Bellard v. Woodward Wight & Co.

362 So. 2d 819, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 2991
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 1978
DocketNo. 9268
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 362 So. 2d 819 (Bellard v. Woodward Wight & 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
Bellard v. Woodward Wight & Co., 362 So. 2d 819, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 2991 (La. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

LEMMON, Judge.

This automobile accident case, although tried in an unusual procedural posture, primarily involves the determination of the extent of plaintiff’s injuries attributable to the accident for which defendants admitted liability.

I

At the time of the accident plaintiff was in the course of his employment with Professional Roofing and General Contractors. Professional’s workmen’s compensation insurer paid weekly benefits and medical expenses, and when plaintiff filed this tort action against the third parties, Professional’s insurer intervened for all compensation and medical expenses paid or to be paid.

Just prior to trial plaintiff and defendants entered into a compromise, whereby defendants paid plaintiff a certain sum and agreed to hold plaintiff harmless for any sums due intervenor in this litigation.1 In-tervenor did not join in or consent to the compromise, and in fact had sought to set the compromise aside.

At trial defendants resisted intervenor’s claim on the basis that some of plaintiff’s injuries and medical expenses were not caused by the accident. The trial court, without specifically determining which injuries were caused by the accident, awarded the full amount paid and to be paid, stating in reasons for judgment that intervenor is entitled to “all sums paid to the plaintiff under the Workmen’s Compensation Act”. On appeal defendants contend intervenor should have additionally been required to prove the injuries forming the basis of the payments under the compensation act were caused by the accident.

II

R.S. 23:1103 provides that in a suit against a third person the employer’s claim for compensation actually paid takes precedence over the employee’s claim, so that if the tort damages are insufficient to reimburse the employer, damages are assessed only in favor of the employer, and only when damages are more than sufficient to reimburse the employer is the excess assessed in favor of the employee. Thus, the third person’s total liability is determined by application of the principles used in fixing quantum of tort damages, and R.S. 23:1103 provides the priority of payment (as between the employer and employee) of the damages thus determined.

In the present case plaintiff’s sole claim against defendants was for the excess over the amount to which intervenor was entitled to reimbursement, and plaintiff could only compromise with defendants his claim for that excess. That compromise did not affect intervenor’s entitlement to reimbursement, provided the tort damages sus-[821]*821tamed by the plaintiff as a result of the accident are at least equal to such amount of reimbursement. Verbois v. Howard, 322 So.2d 110 (La.1975).

As does the plaintiff in any civil litigation, the employee and the employer seeking damages against a third person pursuant to R.S. 23:1101 have the burden jointly of proving the amount of tort damages attributable to the accident. If the employer is the only plaintiff (because the employee has not sued the third person, or has settled with the third person), the employer has the same burden of proof. Therefore, in the present case mere proof of payment of benefits and medical expenses does not establish intervenor’s right to reimbursement; intervenor also has to prove that the benefits and medical expenses it paid were due because of injuries caused by the accident.2

Ill

The central issue on appeal, therefore, is the sufficiency of intervenor’s evidence of a causal relationship between plaintiff’s injuries, for which intervenor has paid and is paying compensation benefits and medical expenses, and the accident for which defendants were liable.

The accident at issue occurred on February 15, 1974. At the time plaintiff was 21 years old, had a seventh grade education, and had been employed primarily as a truck driver and oil field laborer.

In December, 1972 plaintiff had sustained a back injury in a barge accident and in May 1973 had undergone a laminectomy at the L 4-5 interspace in Opelousas. Plaintiff’s back healed uneventfully, and the orthopedic surgeon discharged him in October, 1973, advising him to avoid heavy labor because of predisposition to recurrence of back injury.

In January, 1974 plaintiff went to work for Professional and performed climbing, lifting and other duties of a roofer with no problems. In the February 15, 1974 accident in Jefferson Parish the vehicle in which plaintiff was riding was struck violently in the rear by a tractor trailer.

After the accident plaintiff was examined in a hospital emergency room, where a lumbosacral sprain was diagnosed, in addition to plaintiff’s complaints of head, chest and pelvic pain. Plaintiff was hospitalized through February 19, during which time he complained of back pain, numbness in the legs, and nausea. He was then transferred to Opelousas, to be treated by the orthopedic surgeon who had treated his previous back injury. During his hospitalization there through March 1, he complained mainly of back and leg pain, although his anxiety, nausea and vomiting prompted the treating physician to call in a specialist in internal medicine for consultation as to plaintiff’s stomach complaints.

In outpatient treatment following the hospitalization the orthopedic surgeon found no clinical evidence to support plaintiff’s continued complaints, but since the complaints were consistent with an aggravation of the previous back injury, he referred plaintiff to a neurosurgeon in May, 1974. Neurological examinations in May and July were essentially negative, but when plaintiff’s complaints persisted and a September examination revealed some neurological deterioration, the neurosurgeon performed a myelogram and ultimately removed a herniated disc on the right side at L 4-5.

Upon being informed at trial that plaintiff had fallen in the shower when his leg gave way in August, 1974, the neurosurgeon admitted that the fall could have [822]*822caused the disc injury, but he was still inclined to attribute the injury to the February automobile accident, because plaintiff’s complaint had consistently been on the right side (the 1972 accident having caused injury on the left side at the same level) and because the complaints were compatible with disc injury although no objective symptomatology was produced. The orthopedic surgeon generally concurred in this analysis, although neither doctor could positively relate the disc injury to the accident.

On the issue of causation by the February, 1974 accident of plaintiff’s injuries for which intervenor paid benefits and medical expenses, we accord little weight to the trial court’s decision, because that court specifically did not rule on that factual issue. However, the evidence is in the record, and pursuant to Gonzales v. Xerox Corp., 320 So.2d 163 (La.1975), we proceed to determine that factual issue on the basis of the record.

After the accident plaintiff immediately complained of back pain (on the right side) and numbness in the leg. His complaints were compatible with disc injury and continued until (as the neurosurgeon stated) “his clinical picture (became) clear enough to justify operation”. We conclude the evidence adequately supports a finding of causation by the automobile accident of the back injury requiring the second surgery and resulting in permanent disability.

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Related

Strong v. Prince George's County
549 A.2d 1142 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
Paulk v. GENERAL ACC. GROUP
373 So. 2d 599 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Bellard v. Woodward Wight & Co.
363 So. 2d 923 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
362 So. 2d 819, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 2991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bellard-v-woodward-wight-co-lactapp-1978.