Benoit v. American Mut. Liability Ins.

162 So. 603, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 343
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1935
DocketNo. 1479.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 162 So. 603 (Benoit v. American Mut. Liability Ins.) 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
Benoit v. American Mut. Liability Ins., 162 So. 603, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 343 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

Eno Benoit, while working for McWilliams Dredging Company in the construction of a spillway, received a severe injury, and claims of American Mutual Liability Insurance Company compensation on said account.

He alleges that his injury has produced in him a permanent total disability to do work of any reasonable character. The accident happened on or about April 14, 1934. He alleges that American Mutual Liability Insurance Company carries compensation insurance for McWilliams Dredging Company; that he was being paid at the rate of $3.20 per day, worked seven days a week, and that his compensation should be based on his daily rate of pay; that 65 per cent, of his daily rate of pay, calculated over a seven-day work week, in amount $14.60, is due him, during the period of his disability, not however beyond 400 weeks.

American Mutual Liability Insurance Company for answer admits that it carries compensation insurance for McWilliams Dredging Company; that plaintiff received some injury at the time mentioned, and for which he is entitled to compensation; but it denies the alleged extent of his injuries and that he is entitled to the amount of compensation claimed.

It alleges that his injury is confined to¡ his leg and that his compensation should be fixed under the provisions of the law for the loss of a leg; that it has paid plaintiff all that he is entitled to.

Further answering, defendant alleges that plaintiff, at the time of his injury, was working on a federal project under rules and regulations prescribed for such work by the National Industrial Recovery Act of Congress (48 Stat. 195). That at the time of injury, his actual earnings were 40 cents per hour, not to exceed 30 hours per week, or $12 per week maximum, etc.

It prayed that plaintiff’s demand be rejected.

The lower court classed plaintiff as a permanent total disability, unable to do work of any reasonable character, and fixed his compensation at $12.48 per week for the period of his disability, not exceeding 400 weeks.

Defendant has appealed. The judge a quo in his reasons for judgment discusses the case 'very fully. It would serve no useful purpose to enter into a discussion of the testimony concerning the nature of the leg injury which the plaintiff received. It was severe; there is no dispute on that subject. The dispute is whether the injury received at the time stated extended to and disables his hip. The plaintiff contends that it did, and that hip disability exists; the defendant denies it.

Plaintiff’s averment on the subject is “that as a result of said injuries his hip and pelvic region has been affected in *605 that the leg swings in an abnormal position.”

Dr. E. S. Hatch examined plaintiff, made a statement as to what he found, and says nothing about any injury to the hip; evidently he did not notice any.

Dr. Hamilton says on the subject: “X-ray of hip joint shows upper fragment of femur turned inward slightly.” In a later part of his statement he says: “As a result, patient is unable to walk without the aid of crutches, and in as much as his condition is of long duration, April 14th, 1934, no improvement may be expected from nature, and as Mr. Benoit is a laboring man I consider him totally disabled in his present state to perform common labor as a livelihood.”

How much of this opinion, if any, is based on hip injury, we have no way of determining, but we consider it a proper inference that the entire injury was taken into account.

The plaintiff was asked:

“Q. Do you have the full swing of your leg backwards and forward from the hip joint? A. No, I feel something stopping it.
“Q. Would you mind standing up and show the court, with the aid of your crutches, the swing of your leg from the hip joint?

“Witness stands, with the help of his crutches, swings his right leg and says, T feel something stopping it here’ (pointing at the hip).”

He also declared he had pains and cramps in his hip once in a while.

The lower court had the benefit of a personal examination of the plaintiff and in his reasons for judgment says: “The document marked Exhibit, p 2, shows unmistakably and as testified to by Dr. Hamilton, that the hip joint is turned inward, practically resulting in what is tantamount to a dislocation.” To what extent, if any, this statement is based on personal examination or on the evidence of physicians, we do not know, but the fact must have been evident to the court, otherwise such a statement would not have been made.

There is contention on the part of defendant that plaintiff should submit to the amputation of his leg. It is well settled in the jurisprudence of this state that an injured party' is not obliged to undergo the amputation of his leg in order that his disability may thereby be determined, for purpose of fixing his compensation.

In Franklin v. Ernest Roger Co., 2 La. App. 764, and Jones v. Lake Charles Compress & Warehouse Co. (La. App.) 153 So. 347, it was found that plaintiff, in addition to serious leg injury, had sustained an injury to his hip, and that even if the leg had been amputated, plaintiff would not be thereby restored to the usefulness of a one-leg man.

The lower court states that the plaintiff has a hip injury, and we infer from what he says that it helps to disable him; that plaintiff is because of a permanent total disability unable to do work of any reasonable character, and the evidence on the subject does not justify us in holding that the court erred.

How plaintiff’s compensation should be computed is also a matter of dispute, and the lower court, in acting on this phase of the case, thought that some of the decisions of this court were not in harmony with, decisions of the Supreme Court and the other Courts of Appeal.

Plaintiff’s injury, was received while working on a federal-aid project.

B. P. Lemoine, manager of the re-employment office in the parish of Iberia,' testified that the spillway work in which plaintiff was employed was being done under the National Industrial Recovery Act, a public works project. That the McWilliams Dredging Company was doing the work under contract from the War Department, under supervision of the Army Engineers and subject to the rules of the National Recovery Act. We quote a part of his testimony:

“Q. Do you know how many days a week and how many Jiours each day the plaintiff was working at the time of the accident and at what rate of pay? A. When this work first started, the rules under which they were allowed to work were, not to exceed thirty hours per week At that time, it required a change of crews every three days, and in order to save employee’s transportation of going back and forth, the different offices in this district took the matter up with the U. S. Government in view of allowing the employees to work a 30 hour week, beginning on Wednesday morning until Saturday at noon, and then to begin a new week Saturday noon and to end Tuesday evening, which allowed a man to work 28 hours *606 per week or fifty-six (56) hours for two weeks, requiring the employees to lay off seven days.”
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 603, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benoit-v-american-mut-liability-ins-lactapp-1935.