Tomasik v. LA State Veterans Affairs Office

124 So. 3d 613, 13 La.App. 3 Cir. 451, 2013 WL 5926231, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2286
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 2013
DocketNo. 13-451
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 124 So. 3d 613 (Tomasik v. LA State Veterans Affairs Office) 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
Tomasik v. LA State Veterans Affairs Office, 124 So. 3d 613, 13 La.App. 3 Cir. 451, 2013 WL 5926231, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2286 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

PETERS, J.

| ,The defendant in this- workers’ compensation case, the State of Louisiana, Office of Veterans Affairs, appeals a judgment of the workers’ compensation judge (WCJ) finding that the plaintiff, Larry E. Tomasik, proved his heart attack was work-related and that he was entitled to indemnity benefits. For the following reasons, we reverse the judgment and render judgment dismissing Mr. Tomasik’s claims.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

On Tuesday, February 15, 2011, Mr. To-masik suffered a heart attack while carrying boxes into the DeRidder, Louisiana office of his employer, the Louisiana Office of Veterans Affairs (hereinafter sometimes referred to as “the state”). Mr. Tomasik functioned as a Veterans Assistance Counselor for his employer and worked Monday, Wednesday, and Friday in the Lake Charles, Louisiana office and Tuesday and Thursday in the DeRidder office.

Mr. Tomasik maintained active files in both offices, but would often take DeRid-der files to the Lake Charles office to organize them into new folders. He did so because the two days per week he spent in DeRidder were basically counseling days with little time for paperwork. With more time for administrative matters while in Lake Charles, he would organize the DeR-idder files and then return them to DeRid-der on the next trip. However, in late 2009 or early 2010, he received instructions from A1 Leger, his supervisor, to straighten up the DeRidder office by disposing of the inactive files. This significantly increased the transportation requirements for the office files.

Because the paper shredder in the DeR-idder office was inadequate for the amount of shredding required, Mr. Tomasik began transporting the inactive files from that office to the Lake Charles office where a heavy-duty shredder was |2available. The inactive files, as well as the files to be reorganized, were transported to Lake Charles in boxes with dimensions of approximately four feet by two feet wide by two feet in depth. Each box, according to Mr. Tomasik, weighed between fifty and sixty pounds.

Mr. Tomasik’s heart attack in February of 2011, was actually his second heart attack. One year before, in February of 2010, he had begun feeling “woozy” while unloading some boxes from his car at the Lake Charles office. This occurred approximately one month after he received the instructions from Mr. Leger to clean up the DeRidder office. He was treated at a Lake Charles hospital and remained off work for three months. When he returned to work, his activities were initially limited to the Lake Charles office. However, he returned to his old two-office schedule in January of 2011. During his absence from the DeRidder office, the files had piled up, and the office was in a state of disarray. Because he felt pressured to catch up on the necessary shredding of files, he again began transporting boxes to Lake Charles. One month later, he suffered the heart attack which is the subject of this litigation.

The evidence establishes that Mr. Toma-sik’s day did not begin very well on February 15, 2011. As he started to work on that morning, his vehicle would not start. This not only upset him, but it caused him to arrive at the DeRidder office a few minutes late, where veterans were already waiting on him. He unlocked the door and brought in one of the two boxes he was transporting. After bringing in this box, he felt lightheaded. He waited on the first of the waiting veterans and then returned to the vehicle for the second box. As he brought that box into the office, he began bumping into things and felt a tightness in [615]*615his chest. He dropped into a chair and obtained two nitroglycerin tablets from one of the veterans. He | ¡¡was immediately transported to nearby Beauregard Memorial Hospital in DeRidder. Mr. Tomasik had no memory of being taken to the hospital and did not recall talking to the emergency room nurse. He was subsequently admitted to its intensive care unit after it was determined by the emergency room personnel that he had suffered a heart attack and possible stroke. Later he was transferred for treatment to a Veterans Administration hospital in Houston, Texas.

Tina Sandford, Mr. Tomasik’s daughter, established the time frame for the events of the morning of February 15, 2011. She had resided with her father since his first heart attack, and she testified that after getting the vehicle started, he left home for the thirty minute drive to DeRidder at approximately 8:30 a.m. She received a telephone call from her father at 9:30 a.m., wherein he asked her to look up a telephone number. At that time, according to Ms. Sandford, Mr. Tomasik’s speech was slightly slurred. However, she did not find this unusual because she had observed that since his 2010 heart attack, his speech became slurred anytime he became excited or aggravated. Thirty minutes later, she received a telephone call from the DeRid-der office informing her that something was wrong with her father. When she called back a few moments later, her father had been given the nitroglycerin pills, and the lady she talked to described him as being disoriented.

Ms. Sandford arrived at the hospital at approximately 11:15 a.m., and immediately provided the emergency room personnel with her father’s history of having had a heart attack and stroke the year before wherein he had undergone a heart cathet-erization and the implantation of two stents. She denied telling the emergency room personnel that her father had complained of chest pain, shortness of breath, or any other symptoms the night before, although she did acknowledge |4that she might have told them that he had been a little tired over the weekend after having worked in his rose bed.

On March 28, 2011, Mr. Tomasik filed a disputed claim for compensation against the state, seeking indemnity and medical benefits and penalties and attorney fees. He asserted in his pleading that his heart attack and stroke were caused by his exertions in transporting three boxes, each weighing between fifty to seventy pounds, between the Lake Charles and DeRidder offices.

The matter proceeded to a trial on the merits on August 1, 2012, after which the WCJ took the matter under advisement. On December 20, 2012, the WCJ rendered oral reasons for judgment, finding that Mr. Tomasik proved, by clear and convincing evidence, that his heart-related injury was compensable pursuant to La.R.S. 23:1021(8)(e). Accordingly, the WCJ awarded Mr. Tomasik temporary total disability for the period between February 15 and April 15, 2011, and supplemental earnings benefits for the period between April 15 and May 1, 2011. The WCJ further awarded Mr. Tomasik $2,000.00 in penalties and $6,000.00 in attorney fees based on the state’s failure to pay indemnity benefits. The WCJ executed a written judgment to this effect on December 20, 2012, and, thereafter, the state perfected this appeal.

In its appeal, the state raised three assignments of error:

1. The [WCJ] was manifestly erroneous in determining that the heart attack was a compensable injury.
2. The [WCJ] was manifestly erroneous in determining that the heart-[616]*616related problems were predominantly or majorly caused by work activity.
3. The [WCJ] was manifestly erroneous in determining that the work activity was either exceptional nor [sic] unusual compared to other persons employed in Tomasik’s profession.

1 ¿Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 3d 613, 13 La.App. 3 Cir. 451, 2013 WL 5926231, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomasik-v-la-state-veterans-affairs-office-lactapp-2013.