Andrus v. Industrial Lumber Co.

142 So. 326
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 1932
DocketNo. 1010.
StatusPublished

This text of 142 So. 326 (Andrus v. Industrial Lumber 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
Andrus v. Industrial Lumber Co., 142 So. 326 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

-MOUTON, J.

Plaintiff was employed by defendant company as a carpenter in the erection of a hotel at Elizabeth, La.

He alleges, that on February 26,1931, while working in that capacity, he was struck on the left side of his head with a piece of timber or lumber, which impaired and bruised his nerves, tissues, and blood vessels in that area, causing serious permanent injury to his head, neck, nerve, and brain; that since the injury he has been wholely and permanently disabled from doing work of any reasonable character ; and is asking compensation for a weekly wage of $15.60 for four hundred weeks.

Judgment was rendered rejecting his demand, from which he appeals.

. Plaintiff, in giving án account of how he was- injured, testifies that they were putting up the ceiling with ship lap 1x6; that Mr. Johnson, who was working in the erection of the building, handed a board or piece of-lumber to Mr. Williams, who changed it around, and that the end of the board struck him on the front of his head, at a point about three and a half or four inches from his ear. Upon his counsel stating, “Not that far,” plaintiff corrected himself, and said, “a couple of inches.”

Continuing in his testimony in reference to the place where he claims the injury was inflicted, he said it was back in the hair, slightly to the front of the head from the ear.

The district judge in his written opinion says: “He received a blow from a plank on the left side .of the head, about two inches above; and slightly to the front of the ear.”

We shall proceed in the discussion and solution of the case on this finding of fact by the district judge in which there is certainly no overstatement in reference to the distance between the ear of plaintiff and the point where he was struck.

We have referred with particularity to the foregoing, because, if plaintiff had received a blow three and a half or four inches from his ear, as was first stated by him, there could not, according to the evidence, have been any possible causal connection between the injury and the trouble of which he complains as the basis of his claim in compensation.

He was working on a scaffold with Mr. Johnson, Mr. Togleman, and Mr. Williams when he was hit by Mr. Williams with the end of the board, but who was not present when the case was tried, and did not testify.

The testimony, of plaintiff is that he did not fall from the scaffold when struck, but that he fell against the wall of a partition they were putting up; that he got down, washed his face, then about 10 o’clock in the morning, went back to his job, and worked until night, but suffering death all the time.

Mr. Johnson, witness for plaintiff, says he knows plaintiff got a glancing lick on the side of his head that knocked his hat off; -that is all he saw; and that plaintiff did not wabble.

*327 Mr. Miller, supervisor of the work and who had hired plaintiff, says he made no complaint whatsoever of injury to him, and of which he heard for the first time several months after, when it was rumored that he was going to enter suit against defendant company.

Plaintiff says, the morning after the accident, he asked Mr. Togleman, one of the carpenters, to tell Mr. Miller, the foreman and supervisor, that his head was hurting him “too bad,” and that he could not go back to work. Mr. Miller testifies that Mr. Togleman tfold him plaintiff was not able to come, was not able to work, but that no mention of any injury to plaintiff was made, and that he thought plaintiff would not return on account of an ear trouble.

The third day after the accident, plaintiff says, he was driven in Mr. Carroll’s car to Elizabeth at the hospital to see Dr. Wade, one of the physicians of defendant company, who prescribed some medicine to “ease his head,”

This visit to Dr. Wade was therefore in the first days of March, as the accident occurred on the 27th of February, although alleged to have happened on the 26th.

Dr. Wade says he examined plaintiff’s ear and found a mild catarrhal condition or infection. His testimony is that plaintiff did not complain of any lick or trauma on his head, said nothing about that, and that there was no indication of any such injury, nor symptoms thereof. Dr. Wade says he was complaining of a pain in his ear, and that he never attributed his ear trouble to a lick on the head.

Dr. Mangham, physician for defendant company at the Elizabeth Hospital, also had occasion to examine plaintiff, and believed,' though he is not certain, that the examination was made in March. This physician says plaintiff made no reference to any injury resulting from a blow or lick on his head, and that he saw no indication that such an in'jury had been inflicted.

Dr. D. 0. lies of Lake Charles, specialist in eye, ear, nose, and throat troubles, to whom plaintiff applied for relief, says that plaintiff first came to him March 30, 1931, and said he had been treated by Dr. Mangham. This statement of plaintiff to Dr. lies shows that Dr. Mangham had attended to him in March, 1931, about which, as to time, he expressed some uncertainty, as hereinabove remarked. This expression of doubt by Dr. Mangham shows that he was not solicitous about testifying in the interest of defendant company, though one of its regularly "employed physicians. It may therefore be accepted as true that plaintiff, when examined by Dr. Wade three days after the accident, and by Dr. Mangham later in March, did not tell them he had received a lick on his head, and that there was no indication whatsoever1 that he had suffered such injury.

Dr. lies, who first saw plaintiff on March 30, 1931, says plaintiff told him he had got a lick on the side of his head, but testifies that-there was no objective evidence of head injury, or. any injury to his ear from trauma. Later, in October, 1931, he was examined by Dr. Holcombe, who found no evidence of any lick having been inflicted on plaintiff’s head. None of the other physicians, who examined, plaintiff about that time, found any objective symptoms of any such injury.

The testimony of the plaintiff is that, although he returned to work and worked until night after receiving the blow, he was, however, suffering with excruciating pains; that, after taking the medicine prescribed for him by Dr. Wade three days after the accident,: was in bed about thirteen days, went back to work suffering all the time, and finally “got so bad off” he had to “quit” work.

According to the character of such testimony, the blow plaintiff received would have been extremely severe, and we think would have left marks indicating, at least, slight physical injury, which would have been detected by Dr. Wade on his examination three, days after the accident or by Dr. Mangham, whose examination was made later in the month of March.

Mrs. Didora Andrus testifies in the case. Her testimony is that plaintiff, while sitting on the porch, made some sort of an exclamation, and, upon being asked what was the matter, said, “There is a stick in my head,” and then told her “he had got struck in the head.” On cross-examination she said that it was a little stick, but was larger than a splinter, and that her little daughter “pulled it out.” ,

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