Agee v. Brown Paper Mill Co.

190 So. 148, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 310
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1939
DocketNo. 5945.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 So. 148 (Agee v. Brown Paper Mill Co.) 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
Agee v. Brown Paper Mill Co., 190 So. 148, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 310 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

The petition of plaintiff herein recites that on or about November 29, 1937, while he was working for the Brown Paper Mill Company, Inc., “in what is called the wagon, which is a tank in which chemicals or liquor is burned, he attempted to lift *149 down a large piece of smelt which had accumulated in the tank and which he had sawed off according to orders and in his attempting to handle it fell or jerked him so that he received a hernia from which he is now totally disabled to do any work of any reasonable character.” It is further alleged that the “aforesaid hernia was the result of an injury or trauma suffered by him in the regular course of his employment and in the course of his employer’s trade or business.” The prayer is for a solidary judgment against said employer and its insurer, the New Amsterdam Casualty Company, awarding workmen’s compensation as for total and permanent disability and for medical expenses incurred.

Denial is made by defendants in their joint answer that plaintiff received a hernia while engaged in and as the result of the performance of his work with such employer.

Plaintiff’s demands were rejected and he has appealed.

The evidence conclusively discloses, and it is undisputed, that when this suit was instituted on September 9, 1938, appellant was suffering with a right inguinal hernia. However, it is seriously disputed that such affliction occurred as a result of his employment with defendant, Brown Paper Mill Company, Inc.; and this furnishes the sole issue in the case. Obviously, it is one of fact.

The only testimony in the record relating to the actual occurrence of the alleged accident is that of plaintiff. He states that on a day during the latter part of November, 1937, he was working in the “wagon”. This is a tall, large, round tank or boiler in which certain chemicals used in the employer’s business are processed. A hard substance known as smelt accumulates therein during the operation, and the removal of it becomes necessary at times. Plaintiff says: “When I got down there and cut the smelt off in the flues like this, I was standing on the board; I cut a great big end piece of smelt and I set the air hammer aside and reached down to pick the smelt out and it dropped in the bottom, and when I reached down to pull the smelt out off the bottom the pain hit me in my chest and stomach.” The mentioned piece weighed nearly 200 pounds. He immediately ceased working and informed two of the mill foremen that he was sick. One of them told him to go on home. He left the company premises about 11:20 A. M., and reached his house approximately forty minutes later. He was hurting in his stomach and chest and went to bed. He also states that Dr. Graves called to see him about 1:30 o’clock P. M., of that same day.

The two foremen, to whom plaintiff refers, do not recall his having informed them that he was sick and leaving the shift and going home. No accidental injury to him of any kind was reported to them. Mr. Joe Brumfield, who was plaintiff’s immediate superior, testifies that the employee worked the full eight-hour shift on his last day at the mill, which was November 29, 1937. This work was done in the recovery room and not in the tank or “wagon”, as plaintiff claims.

Further testimony of plaintiff is that he complained to Dr. Graves, on the latter’s above mentioned visit, of pain in his stomach and chest. The physician “just felt of my face and put his hand around on my stomach; that is the only examination he made that day.” No physician visited him during a period of five weeks thereafter. The following day he noticed the commencement of a swelling in the scrotum, and this abnormal condition has been continuous ever since. It is further stated by him that Dr. Graves has never made a complete examination of his body, and that he did not know that he possessed a hernia until in September, 1938. This date was approximately nine months after the occurrence of the claimed accident.

The existence of the described swelling is also attested to by plaintiff’s wife, his brother and another colored person. These state that the affected portion was bathed almost daily with warm salt water.

The testimony of Dr. Graves is greatly at variance with that of plaintiff in many important respects. This professional man testifies that his first visit to plaintiff was in the morning of November 30, 1937. “I think it was around eight or eight-thirty. He had just come from the mill he said. He said he had taken sick the day before and had come home there with fever and rigor and complained of pain in his chest and was coughing. When I examined him very carefully I found that he had the typical characteristic symptoms of acute influenza.” No complaint was then made as to pain in the stomach or the inguinal region. “He only complained of pain in the chest.” “I had just treated his mother *150 who had two large cavities in the lungs, and he had lost two brothers, and when this boy became sick I became very suspicious of his developing tuberculosis.” There was no mention made of an injury or strain received at the mill. An examination of the scrotum revealed it to be perfectly normal.

Dr. Graves further says that he visited plaintiff again on December 10, 1937. -This visit is denied by the latter. At that time “the cover and shirt were laid back and I saw his whole abdomen and genitals.” The scrotum was not abnormal and no complaint was made of pain therein or in the inguinal region or the abdomen. The temperature and cough experienced by the patient furnished the belief that tuberculosis was present. Instructions were then given to the proper authorities that plaintiff be paid the benefits provided for by a group sick and health insurance policy carried by the employer.

Later Dr. Graves reached the definite conclusion that the patient was suffering from tuberculosis, and he ordered confinement to bed for from four to six months. Periodically after this order was given he saw the employee, and on none of these occasions was a complaint made of pain in the abdomen, scrotum or genitals.

Payment of the weekly insurance benefits cea.sed on or about June 2, 1938, by reason of the limitation provisions of the policy, and plaintiff inquired of Dr. Graves if he could then return to work. “I told him that he was getting along fine but to wait a couple of weeks more before going back to work and he did.”

On June 22, 1938, plaintiff appeared in said physician’s office and presented an examination card which he had obtained from the gate office of the employer. Its regulations provide that prospective employees and those who have experienced a spell of sickness must secure such a card, undergo a complete physical examination, and return it with the physician’s report written thereon. The desired examination was made, during which plaintiff’s scrotum and abdomen were exposed. Dr. Graves sought to ascertain if a hernia existed. At the time there was no complaint of any pain or disability. It was found that the left ring was normal. The right ring was slightly dilated, but there was no bulging of the canal. The scrotum was not swollen. No evidence of hernia then existed. A finger was inserted in the inguinal canal and no tenderness or swelling there was noticed.

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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 148, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agee-v-brown-paper-mill-co-lactapp-1939.