Bynum v. Maryland Casualty Company

102 So. 2d 547, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 864
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 21, 1958
Docket4561
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 102 So. 2d 547 (Bynum v. Maryland Casualty Company) 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
Bynum v. Maryland Casualty Company, 102 So. 2d 547, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 864 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

102 So.2d 547 (1958)

Henry BYNUM, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
MARYLAND CASUALTY COMPANY et al., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 4561.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

April 21, 1958.
Rehearing Denied May 26, 1958.
Writ of Certiorari Denied June 27, 1958.

*549 Taylor, Porter, Brooks, Fuller & Phillips, Baton Rouge, for appellant.

Leon A. Picou, Jr., St. Francisville, Sam J. D'Amico, Baton Rouge, for appellees.

TATE, Judge.

This suit for workmen's compensation is by an employee of the State Penitentiary at Angola. Made defendants are the State of Louisiana, its Board of Institutions (the administrative agency charged with control of the penitentiary), and the Maryland Casualty Company, the insurer responsible for compensation liability arising at this penal institution.

The trial court found plaintiff totally and permanently disabled. The defendants appeal from judgment casting them in solido for weekly workmen's compensation at the maximum rate for 400 weeks, commencing with September 8, 1956. This judgment, likewise, allowed defendants credit so that each week's wages paid to Bynum at his regular rate following this date satisfied a week of defendants' compensation liability.

Defendants further filed in this court pleas of one and of two years' prescription and/or peremption under LSA-R.S. 23:1209.

Various factual issues are raised by the parties, but without making a detailed resume of the evidence, we think the following findings to be supported by a preponderance of the evidence:

1. Plaintiff Bynum, 67 years of age and rather obese, had been employed as the penitentiary's roads and bridge supervisor or foreman for approximately five years at the time of the trial below. Although his duties were supervisory in nature, they did require substantial physical participation in walking, bending, stooping, climbing, and rendering physical instruction and demonstration to the inmate road gang in construction activities.

2. In the course of his employment duties, Bynum suffered three accidents, for none of which has he been paid workmen's compensation as such:

(a) On April 19, 1953, while Bynum was poling a boat away from the landing, the pole broke, and Bynum suffered a pain in his left side where—after the second accident—a left inguinal hernia was definitely medically diagnosed. According to Bynum, he reported to the then prison physician (whose testimony is unavailable, due to his ensuing death) and was informed he had a small hernia and a torn ligament, but that with eight or ten days' rest he'd be "all right". Bynum testified that he followed this advice and then "I felt pretty good and went right along with my work. It didn't bother me until I had this [next] accident in November of '54." (Tr-30.)

(b) During the fall of 1954, on a date stated by Bynum to be November 18, 1954, on attempting to move a heavy pipe at the prison sugar mill, he strained, and he testified: "Just seemed like it busted the whole [left] side aloose. * * * I went over and laid down, you know, it just made me sick." (Tr-deposition p. 18.) This accident was corroborated by the testimony of two convicts who were present as members of plaintiff's road gang (Tr-208, Tr-217), although they did not know the date other than that it was in the sugar grinding season of October-December of 1954. Plaintiff's supervisor further testified that Bynum reported the incident to him and that Bynum went to the doctor (Tr-88), although the supervisor made no record or report thereof, in reliance upon the doctor doing so. Dr. Azar, consulting surgeon for the prison, corroborated that Bynum reported to him at some time prior to June 7, 1955 (Tr-190), on which date the large inguinal hernia he had previously diagnosed was surgically repaired by this physician; he did not know the date of this initial interview since "no accurate record" was kept of it. Dr. Azar's history, however, contained *550 reference only to the earlier poling accident of April, 1953, when plaintiff first suffered pain in his left side.

(c) On a date fixed by Bynum as September 18, 1956, two months or so before the present suit was filed, he slipped off a culvert and fell 12 feet into Point Look Out Creek. The happening of this accident was again corroborated by the two convict members of the gang, and by the supervisor's admission that same was reported to him and that he brought Bynum at once to Dr. Azar. Dr. Azar has no recollection of the incident being reported to him, although he corroborates that Bynum reported back with continued complaints of pain in his left side and testicle. Bynum states that he worked with pain since the operation following the second accident, but that the pain is more intense since the third accident. (Tr-23-4.) (The District Court found Bynum's legal disability to date from this last accident.)

3. The preponderant medical and lay testimony, as well as the District Court's specific acceptance of Bynum's credibility as to the genuineness of his complaints, supports the trial court's finding that plaintiff Bynum is unable to perform the ordinary duties of his employment without suffering substantial pain thereby.

4. Bynum, although suffering pain, fully performs the duties of his employment and fully earns the wages paid to him; he is, in fact, an exceptionally conscientious and willing employee.

An employee who is unable to perform, without substantial pain, substantial duties of the employment in which he sustained the pain-producing injury is considered for purposes of the compensation act as totally disabled. See, e.g., Reed v. Calcasieu Paper Co., 233 La. 747, 98 So.2d 175.

In Wallace v. Remington Rand, Inc., 229 La. 651, 86 So.2d 522, Johnson v. Cabot Carbon Co., 227 La. 941, 81 So.2d 2, and Mottet v. Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Co., 220 La. 653, 57 So.2d 218, our Supreme Court overruled pleas of prescription filed by employers to compensation suits filed by employees more than a year (but within two years) following accidents which produced what was held to be total disability, holding that it would be conjectural to find the disability legally "manifest" during the period of more than a year in which each of these employees worked for his employer following the accident.

Based upon such cases, astute counsel for defendants-appellants urges that the present employee cannot be considered legally disabled, because until he ceases working for his employer such disability could not be legally manifest or compensable. We do not, however, interpret these cases as overruling or altering the long established jurisprudence that an employee unable to perform his duties without pain is totally disabled within the meaning of the compensation act; they simply hold that for purposes of prescription the courts will not retrospectively assume as proven a total disability by reason of pain during an interval at which the employee did in fact perform his full duties. To this effect do we believe the statement found in the Wallace case at 86 So.2d 522, 525:

"True enough, the law did not require plaintiff to work during those 70 tedious weeks following the accident enduring the pain that he must have continuously experienced and perhaps a man of less fortitude would have immediately stopped working and demanded compensation for total permanent disability. But for us to presently conclude that the injury developed on the day of the accident would be dealing in conjecture and the commencement of prescription cannot be decided on that basis."

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 2d 547, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bynum-v-maryland-casualty-company-lactapp-1958.