Card v. Southern Builders, Inc.

117 So. 2d 675, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 878
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1960
Docket9164
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 117 So. 2d 675 (Card v. Southern Builders, Inc.) 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
Card v. Southern Builders, Inc., 117 So. 2d 675, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 878 (La. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

117 So.2d 675 (1960)

John Henry CARD, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SOUTHERN BUILDERS, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 9164.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 26, 1960.

Morgan, Baker, Skeels, Middleton & Coleman, Shreveport, for appellant.

Blanchard, Goldstein, Walker & O'Quin, Shreveport, for appellees.

*676 AYRES, Judge.

This is an action for workmen's compensation wherein plaintiff seeks to recover, of his former employer and its workmen's compensation insurer, compensation at the maximum statutory rate as for total and permanent disability, together with medical expenses, penalties, and attorney's fees, as the result of an accidental injury alleged to have occurred on or about May 15, 1958, while he was performing duties in the course and scope of his employment, with Southern Builders, Inc., as a carpenter.

Defendants, in response to plaintiff's demands, deny that an accident occurred or that plaintiff sustained accidental injuries while employed by Southern Builders, Inc., and deny that plaintiff is disabled. There was judgment in the trial court rejecting plaintiff's demands and he has perfected a devolutive appeal to this court.

The issues presented are purely factual. There were no witnesses to the alleged accident and plaintiff relies solely upon his own testimony to establish its occurrence. Therefore, the credibility of plaintiff is an important factor in resolving this primary issue. It is the contention of the defendants-appellees that plaintiff's testimony is so inconsistent, self-contradictory, and flatly contradicted by the testimony of other witnesses on many material points that it is simply not worthy of belief, and fails to establish that he sustained an accidental injury.

First, although a discrepancy is shown between the allegations of plaintiff's petition and his testimony as to the manner of the occurrence of the accident, the record makes it clear that when plaintiff was allegedly injured he was employed alone in a room of a residence on Fairfield Avenue in the City of Shreveport. While putting up sheet rock, he claims, after ripping, or scoring, a sheet thereof of a four-by ten-foot dimension, approximately in half, lengthwise, one of the pieces fell from a height of approximately five feet, striking the inside of his left leg and ankle, lacerating his leg, causing it to bleed, and ultimately producing traumatic ulcers and aggravating a pre-existing condition on his left leg. In his petition, to which he made affidavit, he alleged "* * * that he immediately felt pain in his left leg, reported the accident to his foreman and was sent to the Company Doctor, Drs. Harman, Holt, Hilton & Akin, which firm of Doctors treated your petitioner for a period of nine weeks."

That the alleged accident was not immediately reported to the foreman was established through the testimony of Thomas B. Jacobs and O. A. Olsen, superintendent and timekeeper, respectively, of Southern Builders, Inc. Notice of the alleged accident, and the assertion of a claim predicated thereon, was not given until May 19, 1958, after plaintiff had been laid off from his employment, when he made a telephone call to Olsen from the office of Dr. Hilton. These facts were later admitted by plaintiff while testifying on the trial of the case.

Doubt as to the occurrence of the accident is aroused because of the manner in which plaintiff related its occurrence. He testified, with reference to the piece of sheet rock, that he was standing alongside the middle of the length thereof when it slipped out of his hands and fell. In such position, it is incredible that, when the sheet rock fell, it could have struck the inside of his ankle. To account for this, he testified that the piece of sheet rock broke when it fell. However, in his discovery deposition, taken prior to trial, he testified that the sheet rock did not break but remained all in one piece.

Moreover, his testimony that, during the several months he worked in Shreveport for this and other employers, he had no difficulty at all with his left leg and that he had no ulcer or open wound on his left ankle, is contradicted by Mrs. J. B. Tyner, at whose home he rented and occupied a room. Mrs. Tyner testified that she observed open sores and ulcers on his left leg; that he complained of severe pain; *677 and that he had related to her information that a surgical operation had been performed in that area for the removal of a nerve and for the treatment of a vein and artery.

Two ulcers on plaintiff's left leg near his ankle constituted the major finding of Dr. E. T. Hilton, upon whom plaintiff called May 19, 1958, prior to his giving notice of any alleged accident. Although plaintiff testified that, in the accident, his ankle was so severely cut it bled through his sock, three days later Dr. Hilton found no evidence of a cut, but merely the two infected ulcers.

Plaintiff's experience as a workmen's compensation claimant was extensive. The record discloses that the present claim is the fifth such claim he has asserted since 1953, and that four of these were predicated upon ulceration of this same foot and ankle. In each of these former matters, plaintiff was examined and treated by various doctors, represented by attorneys, and appeared before the Oklahoma Industrial Accident Commission. Nevertheless, on the taking of his pretrial deposition and in the course of his testimony during the trial of this case, plaintiff was vague and evasive as to many material particulars of these prior claims and settlements. Considerable of his testimony was positively contradicted by the physicians who treated and attended him in connection with the alleged prior injuries. He testified that Drs. Hoover, Blaschke, and MacDonald of Oklahoma City did not give him their diagnoses of his difficulty, and he particularly denied he had been informed or advised he could have reoccurrences of the ulceration of his left ankle. Dr. Blaschke testified he discussed plaintiff's condition with him at frequent intervals, while plaintiff was under his care, during May, June, and July, 1956, and that plaintiff was made fully aware of his condition. According to Dr. Hoover, when he examined plaintiff November 2, 1954 there were severe and extensive varicose veins and two varicose ulcers on the medial aspect of his left ankle with a dark brown discoloration of the ankle. Treating plaintiff until December 28, 1954, Dr. Hoover dismissed him after advising him that he was likely to have this trouble in the future, particularly if he did not wear some type of supportive bandage. Dr. Hoover again examined plaintiff July 13, 1955, because the ulcers had reoccurred, and, during his treatment, discussed with plaintiff his condition, made recommendations as to the care he should exercise with reference thereto, and suggested consideration of surgery for relief of the condition arising from the presence of the varicose veins.

Dr. MacDonald testified that, on an examination in March, 1955, plaintiff gave him a history of having a thrombophlebitis in 1949 and a breakdown, from time to time, of the blood vessels in the lower left leg and ankle. The examination revealed ulcers or wounds on the lower left leg and ankle and marked varicose veins in the left leg. From poor circulation in the left leg, the doctor expressed the opinion that plaintiff could expect reoccurrences of the aforesaid conditions, which, he testified, he fully explained to him and pointed out what care and attention should be given.

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Bluebook (online)
117 So. 2d 675, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/card-v-southern-builders-inc-lactapp-1960.