Tida Rose Bourgeois v. Brown's Market & Deli, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 14, 2009
DocketWCA-0009-0290
StatusUnknown

This text of Tida Rose Bourgeois v. Brown's Market & Deli, Inc. (Tida Rose Bourgeois v. Brown's Market & Deli, 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.

Bluebook
Tida Rose Bourgeois v. Brown's Market & Deli, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

09-290

TIDA ROSE BOURGEOIS

VERSUS

BROWN’S DELI & MARKET, INC.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION, DISTRICT 3, PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 05-02850, HONORABLE CHARLOTTE L. BUSHNELL, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION JUDGE

SHANNON J. GREMILLION JUDGE

********** Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Marc T. Amy and Shannon J. Gremillion, Judges.

Amy, J., concurs in part, dissents in part, and assigns reasons.

AFFIRMED.

Mark Zimmerman 4216 Lake Street Lake Charles, LA 70605 Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellee, Tida Rose Bourgeois

Matthew D. Crumhorn Rabalais, Unland and Lorio 200 Caroline Court Covington, LA 70433 Attorney for Defendant/Appellant, Brown’s Market & Deli, Inc. GREMILLION, Judge.

Brown’s Market & Deli, Inc. (Brown’s) appeals the judgment of the workers’

compensation judge (WCJ) allowing its employee, Tida Rose Bourgeois (Bourgeois),

to obtain treatment from a second orthopedic surgeon; ordering that Bourgeois be

supplied with a spinal cord stimulator; and assessing Brown’s with a $2,000 penalty

and $4,500 in attorneys fees for failing to approve the spinal cord stimulator.

Bourgeois answered the appeal and requests that we award additional attorney fees

for work performed in the appeal. For the reasons that follow, we affirm and award

Bourgeois additional attorney fees.

FACTS

Bourgeois was employed at Brown’s when, on January 1, 2005, she slipped on

ice while in the freezer. As a result, she sustained a scapholunate dislocation in her

left wrist. An orthopedic surgeon, Dr. M. Alan Hinton, performed an open reduction

and internal fixation of the dislocation and reconstruction of the scaphoid lunate

ligament on January 6, 2005. Dr. Hinton ordered Bourgeois off work.

Soon after surgery, Bourgeois began to complain of left elbow pain. Dr.

Hinton ordered an MRI that revealed no injury or defects to the elbow. Dr. Hinton

felt these problems were more probably than not related to Bourgeois’s wrist trauma.

In March 2005, Bourgeois reported to Dr. Hinton that she was experiencing

pain in her left shoulder. Dr. Hinton immediately suspected that Bourgeois was

developing or had developed reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD), but ordered an

MRI of the shoulder to rule out trauma and an EMG/nerve conduction study of the

left arm to rule out carpal tunnel syndrome. The MRI ruled out trauma, as Dr. Hinton

suspected, and he referred Bourgeois to a pain management specialist for treatment

1 of RSD.

Brown’s obtained an independent medical examination (IME) of Bourgeois

from Dr. Patrick Juneau, in June 2005. He confirmed the diagnosis of RSD and

concurred in the referral to pain management.

Initially, Bourgeois saw Dr. Kevin Gorin for pain management. Dr. Gorin

treated Bourgeois until December 2005, when he closed his practice.

Bourgeois’s current pain management specialist is Dr. Christopher Y. Lew of

Slidell, Louisiana, whom she first saw in February 2006. Dr. Lew confirmed the

diagnosis of RSD and began a regimen of treatment.

In March 2006, Bourgeois complained to Dr. Lew—for the first time to any

health care provider—of neck pain. During this same visit with Dr. Lew, Bourgeois

indicated to him that her attorney suggested that she obtain a second opinion

regarding her wrist, as Dr. Hinton had indicated that he had nothing more to offer her.

Dr. Lew desired an MRI of the neck, and agreed that a second opinion regarding

Bourgeois’s wrist would be useful.

