EZELL, Judge.
Jason Lestage appeals a judgment of the workers' compensation judge below dismissing his claim against Nabors Drilling Company. For the following reasons, we affirm the decision of the workers' compensation judge.
Mr. Lestage was working on a Nabors rig in West Helena, Arkansas when he alleges drill pipe elevators pinned his knee against a chain guard. Mr. Lestage claims that when he tried to push the elevators off his knee, he injured his back. After filing a disputed claim for benefits and a trial on the matter, the workers' compensation judge ruled that Mr. Lestage did not meet his burden of proving an accident. Notably, the workers' compensation judge found Mr. Lestage's testimony to be "too inconsistent to be believed." From that decision, Mr. Lestage appeals.
Mr. Lestage asserts four assignments of error on appeal. He claims that the workers' compensation judge erred in not accepting his testimony as valid; in failing to address fraud allegations in its written reasons; in failing to admit untimely produced phone records; and in admitting a letter from one of Nabors' physicians.
Mr. Lestage first claims that the workers' compensation judge erred in disregarding his version of the accident due to "prior inconsequential or inaccurate statements about the incident," thereby violating "jurisprudential precepts applicable in unwitnessed accidental injury cases." In discussing an employee's burden in establishing a work-related accident, this court discussed the applicable law as follows:
Dantley v. Lake Charles Mem'l Hosp., 07-1227, pp. 2-3 (La.App. 3 Cir. 3/5/08), 978 So.2d 1117, 1119-20.
Mr. Lestage's version of the accident varied several times. He has claimed that he was pinned for a few seconds or as long as three minutes. He said in his recorded statement to Nabors' claims adjuster that he felt burning in one leg from hip to toe. He later claimed that he immediately went numb bilaterally from the waist down for up to fifteen minutes, yet he continued to work without stopping. Moreover, Mr. Lestage then denied any radiation of his back pain at his initial hospital visit and his chief complaint was pain and bruising on his tailbone. X-rays and an MRI performed on him after the alleged accident showed no signs of abnormality.
Moreover, the inconsistencies in Mr. Lestage's statements are not the only or most damning evidence against his claim. The record contains the statements of three men who worked on the relatively small rig floor with Mr. Lestage: James Baines
Nabors also introduced a video depicting the drilling floor showing that the elevators, due to their suspended nature, swung back and forth in a pendulum-like manner, making Mr. Lestage's claim of being pinned for seconds unlikely and his claim that he was pinned for three minutes all but impossible. Finally, Nabors introduced a surveillance video of Mr. Lestage effortlessly working on a car and at his current job as a trucker. He performed a range of activities from climbing a ladder and undoing a tarp while nonchalantly talking on a cell phone to unhooking his trailer, bending, stooping, kneeling, walking, and carrying his child on his hip. At no point did he show any signs of discomfort or anguish, in spite of his testimony at trial that bending and squatting caused pain.
Mr. Lestage next claims the workers' compensation judge erred in failing to address his allegations of fraud in his written reasons. "[I]t is well settled that a trial court's judgment and reasons for judgment are two separate and distinct legal documents, and appeals are taken from the judgment, not the written reasons for judgment." McCalmont v. Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office, 99-940, p. 6 (La.App. 5 Cir. 1/12/00), 748 So.2d 1286, 1290, writ denied, 00-679 (La.4/20/00), 760 So.2d 1160, (citations omitted). See also La.Code Civ.P. art. 1918. "[W]ritten reasons are not binding or appealable; only the judgment itself has judicial effect and is subject to appeal." Guidry v. Gulf Coast Coil Tubing, 09-621, p. 13 (La.App. 3 Cir. 12/9/09), 24 So.3d 1019, 1027. This assignment requires no action by this court.
Finally, Mr. Lestage asserts two assignments of error dealing with the admission of evidence. Because the assignments are so similar, we shall address them together in the interest of judicial economy.
Mr. Lestage claims that the workers' compensation judge erred in refusing to admit phone records that had not been timely produced, and in admitting a letter from Dr. Michael Duval indicating his belief Mr. Lestage was malingering. "The decision to admit evidence into the record rests within the sound discretion of the workers' compensation judge and will not be reversed in the absence of manifest error." Jones v. Trendsetter Prod. Co., Inc., 97-299, p. 11 (La.App. 3 Cir. 2/25/98), 707 So.2d 1341, 1346, writ denied, 98-793 (La.5/15/98), 719 So.2d 463. Louisiana Revised Statutes 23:1317(A) provides, in part:
After reviewing the record as a whole, we can not find that the workers' compensation judge abused his vast discretion in disallowing the phone records which Mr. Lestage admits were not submitted in a timely fashion. Furthermore, considering the relaxed standard for the admissibility of evidence in workers' compensation matters, we can find no error in the workers' compensation judge's admission of the letter
For the above reasons, the decision of the workers' compensation judge is affirmed. Costs of this appeal are assessed against Mr. Lestage.