Bailey v. Long-Bell Lumber Co.

63 So. 2d 452, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 548
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1953
DocketNo. 3623
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 So. 2d 452 (Bailey v. Long-Bell 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
Bailey v. Long-Bell Lumber Co., 63 So. 2d 452, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 548 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge.

This is a compensation, suit in which the plaintiff seeks to recover compensation in the maximum amount allowed for total and permanent disability resulting from a hernia allegedly sustained as the result of his having been struck in the groin by a board while in the employ of the defendant, Long-Bell Lumber Company. Also joined as a defendant, is the insurer of the lumber company.

Counsel for defendant in his brief limits the issues by making the following statements :

“According to the allegations of the petition,, which are not in that respect disputed, the plaintiff was earning a wage sufficient to entitle him to Thirty & No/100 ($30.00) Dollars per week during the period of his disability, if, in truth and in fact, he did sustain a hernia while performing services incidental to his employment in the course of his employer’s trade. Likewise there is no dispute as to the fact of the employment nor is there any dispute as to the fact that at the present time the plaintiff is suffering from a left inguinal hernia.
“The sole dispute, which is entirely a factual one, is whether or not the hernia from which the plaintiff is admittedly suffering was sustained in the course of his employment.
“The District Judge, in a written opinion, resolved this factual question adversely to' the plaintiff and rejected his demands in toto.”

It is from this judgment that the plaintiff is devolutively appealing.

It is shown by the evidence that the plaintiff worked for the defendant lumber company at irregular intervals from' 1920 until the date of his alleged accident and-injury on December 7, 1951. On the date of the alleged accident he had been working for the lumber company since March of 1947.

The plaintiff testified that on December 7, 1951 at about 2:30 P. M. while working “on the knot saw” which was one of two such small saws located on opposite sides of a bench or table, and used to saw knots out of boards. These boards -were mechanically conveyed from a matching machine which was located approximately 30 feet from the knot saw. The plaintiff stated that one of these boards in some manner became hung in the matching saw or machine and was kicked back when the operator of the matching machine released it, striking the plaintiff as stated by the Court in the transcript “approximately in the groin about four or five inches below the belt” on his left side. While the testimony does not in detail describe the rollers or the matching machine, the rollers apparently worked on the same principle as the rollers on a wringer-type washing machine, and pulled the board into the saw or saws which turn in an opposite direction from which the boards were coming. When the rollers are released this frees the board and it would be thrown in the opposite direction by the force of the saw.

At the time of the accident the plaintiff felt a stinging pain and “turned sick at my stomach”, however, he continued to work without an outcry or complaint until approximately 3:00 o’clock when they were given a short rest period, at which time he told a fellow employee, Edmond Howard, that “he got hit in the side with a piece of lumber and believed he was going to have to ask the boss to let him go to the doctor * * Plaintiff continued to work until quitting time, and when he got home he was sick at his stomach and his left side was -hurting him and he went,to bed without eating any supper. On the following day, which was Saturday and an [454]*454off day from work, plaintiff stayed in bed most of the day, and also on Sunday, and on Monday morning' he went to1 see Dr. Strecker, who was in the employ of the lumber company, where he was examined and told to return the following Wednesday when he was again examined and told by the company doctor that he had a hernia and that he should have an operation.

The defendants rely upon expert medical testimony to the effect that a man receiving a hernia from the force of a blow from a board as described by the plaintiff would be rendered incapable of proceeding with his work, and it would probably make him sick and probably prostrate him for at least a short period of time, and would at the point of contact “rupture some small blood vessels or capillaries which would in turn be evident as a bruise or an extravasation of blood under the skin or into the skin and soft tissues, and would be noticeable as the changes in the hematin or contents of the red cells took place, the usual change from blue to orange to lemon colored and' on to disappearance over a period of days to two or three weeks would take place,” which would be evident to a physician who examined the plaintiff two days subsequent to the striking of the blow. Dr. 'Strecker testified that he found no bruises on the plaintiff at the time of his examination on Monday following the alleged accident on Friday, however, both plaintiff and his wife disputed this in that both testified he had a knot and a bruise where the board had struck him.

The defendants also offered the testimony of the plaintiff’s fellow employees who were working a distance of three to ■thirty feet from him at the time he says the board struck him. All of these co-employees testified that nothing unusual happened as far as they knew, that the plaintiff made no outcry, and that they never saw a board come back out of the matching machine and strike plaintiff, nor did the plaintiff complain to the superintendent or any of his fellow employees that he had been injured, nor did he notify his foreman, George Dion, that he had been injured in accordance' with the company rules which were posted in the building. The defendants also rely upon the testimony of Dr. Strecker to the effect that the plaintiff did not tell him that he had been accidentally injured while at work, however, at this time it might be interesting to note that Dr. Strecker on the second examination, which was on Wednesday, December 12th, in response to a question as to whether the plaintiff told him that on the preceding Friday he had been struck in the stomach with a board, answered: “No. I only heard he had been struck by a board. I don’t know how I heard it. It came to me sort of indirectly. It never came out of his mouth.” It is not shown that Howard, the fellow employee to whom plaintiff complained at. the rest period of having been struck by the board, told anyone of the complaint, and plaintiff had remained at home from Friday night until Monday morning and only his wife and a visiting friend knew of the alleged accident according to the testimony, but one thing is certain: the doctor had to learn this from someone who knew it, or had heard it.

It is not necessary, in order to overcome the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses, to' depend solely upon the plaintiff because he is corroborated in many respects by the testimony in the record. It is definitely shown that prior to his employment in 1947 he was required to take a pre-medical examination and was specifically examined for 'hernia, and at that time he had none. The record shows that he was a steady worker, with no accident record or claims for previous compensation except that at one time he had bumped his back according to his own testimony. He was also known as a quiet man who did very little talking and he testified that he continued to work on the date of his injury because he had been struck before and suffered no serious effects and he thought that it would pass off, and to have told anyone at that time would have necessitated his stopping work as there was a great deal of noise going on

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Bluebook (online)
63 So. 2d 452, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-long-bell-lumber-co-lactapp-1953.