Brown’s sent Bourgeois back to see Dr. Juneau in May 2006, after the cervical

complaints materialized. He saw no causal relationship between the on-the-job

accident and the cervical complaints. Dr. Juneau opined that Bourgeois had reached

maximum medical improvement (MMI). In addition to Dr. Juneau, Bourgeois was

sent to Dr. Sandra Weitz, a pain management specialist of Brown’s choosing. Dr.

Weitz opined that there was no causal relationship between the cervical complaints

and the accident.

In September 2007, the WCJ appointed Dr. Clark A. Gunderson, a Lake

Charles orthopedic surgeon, to perform an IME. Dr. Gunderson diagnosed Bourgeois

2 with a complex regional pain syndrome—essentially, RSD—and opined that the late-

onset cervical complaints were not related to the on-the-job accident. He further

opined that Bourgeois was restricted from lifting more than five to ten pounds, with

her right hand only.

In November 2007, Bourgeois returned to Dr. Hinton, who indicated that she

continued to have pain, loss of motion and dysfunction in the wrist. He reported that

she was not at MMI. However, in April 2008, Dr. Hinton reported to Bourgeois’s

vocational rehabilitation counselor, Jeanne Tarver, that Bourgeois was at MMI from

an orthopedic standpoint.

Dr. Lew disagrees with the other physicians in this matter, and feels that

Bourgeois’s cervical complaints are the result of “sympathetic cervical disc disease,”

and are causally related to the on-the-job accident. He also requested that Bourgeois

be approved for a trial of a spinal cord stimulator to see whether it would provide any

relief from the “chronic pain she has in her neck and to her left upper extremity,”

resulting from her sympathetic disc disease.

Bourgeois’s Disputed Claim for Compensation (Form 1008) was filed in April

2005. In the 1008, Bourgeois requested that she be allowed to seek treatment with

Dr. Robert Morrow, an orthopedic hand surgeon in Lafayette, Louisiana, specializing

in hand and wrist problems.

The case was tried on submissions, stipulations and briefs. The principal issues

were the causal relationship between the cervical complaints and the accident, the

referral to Dr. Morrow, the trial of the spinal cord stimulator and penalties and

attorney fees. The WCJ found that the cervical complaints were not related to the on-

the-job accident, ordered that treatment with Dr. Morrow be authorized and ordered

3 that the spinal cord stimulator be authorized. She also awarded Bourgeois a $2,000

penalty for Brown’s refusal to authorize the stimulator and awarded her $4,500 in

attorney fees.

ANALYSIS

Standard of Review:

A finding by a WCJ that medical treatment is necessary is reviewed under the

manifest error standard. Figgins v. Wal-Mart, 06-806 (La.App. 3 Cir. 11/15/06), 945

So.2d 153, writ denied, 06-2977 (La. 2/16/07), 949 So.2d 421. That standard requires

that the appellate court, in order to reverse, must find that the record reflects that there

is no reasonable basis for the WCJ’s factual determinations. Clay v. City of

Jeanerette, 99-1421 (La.App. 3 Cir. 5/31/00), 768 So.2d 609, writ denied, 00-2006

(La. 10/27/00), 772 So.2d 124. Similarly, we are bound by the same standard in

reviewing a WCJ’s assessment of penalties and attorney fees. Metoyer v. Roy O.

Martin, Inc., 03-1540 (La.App. 3 Cir. 12/1/04), 895 So.2d 552, writ denied, 05-1027

(La. 6/3/05), 903 So.2d 467.

Further, the responsibility of determining which, among differing experts, is

most credible is reserved to the trier of fact. Mistich v. Volkswagen of Germany, Inc.,

95-0939 (La. 1/29/96), 666 So.2d 1073. If a trial court gives greater weight to one

expert's testimony, this finding cannot be reversed absent manifest error. Gautreau

v. Gautreau, 96-1548 (La.App. 3 Cir.

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