Cain v. Delta Tank Mfg. Co.

34 So. 2d 662, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 436
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 1948
DocketNo. 2995.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 So. 2d 662 (Cain v. Delta Tank Mfg. 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
Cain v. Delta Tank Mfg. Co., 34 So. 2d 662, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 436 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

This suit is to recover compensation at the rate of $20.00 per week for a period of *Page 663 not exceeding 400 weeks, plus medical expenses not exceeding $500.00, on account of an injury received by the plaintiff on or about the 16th day of January, 1947, which injury is alleged to have caused bilateral herniae or both a left and a right inguinal hernia, causing total and permanent disability. Plaintiff alleges that he did not, at the time of the accident, realize the nature or consequence of his injury and continued in the employment of defendant until on or about January 26, 1947, when he was laid off in a general lay-off; that on the 30th of June, 1947, he was notified by his employer, defendant herein, to return to work and in order to resume his former duties he was required to submit himself to a pre-employment physical examination by Dr. James R. Godfrey, defendant's physician, which said examination disclosed that he had double herniae, or both a left and a right inguinal hernia. He alleges that from the time he was laid off until he was called back to duty, he was not employed and drew and accepted, for such period, weekly unemployment benefits without knowledge of his disability. The defense is that the plaintiff did not receive any accident in the scope and course of his employment resulting in or causing the bilateral herniae and the accompanying disability.

Thus, there was presented only one issue in the lower court and that was whether or not plaintiff sustained the herniae in the course and scope of his employment with the defendant company. The trial judge found that plaintiff had failed to prove with legal certainty that he sustained the herniae in the course and scope of his employment and dismissed his suit. Plaintiff has appealed.

Plaintiff testified that he started working for the defendant in the latter part of 1943 and worked until some part of 1945, when he was laid off as the result of a general lay-off. He was rehired in the latter part of 1945 and worked until the latter part of January, 1947, and was then released in a general lay-off. On or about January 16, 1947, he was screwing fittings in a pump with a 24-inch Stilson wrench. While pulling with his full strength on the wrench, the wrench slipped causing him to lose his balance and going over backwards for a distance of ten feet, hitting something on the floor and finally landing on his buttocks on a box. He wrenched or turned his left ankle. He experienced the "severest" pain in his left ankle. He states: "I hurt myself when I hit the box or whatever I hit, but I thought it was just a jar, and got sick at my stomach." He was sick about twenty minutes. His foreman told him to report to the first aid office. He reported to the first aid within twenty minutes after his fall. He told the nurse at the first aid station that he had fallen and had hurt his ankle and being sick at the stomach. He knew that he had a bruise in the lower part of his abdomen; it was a burning feeling but did not care to show it to the nurse, nor did he tell her about it. From then on he was put on light duty and was finally laid off in the general lay-off on January 26, 1947. He immediately applied for unemployment compensation and thereafter went to his home northeast of Denham Springs, where he started a garden. His work consisted of plowing and hoeing to a small extent. On or about June 30, 1947, in obedience to a notice to return to work, he visited Dr. Godfrey's office for a pre-employment examination, and then was shocked to know that he had bilateral herniae. According to his testimony, outside of pains from his ankle, which abated prior to his termination on January 26, 1947, he had had no pains or any indication whatever that he had or was developing a hernia.

Ivy Pearson, a fellow employee, testified that plaintiff was putting a piece of pipe in a pump with a wrench; the wrench slipped and plaintiff ran backward and sat down on a box about seven feet away. He spoke to plaintiff and plaintiff's only complaint was that he had hurt his ankle. Plaintiff did not complain of any pains in his stomach, did not mention or complain of any bruises in the lower region of his body, nor did he mention that he was nauseated, at the time of the accident nor while working from the time of the accident to his termination nor since.

Jim Henry Street, a fellow employee, testified that, during the lay-off period between January and June of 1947, he and the plaintiff would come to the union hall at Baton *Page 664 Rouge three or four times a week seeking employment; that the plaintiff did not complain or indicate that he had pains in his stomach, nor did he say anything about being hurt in the lower regions of his stomach or being hurt thereabouts. He and Cain went together for the pre-employment examination and Cain was the first to be examined. On coming out of the doctor's office, Cain said "Boy, I am in terrible shape." Cain was white and said "I am ruptured on both sides." Cain did not know it until then. Cain, during the lay-off period, farmed about three acres.

Sam C. Chambers a first cousin of plaintiff, testified that during plaintiff's lay-off period he, plaintiff, continually complained of pain in his lower stomach and sides and that he had been sick practically all of the time. This is diametrically opposed to the testimony of Street and plaintiff. From the examination of this witness by the trial judge, it appears his testimony did not impress the trial judge.

Dr. Charles McVea, a medical expert called by plaintiff, testified that he examined plaintiff on August 19, 1947, and that he found that plaintiff had definite hernias on both sides. The doctor states that from his examination he could not tell anything about the age of the bilateral herniae. He did not find any tenderness or soreness of any particular moment on either side. He was then asked the following questions and answered as follows:

"Q. Ordinarily would a recently developed hernia give indications of tenderness? A. A very recently developed hernia might show some tenderness or soreness, probably would but notnecessarily so.

"Q. From a hypothetical standpoint would it have been possible for the plaintiff in this case to have sustained a hernia in January without having knowledge of it until subsequent examinations? A. Yes, Sir.

"Q. Would that necessarily have been accompanied by nausea or other indications? A. No, Sir."

On cross-examination, the doctor states that if the plaintiff had sustained a hernia at the time as a result of the fall and the hernia was the size that it was at the time of the examination, plaintiff would have some pain in his lower abdomen or at least some burning sensation in his lower abdomen in the region where the hernia occurred. He might or might not have nausea or vomited. The predominant usual indication of this type of hernia is a burning sensation in the region of the hernia. Plaintiff did not inform him when the hernia occurred. The doctor concluded by saying that he questioned plaintiff relative to the occurrence of the hernia and plaintiff hold him that he first knew that he had a hernia after his pre-employment examination on or about June 30, 1947.

George Mathew Ellis, Jr., plaintiff's foreman, a witness for the defendant, testified that plaintiff was tightening up a piece of pipe into a meter which was located in a vice. The wrench slipped and plaintiff' took several steps backwards and sat down on the concrete floor. He immediately went over to plaintiff and asked plaintiff if he was hurt. Plaintiff replied that he thought that he had sprained his ankle.

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Related

Parish v. Arkansas-Louisiana Gas Co.
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68 So. 2d 670 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 2d 662, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cain-v-delta-tank-mfg-co-lactapp-1948.