Brent v. Union Indemnity Co.

135 So. 735, 17 La. App. 689, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 215
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1931
DocketNo. 13,814
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 135 So. 735 (Brent v. Union Indemnity 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
Brent v. Union Indemnity Co., 135 So. 735, 17 La. App. 689, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 215 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

DUNBAR, J. ad hoc.

This is a suit by William C. Brent against the Union Indemnity Company, as insurer of plaintiff’s employer, for compensation for permanent total disability as a result of an accident that occurred July 31, 1929, admittedly within the scope of plaintiff’s employment.

Defendant paid plaintiff compensation from the date of the accident until approximately October, 1930, when further ■ payments were refused on the ground that the accident was not the proximate and legal cause of the condition from which the plaintiff was then suffering, hut that the condition was due to the normal and usual development and was the result of a pre-existing disease. The plaintiff claims compensation for permanent total disability for a period of 400 weeks, subject to a credit for compensation paid.

Judgment was rendered against the plaintiff, and he has appealed.

Plaintiff was employed as a carpenter by Caldwell Brothers and Bond Brothers, contractors, in the erection of the new Municipal Auditorium. On July 31, 1929, at about 9:30 p. m., while plaintiff was working upon a scaffold, a cross member supporting a piece of planking upon which he was standing broke in half, and plaintiff was precipitated towards the ground. In falling plaintiff struck another cross member about eight or ten feet below, and then fell to the ground, a distance of another two feet. As a result of the fall, plaintiff fractured the fifth and sixth ribs on the left side posteriorly. He remained at work after the accident during the rest of the night, and the next day, on account of pain resulting from the fall, he was sent .to the company’s physician for treatment. Subsequently, plaintiff called in his own physician, Dr. Cole, who strapped him and treated him for the fracture of the ribs. Between eight and nine days after the accident, plaintiff discovered a tumor or mass forming in his upper abdomen. It later developed that this tumor or mass formation, accompanied by pain, resulted from the beginning of an acute condition or crisis due to hydropyonephrosis with stone; that is to say, a badly diseased kidney of long standing and the presence of a kidney stone. It became necessary to operate on plaintiff on December 18, 1929, and his kidney, which was badly diseased and which contained a large kidney stone, was removed, producing the total disability alleged.

The contention of counsel for plaintiff is that this stone which they claim was in the pelvis of the kidney where stones usually form, was, as a result of the fall, firstly, either dislodged from the wall of the pelvis, or, secondly, if unattached, was caused as a result of the sudden jolting which the kidney received in the fall, so as to become lodged in the head of the ureter where it joins the kidney at the pelvis, and as a result the secretion of urine formed the mass which plaintiff noticed, and this mass of urine diseased the kidney and necessitated its immediate removal by an operation.

Defendant’s contention is that the accident and resulting trauma had nothing to do with the formation of the kidney stone or the diseased condition of the kidney, [691]*691and that on account of the unusually large size of the kidney stone which was later removed, it was clear that the disease had existed and the stone had been forming for a long period prior to the accident, and that the later development of the tumor and acute condition necessitating an operation and the removal of the kidney and stone was a development normal and natural in the light of medical science and experience in connection with such diseases, and that the acute condition of, the kidney would have resulted and the necessity for the operation would have arisen in the same way and at the same time in the ordinary course of events.

It is admitted that the kidney disease and kidney stone existed long prior to the accident, and the only issue presented is one of causation, namely, whether or not the trauma accelerated the diseased condition and caused a “flare-up” necessitating an immediate operation before the normal development of the disease would have resulted in such a crisis and necessity for an operation.

Only questions of fact are involved in the case, and the record consists primarily of the testimony of the expert witnesses called by the plaintiff and defendant. The expert testimony deals with medical and scientific facts, and a discussion of the symptoms, inferences and conjectures with reference to the problem of causation involved in this case, which is peculiarly and wholly within the field of medical science.

Counsel for plaintiff in their brief argue with considerable emphasis that the conclusions and opinions of some of the experts for defendant were based on an erroneous assumption as to the fact in relation to the period of time after the operation within which the tumor and pain in the abdomen of plaintiff appeared for the first time. Counsel for plaintiff contend, in this connection, that the tumor as well as the pain, was discovered and complained of by plaintiff within four or five days after the accident, and not eight or nine days after the accident, which fact was assumed in connection with the reasoning and opinions of some of the experts. This difference in time is emphasized as important by counsel for plaintiff, because one of the reasons given by the experts for their opinion that there was no connection between the accident and the beginning of the acute condition necessitating the operation, was that if the fall and resulting tumor had injured the kidney, causing the “flare-up” and crisis in plaintiff’s diseased kidney condition, there would have been immediate- symptoms of pain and swelling in the abdomen within 24 to 48 hours after the accident, and, according to one expert, “within two or three days at the most.” Counsel for plaintiff argue that according to Dr. Cole’s testimony, the tumor and pain in plaintiff’s side were complained of by plaintiff and discovered four or five days after the accident, and that the expert testimony, therefore, in the light of this correction, would tend to support plaintiff’s theory of the case. The record, however, in this connection shows that Mr. Brent, the plaintiff, was asked how long it was after the accident when he first noticed a pain or a lump in his side, .which indicated the beginning of the condition, and his reply was: “I am sure it was about between eight and nine days.” Although on one occasion Dr. Cole did testify, as counsel for plaintiff pointed out, that the tumor or lump and pain indicating the beginning of the acute condition were discovered four or five days after the accident (which was inconsistent with plaintiff’s testimony), he [692]*692later corrected this statement and corroborated plaintiff’s testimony when he was questioned by the court on this point, and plaintiff’s testimony was called to his attention. In the light of the testimony taken as a whole, therefore, it seems to us reasonable to accept as a fact that the tumor and pain were not complained of or noticed until between eight and nine days after the accident, which is the fact assumed, among others, by the experts in arriving .at their conclusion.

The three physicians who -testified as experts for the defendant, Drs. Martin, Mattes and Menendez, one of whom specialized in urology, or genito-urinary diseases, stated very positively and unequivocally that after studying the history and facts of the case from a medical standpoint, there was no connection'of any kind between the accident and the tumor and acute condition. of the diseased kidney resulting in the operation.

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Bluebook (online)
135 So. 735, 17 La. App. 689, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brent-v-union-indemnity-co-lactapp-1931.