Ms. Maxwell was working as a caregiver for Care Solutions when she was attacked and severely beaten at Glenwood Regional Hospital in West Monroe. Ms. Maxwell was attending to a client at his home. On Care Solutions’ instructions, she took him to the hospital when he complained of chest pain and breathing problems. She was assaulted by an unknown assailant in the parking lot and sustained severe injuries to her face.
Ms. Maxwell was not able to work since January 22, 2014. She filed a disputed claim for workers’ compensation the following February because Care Solutions refused to provide her with workers’ compensation benefits. Care Solutions admitted that she had been injured while employed with them but disputed that the injury arose out of and in course of her employment.
In Louisiana, Workers’ compensation will not be paid to an employee unless the injury arises out of and in the course of her employment. An injury occurs in the course of the employment when the employee is injured while actively performing her duties during work hours, or during a reasonable period afterward, at places, the employment has taken her. An injury arises out of the employment when the source of the injury is related to the nature of the employment.
Ms. Maxwell sought medical benefits, which would compensate her for the medical expenses, and TTD Benefits. After a hearing, the Workers’ Compensation Judge granted her medical benefits but denied her TTD benefits. The Workers’ Compensation Judge found that the injury arose out of and in the course of Ms. Maxwell’s employment, but ruled that she could not get TTD benefits because there was no testimony from a medical professional indicating her inability to work. Ms. Maxwell went back to her doctor get an opinion that she was disabled, but her motion to introduce this evidence into the trial was denied. The judge also awarded Ms. Maxwell attorney fees and penalties for Care Solutions’ failure to pay medical benefits.
Care Solutions appealed the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge granting Ms. Maxwell medical benefits. It argued that the injury did not arise out of and in the course of her employment because she was “off the clock” when she took her client to the hospital. The Court of Appeal ruled that the injury was in the course of the employment because she was at the hospital on the defendant’s instructions. It also ruled that the injury arose for the employment for the same reason. Therefore, the court affirmed the Workers’ Compensation Judge’s award of medical benefits. It also affirmed the grant of penalties and attorney’s fees. However, the Court of Appeal overruled the denial of TTD benefits because it would be a grave injustice to not allow testimony on her inability to work from a medical professional. It held that the Workers’ Compensation Judge could have easily allowed such testimony. It considered that penalizing the plaintiff for her inability to obtain evidence to show her disability flew in the face of the policy behind the Louisiana Workers’ Compensation Act.
Here, the Trial Court erroneously refused to allow evidence of Ms. Maxwell’s disability: the opinion of her treating physician. Luckily for Ms. Maxwell, the Court of Appeal remanded the case back to the Workers’ Compensation Judge to allow the presentation of further evidence on the issue of Ms. Maxwell’s disability.
Just because a judge makes a ruling to disallow certain evidence into trial does, this does not mean it is the end of the road. Avenues of appellate and supervisory jurisdiction exist to correct erroneous rulings by the trial court. This is why it is critical to have a good lawyer to make objections to such rulings at trial and to make compelling arguments on appeal as to why such errors should be overturned.
Additional Sources: SHEILA MAXWELL VERSUS CARE SOLUTIONS, INC.
Written by Berniard Law Firm Blog Writer: Matthew David Sanders
Additional Berniard Law Firm Articles on Workers Compensation: Louisiana Appellate Court Rejects Plaintiff’s Workers’ Compensation Claim in Part