Bailey v. Gifford Sand & Gravel Co.

7 La. App. 513, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 39
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 1928
DocketNo. 3168
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 7 La. App. 513 (Bailey v. Gifford Sand & Gravel 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
Bailey v. Gifford Sand & Gravel Co., 7 La. App. 513, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 39 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

This suit is for compensation under Act No. 20 of 1914 and amendments, not including Act No. 85 of 1926.

Plaintiff, while at work for defendant, fell a distance of some six or eight feet, striking his head against a piece of iron which passed through the left ear and penetrated the skull in front óf and above the ear.

The brain itself was punctured and a small portion of the brain tissue escaped through the opening. Surgeons removed fragments of the skull and reunited the tissues. There was left in the skull a hole about the size of a fifty-cent piece. The outer skin has healed over the wound, hut the hole in the skull is still there.

He was injured on December 13, 1925, and was carried to a sanitarium where he remained fifty-three days. During a good portion of the time he was unconscious.

He brought this suit on May 24, 1926, alleging permanent total disability to do work of a reasonable character, and he asks full compensation for four hundred weeks.

TJhe defense is that he has fully recovered.

The lower court allowed full compensation for a period of twenty-seven weeks.

Plaintiff appealed.

OPINION

Admittedly plaintiff’s injury arose out of and in the course of his employment.

The only question presented, therefore, is whether the disability resulting from the injury is partial or total, and, in either event, whether’ it is temporary or permanent.

A reading of all the testimony has convinced us that at the time of the trial, on January 18th, 1926, about six months after the injury, plaintiff was unable to do manual labor of a reasonable character, such as he was accustomed and capacitated to do, and that in all probability his disability is permanent. At any rate, the court cannot, with any degree of certainty, fix the period over which his disability will continue.

But for the earnest argument of counsel for defendant and the elaborate brief filed by them, we would be disposed to pass the case without an extended discussion of the facts. However, we shall go into detail as to our reasons for the conclusion which we have reached.

Plaintiff is a carpenter by trade and was employed by defendant at a daily wage of $3.50, working regularly. He is thirty-one years old and up to the date of the injury was healthy and strong. He had good capacity, both mental and physical, for the work he followed. No defect, mental or physical, had developed.

On December 13th, 1925, he was working on a pipe-line and fell a distance of some [515]*515six or eight feet, and struck; his head upon a piece of iron which penetrated his skull. Dr. F. M. Letts, a physician and surgeon, who attended him immediately, thus decribes the wound and his treatment:

“This wound was. a puncture wound through the skull, making an irregular, almost round hole, fi;om which three or four fragments of bone were removed; the size of this opening was approximately the size or a little less than the size of a half dollar. The covering of the brain had an ‘L’ shaped tear, from which a small amount of his brain substance had escaped; all these fragments were taken out and the edges of the brain covering brought together, on which was placed a small sterile pact saturated with mercurochrome, the torn area in the bone covering closed with the exception of the small area of skin which had previously ■been in size about an inch and a half upward. The patient was put to bed. He was admitted on December 13th and allowed to go to his home about February 4th.”

Dr. Letts’ attention was called to the fact that other physicians had testified that the wound was in the rolando area of the brain and that as a result the left motor cortex was damaged, and was asked if in his opinion there was injury to such portion of the brain, and he said the injury was not over the rolando area but was from one and a half to two inches from that area, and that the injury was not over the motor area of the brain.

The location of the injury to the brain is highly important, due to the fact that plaintiff contends that his right arm and right leg are partially paralyzed, which would follow as a result of an injury to the motor area of the brain on the left side. We shall revert to this point later in this opinion.

Now, as to plaintiff’s condition at the time of the trial. He testified that:

“I have been awfully weak and I can hardly stand up. My mind is a little off and I can’t remember much. * * * When I get warm I have headaches and my head hurts on the side pretty nearly all the time. * * * I can hardly sleep at all. Pretty good strength in the left hand but not on the right.”

And he said that applied to the whole right side, his leg, arm and shoulder; that his right shoulder is slightly drooped down; that he was not able to work, and that about all he had done was to carry in stovewood for his wife.

His wife testified that he remained unconscious for five weeks after the accident, and asked as to his present condition she said:

“Well, he is just nervous, and he cannot hold his temper, he just can’t hold his temper.”

She said he does not sleep well at night.

Mr. J. F. Smith testified that he was well acquainted with plaintiff, who had worked for him; that plaintiff was one of his leading men and—

“he was the best man that I had, he was good in his head work. * * * I could risk him out in dangerous places.”

And he was asked:

“Would you be willing to risk him now on overhead work?”

And he answered:

“No, sir, and no other job.”

Plaintiff admitted, on cross-examination, that since he was discharged from the hospital he had made no effort to work, giving as his reason that he was not able to work due to his nervousness and the weakened condition of his body. He admitted, on cross-examination, that he had made repeated trips from his home to Lecompte, a [516]*516distance of about nine miles, and that he walked until he could catch a ride. Whether he ever walked the entire distance or not is not disclosed by the record but we infer that he probably had.

Now, as to his condition as viewed by the physicians.

Defendant called Dr. F. M. Letts of Lecompte and Dr. R. O. Simmons of Alexandria.

Dr. Letts treated him and saw him last about May 9th, a month before the trial. He said when he discharged him his muscles were soft and he was not in condition to do hard work and he did not want him to try to work' for several months after he was discharged in February; that he later advised him to do light work, and he was asked:

“Had he started to perform light work when you told him that he could do light work; could he do hard manual labor now?”

And he said:

“Most probably he would be in a position to do quite a bit of hard manual labor at this time, and more as time rolls by.”

His testimony was taken on June 18th, six months after the date of the injury. He said his reflexes were normal, that there was no shrinking of the parts, and that mentally he was sound.

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7 La. App. 513, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-gifford-sand-gravel-co-lactapp-1928.