Brinson v. Arkansas Natural Gas Corp.

152 So. 381
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 1934
DocketNo. 4680.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 So. 381 (Brinson v. Arkansas Natural Gas Corp.) 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
Brinson v. Arkansas Natural Gas Corp., 152 So. 381 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, on March 31, 1931, while in the employ of and performing labor for defendant Arkansas Natural Gas Corporation at and about one of its producing wells in the Homer oil field, experienced an accident which caused serious injury to him. He was conceded to be entitled to compensation of $20 per week, and this amount was regularly paid him, presumably by defendant’s insurer, Union Indemnity Company, for 60 weeks; and, thinking plaintiff had recovered from his disability resulting from said injury, payments thereafter were discontinued. This suit was then instituted against the gas company and its insurer to recover compensation at said weekly rate for 400 weeks, less the payments, and for the maximum amount allowed by law for medical expenses, sanitarium and physicians’ bills incurred by plaintiff on account of (his injuries. His allegations and testimony disclose that he and another laborer had loaded some foundation timbers on a truck of defendant to be transferred to another place in the oil field; that the ground was slippery from rain, and he and said co-workman were pushing and lifting the truck to enable it to haul its load; that the fore wheels of the truck crossed a narrow ditch but the rear wheels stuck therein and the truck, of its own power, could not pull out; and that he and his assistant were straining to extricate the truck from said ditch, and, as the rear wheels were about out of it, the truck’s driver, without warning, suddenly put the truck in reverse gear, backing it against their efforts to shove it forward, and it was then and there he was injured. Specifically, the Injuries are alleged to be strain and wrenching of the right side of the back, hurting of pelvic bones, injuries to his lower back and spine, possibly causing arthritis of the lower lumbar spine and sacroiliac joints, with displacement of vertebra. He avers that his disability is total and permanent, preventing him from performing work of any reasonable character.

' Defendants admit that plaintiff was injured on the date alleged by him, but that he has been paid all the compensation he was entitled to; in all other respects the essential allegations of the petition are denied.

From a judgment for plaintiff for compensation sued for and $100 medical expenses, the gas company appeals. Before the case was tried, the Union Indemnity Company was placed in receivership. No judgment was rendered against it.

There is no testimony in the record as to the facts and circumstances of the accident to plaintiff but his own. It stands alone, but is uncontradicted.

After testifying about the truck’s rear wheels being stuck in the ditch and spinning when the motor power was applied to them, and the efforts of himself and assistant to shove the truck out, he says further:

“Q. Did the truck driver shove the engine in the car backward? A. This shackle line was sawing the casing, looked like was going to cut a hole in it and he wanted to get off— the motor would not pull it up out of the ditch, so he just asked us to give him a real hard shove, to get it off the shackle line to keep from cutting a hole in the casing, I was standing straddle the ditch reached down under the side of the truck, and was pushing it forward, we got it up to the edge of the ditch and it stopped again, and when it stopped he just all of a sudden, without any warning threw it in reverse and it come back on me.
“Q. When he threw it in reverse you were still pushing? A. Yes sir, that is what hurt me, I was pushing ahead, so I was not expecting the truck to come back.
“Q. You were finally pushed out of the way? A. Yes sir, but it jerked me forward, jerked me down right quick all of a sudden and twisted me around.”

That the reverse motion of the truck, without notice to plaintiff, who was exerting strenuous physical effort at the time to shove it forward, subjected him to unusual strain and serious injury may be safely assumed; and in addition he was twisted around and jerked to the ground a result which would be expected to follow the sudden reversal of the truck’s movement.

Plaintiff had rendered faithful and satisfactory service to his employer for more than twelve years as an oil field roustabout. His duties required the performance of heavy work. He was receiving $5 per day when in *382 jured, but has not been able to perform manual labor since that time. He is only qualified to earn a livelihood by such labor. In his home town of Homer he enjoyed a good reputation.

The record is replete with contradictory evidence of medical and X-ray experts. Among the experts of both sides are included some of the most prominent doctors and radiologists in the city of Shreveport, the sincerity of whose opinions we do not, and have no good reason to, question; but some of them are in error as to plaintiff’s condition.

After a careful study of the testimony in the case, we arrive at the conclusion that, Whatever other injuries plaintiff suffered from the accident, there remained only one that bothered him to any great extent at time of institution and trial of this suit, and that one involved the right sacroiliac joint and the muscles, ligaments, etc., of that particular part of the body. It was conceded originally that his injuries were serious and his disability total, because the maximum amount of compensation, in such a case, was paid him for 60 weeks. The question at issue now is as to whether he has recovered and is now able to do the work he formerly did. No question of partial disability is presented.

Immediately after he was injured, plaintiff’s case was intrusted to Dr. E. B. Middleton, of Homer, La., who is referred to as the physician of one or both of the defendants. Dr. Middleton treated him regularly until a few weeks before the case was tried. He treated him for several weeks, perhaps months, after he was advised by defendants that they would no longer be responsible for the expense of the treatment. This doctor, from a physical examination, thought plaintiff’s right sacroiliac joint was strained, but said that an X-ray picture of the joint made two weeks after the injury did not confirm his opinion, but negatived it. Plaintiff was confined to his bed for ten days or more. In answer to a direct question on the point, Dr. Middleton, as a witness for defendants, gave it as his opinion that plaintiff was not suffering from any disability as a result of the injury of March, 1931, notwithstanding he and his office assistant administered various kinds of treatment to him to within four weeks of the trial, only ceased doing so when an electric machine used in such treatment broke down, and promised to resume the electric treatment when the machine was repaired. He states, in addition, that he did not think the treatment for the last several months did any good. The question irresistibly arises at this juncture, Why the continued treatment if there were no existing injury to be relieved?

Dr. Middleton states, and it is otherwise shown from the record, that plaintiff was again X-rayed at the North Louisiana Sanitarium in Shreveport, at the instance and expense of defendants, on October 29, 1931, seven months after being injured, and that the film made then disclosed no injury to or strain of the sacroiliac joint. However, following the making of this picture, plaintiff was again sent back to Dr.

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152 So. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinson-v-arkansas-natural-gas-corp-lactapp-1934.