Chance v. T. J. Moss Tie Co.

31 So. 2d 19, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 435
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 1947
DocketNo. 7041.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 So. 2d 19 (Chance v. T. J. Moss Tie 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
Chance v. T. J. Moss Tie Co., 31 So. 2d 19, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 435 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

This suit was instituted by the plaintiff on August 14, 1945. The petition alleges that on September 2, 1944, while employed as an "edgeman" by T. J. Moss Tie Co., Inc., at its mill in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, plaintiff met with an accident which rendered him permanently and totally disabled from doing work of any reasonable character, and that he is entitled to workman's compensation for four hundred weeks at the rate of $18.72 per week. The suit was directed against the tie company and its insurance carrier, Consolidated Underwriters.

These defendants answered, denying that plaintiff was in the employ of the tie company, and specially alleged that the employment of plaintiff was with Weldon and Daniels, who had a contract to deliver ties to the T. J. Moss Tie Co., Inc. The defense was also made that plaintiff was not disabled but that he had been paid compensation *Page 20 at the rate of $18.72 weekly for thirty-four weeks, aggregating $202.00 which was paid through "error of law and fact." Judgment in reconvention was asked for the amount paid.

On February 27, 1946, plaintiff filed a supplemental petition in which he joined Elmo Weldon and J.W. Daniels as defendants, alleging that Weldon and Daniels, and the other defendants were solidarily liable to him for the compensation claimed. Weldon and Daniels filed a plea that the claim was barred by the prescription of one year. They later filed an answer in which it was admitted that plaintiff was in their employ on the day of the alleged accident but denied that he suffered any disabling injuries. The plea of prescription was maintained and the suit was dismissed as to Weldon and Daniels. There was judgment on the merits in favor of the tie company and its insurance carrier rejecting plaintiff's demands. The reconventional demand was likewise rejected. Each side has perfected suspensive and devolutive appeals which are now before us for consideration.

It is not disputed that the employment of plaintiff was hazardous and is within the purview of Act 20 of 1914 as amended, and that at the time of the accident he earned wages aggregating $28.80 per week. Nor is there any dispute that Consolidated Underwriters carries the workmen's compensation insurance for T. J. Moss Tie Co., Inc.

The record shows that the duties of plaintiff were to handle cross ties and slabs of lumber which weighed from one hundred to two hundred pounds each. On the date alleged plaintiff accidentally slipped and fell upon his back across a roller bed. The accident occurred on a Saturday and he was taken to his home where he remained until the following Monday at which time he reported to the mill for work. He testified that he could not perform his duties and that he was thereupon taken to the Many Sanitarium where Dr. S.F. Fraser had x-rays made of his injured back; that plaintiff was ordered to bed and remained in the hospital for about twelve days at the end of which time his back and body were placed in a plaster cast and he was allowed to return to his home. This cast was worn by plaintiff for a period of between three and four months.

Plaintiff is a white man thirty-one years of age with a tenth grade education. He was eligible for military service and was physically examined by the United States Army physicians during March, 1944 and was placed in classification 1-A under the Selective Service Act, and inducted into service on February 22, 1945, a little less than six months after the alleged injury. He was discharged from military service on December 12, 1945, after a service of nine months and twenty-one days. The plaintiff testified that he was classified as being fit only for limited service in the Army, but this fact is not disclosed by his discharge certificate or by the Separation Qualification Record which was issued at the time he received his discharge. The discharge certificate does not on its face show that plaintiff was discharged by reason of any physical disability and we gather from the record that Chance was mustered out of service for the reason that he had a wife and three children dependent upon him.

Upon returning from the service, plaintiff rejoined his family at Hornbeck, Louisiana, and he testified that he has never been able to return to any kind of work because of the injuries existing in his back. Both he and Mrs. Chance stated that he could not do any of the chores around their home and that on the few occasions when he attempted work around the house it was necessary for him to be confined to bed for a few days after each attempt. They further stated that it was necessary to hire help ill connection with the small vegetable patch which they operated.

As is usual in this type of back case, there is conflict in the expert medical testimony. Dr. S.F. Fraser testified that he made his first examination of plaintiff on September 7, 1944, and that he ordered plaintiff to be confined to bed in a hospital where he remained for twelve days; that during this period x-rays were made and plaintiff's back was placed in a rigid plaster cast; that plaintiff was then permitted to go to his home and was instructed to return to Dr. Fraser every fifteen days or *Page 21 so for further examination, but did not return to Dr. Fraser until December 5, 1944. Dr. Fraser testified that while Chance wore the plaster cast for something over one hundred days, it was unnecessary for him to have done so and that it was only through plaintiff's disobedience in not returning to the doctor's office as directed that the cast remained on his back for that period. Dr. Fraser stated that when the x-ray pictures were made he examined them before they were completely dry and that he was misled by his interpretation of the wet pictures that there was a "little mark across the transverse process of the first lumbar vertebrae" and that he assumed that Chance had cracked that transverse process, and that being of such opinion at the time he ordered plaintiff to bed and applied the cast. Dr Fraser testified that he later determined that his original impression was in error and that there was no fracture to plaintiff's back but that the difficulty resulted from a congenital extra joint and that if there was any deformity in plaintiff's back or spine it was caused from the congenital condition. On cross-examination the doctor stated that he also noticed a knot or swelling in the upper part of plaintiff's lumbar area and that he thought it was due to the bruise that plaintiff had sustained. In December, when Dr. Fraser last examined plaintiff he could detect no muscle spasms in the area of the back and although plaintiff complained of soreness he saw no reason for that condition to exist. The x-rays taken at that time according to Dr. Fraser showed no indication or evidence of a fracture. It was his opinion that the plaintiff was then able to return to his usual duties.

Dr. J.R. Brown stated that he first examined Chance on January 22, 1945, and in connection therewith had x-rays made. He found that the back presented some rigidity of the left lumbar muscles and that plaintiff was slow on movement forward, backward and upon rotation and complained of pain; that the only positive sign was that of twenty-two eosinophilis, which in common parlance is termed "hookworm." Dr. Brown again saw plaintiff on June 19, 1946 and he found some rigidity present in the muscles of the back, but he could not determine whether that condition was involuntary or was brought about by the voluntary contraction of the muscles. He also noticed' what he termed a congenital non-union of the right lateral process of the first lumbar vertebrae and also congenital deformities of the left and right lateral process of the third lumbar vertebrae. It was Dr. Brown's opinion that Chance was physically able to return to his employment.

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Anderson v. Tudor Construction Co.
281 So. 2d 817 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
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85 So. 2d 379 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
31 So. 2d 19, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chance-v-t-j-moss-tie-co-lactapp-1947.