Boudreaux v. Rossen

139 So. 706, 19 La. App. 188, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 256
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1932
DocketNo. 931
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 139 So. 706 (Boudreaux v. Rossen) 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
Boudreaux v. Rossen, 139 So. 706, 19 La. App. 188, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 256 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LE BLANC, J.

Plaintiff was employed by the defendant in the latter’s moss gin in Morgan City, in the parish of St. Mary. He alleges that on or about November 14, 1930, while in the performance of his duties as such, in the act of feeding moss to the gin, his left hand was accidentally caught in the rollers of the gin and severely injured. 1-Ie seeks to recover compensation as for total disability for a period of 400 weeks at the rate of $6.82 per week; the amount being based on an average weekly wage of $10.50, which is at the rate of $1.75 for a 6-day week. In the alternative, he pleads, first, that, should his disability be decreed to be partial instead of total, he recover for a period of 300 weeks; and, secondly, that, should both of those demands be denied, he recover .compensation for 150 weeks as for the loss of his hand.

P, 2] Plaintiff made allegations in his petition under which, had he complied formally with the provisions of Act 156 of 1912, he was entitled to litigate his cause in forma pauperis. Section 2 of that act requires that a plaintiff, in order to exercise the rights granted under it, shall file with his petition his own affidavit declaring that, because of [707]*707his poverty and want of means, he is unable to pay the advance costs or other costs as they accrue, or to .furnish bond for the payment of same. In addition thereto, he must • supply the affidavit of a third person declaring that he knows the party and.knows his financial condition, and that he firmly believes that he cannot pay the costs in advance or as they accrue or give bond to protect them.

Instead of furnishing these affidavits, the plaintiff merely swore to the truth of the allegations of his petition, among which were those declaring his inability to pay costs or furnish bond. He did, however, furnish the affidavit of two other persons which substantially met the requirements of the act. The district judge signed an order permitting him to prosecute his suit in forma pauperis, whereupon the defendant ruled him into court to show cause why the order should not be set aside. On a hearing of the rule, the court held that there had not been a compliance with the mandatory provisions of the statute, but, as there appeared to have been an honest effort on the part of plaintiff to do so, he. was given 10 days within which to make the proper affidavit in accordance with the provisions of the act. Plaintiff reserved its rights against further proceedings under the form in which the defects were cured, and in this court asks that the case be remanded and the action be relegated to one in which the plaintiff had to pay the necessary costs or furnish proper bond therefor.

Counsel for plaintiff assimilates the requirement of an independent affidavit in an action of this kind to the form required in a mandamus proceeding, in which it was held in the ease of Porteau v. Gluck, 149 La. 653, 89 So. 886, that the oath required under article 840 of the Code of Practice could not be supplied by a verification of the allegations of the petition hy plaintiff’s attorney, as the Pleading and Practice Act, No. 300 of 1914, did not have the effect of repealing these provisions of the Code of Practice. The court states in its opinion in that case that there is no indication in the Pleading and Practice Act of the intention of the Legislature to repeal the rigid requirements of the Code of Practice for obtaining a writ of mandamus or other supervisory writ. Conceding that the ruling in that case as applied to a mandamus proceeding applies with equal force to a proceeding fiied under the Pauper’s Act of 1912, and that neither was the latter act repealed by the Pleading and Practice Act, it is observed that the facts here are not the same as they appeared in the case cited. There, the verification to the petition had been made by the plaintiff’s attorney, whereas here it is in the form of an affidavit made by the plaintiff himself. Here, morever, plaintiff filed the other affidavit required by the act, of not •only one, but of two third parties, and this last affidavit, although not in the exact language of the act, contained the substance of what it required. Be all of that as it may, however, the district judge, in the exercise of what he believed to be his discretion, granted plaintiff time in which to supply the proper affidavits which cured any defect that may have existed, and we are not prepared to say that he made any abuse of that discretion, especially when it is considered that this is a compensation suit in which the trial judge exercises greater discretion than in ordinary proceedings, and is not bound by any technical or formal rules of procedure. The ruling of the court on this matter is affirmed.

Coming now to a consideration of the case on the merits, we find that there is no doubt but that plaintiff was injured on November 11 or 14, 1931,' while he was feeding moss to defendant’s moss gin. The sole question involved, as we see it, is whether or not his disability in his hand is a result of the injury, or did it exist before.

Plaintiff’s disability, if any, is due to an ankylosis of the index and little fingers of the left hand. In this case, it was the second joint of the index and little fingers that were involved. We are given to understand that an ankylosis is a .stiffening of the joint, and usually appears in rheumatic conditions or in gout.

Plaintiff’s wife, his daughter, son and a lady named Mrs. Theresa Tourere, say that his left hand was entirely free of injury or showed no defect before the accident of November, 1930. Dr. J. H. O’Neil, to whom he was taken for attention following the accident, and who treated his hand, states that the fresh injury consisted of a fracture of the first phalange of the ring finger, lacerations of all the flesh between the second phal-ange of all his fingers, bruises between the joints, and contusions and lacerations in the palm of the hand. He observed the ankylosis in the second joints of the index and little fingers which he says looked to him as the result of prior injuries, or perhaps of rheumatism. The defendant, J. W. Rossen, his son, Wyatt Rossen, and a witness named John P. Davidson, all testify to having seen plaintiff’s left hand before the accident, and that there was some defect in it.

In 1920 plaintiff had employed Mr. W. T. Gilmore as his attorney to bring a compensation suit for an injury to the index finger of his. right hand. Mr. Gilmore testifies that in going over his case with him the condition of his left hand was discussed with the view of ascertaining whether it interfered in any way with his handling of an axe, as at that time plaintiff worked in the swamps, and he told Mr. Gilmore that it did. Mr. Gilmore is positive that he observed the left hand, and is equally as positive in his recollection that the index finger was stiff and the little finger [708]*708crooked. Plaintiff informed Mm then that he had had a bone felon on the index finger, and that he had also had the third and fourth fingers injured by a saw. Asked to state what difference he saw in the condition of his hand as compared to the time he was consulted by plaintiff, he answers that it is practically the same. Plaintiff does not rebut a word: of an this testimony.

With what evidence we have already referred to, plaintiff has failed, in our opinion, to show with that legal certainty- required that the disability he claims is the result of his injury of November, 1930. He relies a great deal, as seems to do the trial judge, on the testimony of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 706, 19 La. App. 188, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boudreaux-v-rossen-lactapp-1932.