Brown v. Continental Oil Co.

22 So. 2d 758, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 402
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1945
DocketNo. 2729.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 758 (Brown v. Continental Oil 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
Brown v. Continental Oil Co., 22 So. 2d 758, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 402 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

The plaintiff in this case was injured while working for the Continental Oil Co., on May 18, 1942. He performed work of a common laborer and while engaged in unloading pipes on that day, a heavy iron skid pipe was knocked out of its place, struck him on his back, throwing him down and rolling over his left leg. He sustained severe fractures of that leg, two in the tibia, in both instances union having had to be made by means of metal plates screwed into the bone, and one in the fibula.

There is no dispute about his employment and about the accident, nor is it seriously contended that he had a very serious injury to his left leg. There is some question about the injury to his back which he still complains of and there is also a controversy as to the number of days he worked per week.

He was immediately placed on compensation and received payments until Nov. 2, 1942, when he returned to do lighter duties at which he remained until March 3, 1943. This last employment was then terminated and apparently plaintiff made no attempt at that time to recover further compensation. Instead he went to California and took up the trade of a welder in a ship yard there. After his training he did actual work as a welder for sometime and then returned to Westlake, near Lake Charles, and filed this suit against his employer and its compensation insurance carrier, Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co. He makes the usual allegations that by reason of the injury to his leg, which has never completely healed, he is disabled from performing duties of a laborer and is therefore entitled to compensation as for total, permanent disability for a period not to exceed 400., weeks. He alleges that he worked six days a week and is entitled to 65% of his average *Page 759 weekly wage based on his rate of $5.04 per day, which at six days per week gives him earnings of $30.24 per week; 65% of that being $19.66, that is the amount he claims per week. He acknowledges credit for the amount of compensation paid him at the rate of $16.38 per week for the period from May 18, 1942, to November 2, 1942.

The defense to the suit is that the plaintiff has entirely recovered from the injury he sustained and that he has been paid all compensation that is due him. The trial judge after hearing the case wrote an opinion in which he reached the conclusion that plaintiff had failed to make out his case with that legal certainty which was required of him and he accordingly rejected his demand and dismissed his suit. From the judgment rendered plaintiff took this appeal.

After carefully reading and considering the testimony, which consists mostly of that of the medical experts, we are inclined to disagree with the trial judge as we believe that this man is still suffering pain from an injury to his leg which for the greater part has healed, but in a certain area, even according to the testimony of doctors for the defendants, is not entirely well and can give him trouble. Besides, because he still has two steel plates screwed to the bone in his leg, there may be some nerve and tissue involvement which may well cause him the pain he complains of.

We are convinced that if plaintiff suffered any injury to his back in the accident he has recovered from that. The preponderance of the testimony on that point is to the effect that any defect which may exist in any of the vertebrae of his back is of congenital origin and not due to the injury.

Plaintiff in testifying about the accident and how it happened, relates pretty much the same story as is set out in the petition, and on this, as we have said, he is not contradicted. In talking about the effects of his injury as they now exist, he states that any standing too long, any jar, riding on a rough bus, or any kind of awkward step causes pain and produces swelling of his leg. The day he testified was May 31, 1944, and he says that "even yesterday it was swollen up." He compares his pain to a tooth-ache and says that he feels it also with a change of weather.

Dr. S.F. Fraser who testified as a witness on his behalf stated that he examined him on April 8, 1943, and took x-rays of his leg. He found evidence of disturbances of the left leg from the knee to the ankle. There was some disturbance in the back but he says this was superficial. The disturbance in the leg was in the contour, both medial and posterial. The skin was shiny and slightly atrophic. There was tenderness along the tibia and limitation of motion in the knee and ankle. The x-ray showed the fractures and also the metal plates which had been used in the tibia together with the screws by which they were fastened.

He says that there seemed to be a good callus formation of the fibula and also over the major portion of the tibia with lack of callus in the lower fracture of that bone. He re-examined him on April 27, 1944 and was well pleased with the appearance compared to his pervious examination. However there was an area in the center part of the tibia which did not show good callus and his conclusion was that it had not completely healed. There was some scar tissue formed because of trauma as a result of broken fragments of the bone. He was prone to believe that plaintiff has quite a bit of discomfort at times and especially does he have pain after walking or using his leg for a long period of time.

In his opinion it is not advisable for the man to return to hard work and as an examining physician for industrial employment he would not pass him for that kind of work. He says he might be able to go ahead and be able to tolerate the discomfort but that would impair his efficiency.

We are rather impressed with this doctor's statement concerning the effect these steel plates in this man's leg may produce. He says that it is a well known medical fact that once you had a bad injury, one which impairs circulation of the lower extremities, or of the tissues overlying the bones, you are more liable to get an injury to a deeper tissue and more apt to get slow healing of the injury.

Dr. H.B. White also testified as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff. He examined him the day before the trial of the case and found the leg slightly swollen with a complaint of pain. This tends to corroborate the plaintiff who testified that even the day before the trial of the case, his leg was swollen. In interpretating the x-rays of April, 1943, Dr. White says that they showed apparent perfect union in the lower segment but that the upper fracture *Page 760 was not completely healed. The x-ray plates of April, 1944, showed the lower segment in perfect condition and the upper to have formed more callus. When asked what objective symptoms he found, he referred to the pain plaintiff complained of and some swelling in the soft parts. He says that he could wear these plates indefinitely and that might not hurt him unless there was some accident to the scar tissues, but there is a possibility of constriction of the nerves. He doubts seriously that the man can pass an examination before a board for hard physical labor.

Dr. Walter Moss was the first doctor called on behalf of the defendants and while from his interpretation of the x-ray plates he found that there was complete healing of the fracture with good callus formation, and expressed the opinion that this man could do hard manual labor, still he says it was hard to deny that he has the pain he complains of. The following statement he makes is rather significant in our opinion: "You think that one should have some pain in proximity to any fracture for quite a long while after bone is repaired, whereas most of the pain comes from soft tissue injury which may have been injured at the time plus the effect of the open reduction and operation at the time. But I cannot question that those

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 2d 758, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-continental-oil-co-lactapp-1945.