten patient history, which said nothing about an accident on the job; he ascribed her symptoms to stress. He gave her Naprosyn, an NSAID (Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drug), and Paxil, an anti-depressant, and told her to quit the chiropractic manipulations. He testified that on June 26, she told him it was a workers' compensation claim, but she said nothing about the nature of the accident. Dr. Hudson also discovered that Ms. Sheppard had a history of back problems, including a lumbar strain sustained while working as a cashier at Brookshire's in 2000, a course of treatment at Mid-South Orthopedics, a lumbar sprain in 2001, and an MRI in October 2001.
On April 30, Ms. Sheppard filled out her FMLA application. The accompanying certification of health care provider, written *702 by Dr. Peele and signed by Ms. Sheppard, read, "Pt. reported the onset of her condition as starting 2-3 months ago." On the same day, she filed an accident/injury report referring to "back problem which happen [sic] several months ago," "caused by lifting bag of money in the cage." The Isle's risk claim manager, Sherolyn Beard, testified that company policy required employees to report any work-related accident the day it occurred; this was corroborated by a file copy of the Isle's safety policy, signed by Ms. Sheppard in January 2000. Ms. Beard added that by April 30, the surveillance video had been destroyed, and Ms. Sheppard did not list any eyewitnesses or submit any medical expenses; for these reasons, the Isle denied the compensation claim.
Ms. Sheppard filed this disputed claim in April 2003.
At trial in August 2004, Ms. Sheppard testified she was still in too much pain to work an eight-hour day; she described her pain as chronic, sharp and hard, requiring treatment at LSU Health Sciences Center. However, she admitted she had drawn unemployment compensation benefits from March through August 2003 (documents from the Department of Labor showed it was actually through October 2003). She also admitted she had worked intermittently as a substitute teacher for the Caddo Parish School Board since November 2003 and as a part-time cashier at Brookshire's since May 2004.
Action of the WCJ
The WCJ cited the law governing the plaintiff's burden of proving an unwitnessed accident, Bruno v. Harbert Int'l Inc., 91-1444 (La.1/17/92), 593 So.2d 357, and West v. Bayou Vista Manor Inc., 371 So.2d 1146 (La.1979). Because of Ms. Sheppard's significant history of low back pain predating this incident, the WCJ could not apply the corroborating factor that she "worked her job for quite some time prior to the accident without problems."
The WCJ noted her failure to report a work-related injury to either Dr. Peele or Dr. Hudson, as well as her inconsistent accounts of when the pain began: "Ms. Sheppard herself was never sure of the onset of the symptoms." Significantly, neither doctor related her current condition to a work injury on March 30, 2002.
The WCJ then found that the two call-out slips and one live witness contradicted Ms. Sheppard's claim to have reported the injury in early April. Most importantly, Ms. Sheppard's lead witness, Cassandra Jackson, simply did not corroborate the incident (she recalled Ms. Sheppard saying only that she "hurt her back") and lacked credibility (she "changed her demeanor quite a bit and this court felt she wasn't really being forthright"). In the absence of corroboration, the WCJ dismissed the claim.
Ms. Sheppard has appealed, urging by one assignment of error that the WCJ erred in finding she failed to prove a compensable injury.
Discussion
The threshold requirement in a workers' compensation case is that the claimant must establish "personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment." La. R.S. 23:1031 A; Bruno v. Harbert Int'l Inc., supra.
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