Clements v. Liberty Mutual Insurance

85 So. 2d 675, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 617
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 1956
DocketNo. 4129
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 85 So. 2d 675 (Clements v. Liberty Mutual Insurance) 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
Clements v. Liberty Mutual Insurance, 85 So. 2d 675, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 617 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is a workmen’s compensation suit arising out of accidental injuries received by the plaintiff on October 22, 1951, at which time the plaintiff was working for the defendant’s assured, J. A. Myers, in a [676]*676stump wood operation. The petition alleges that on said day while performing duties arising out of and within the course and scope of his employment, i. e., while loading stump wood onto a truck, a piece of wood fell upon petitioner’s right hand and thumb which resulted in the amputation of the thumb. It is alleged that in addition to the amputation of the thumb, the plaintiff suffered neuroma and hone spur at the site of the amputation as well as injury to the radial nerve. It is further alleged that in addition to being entitled to benefits for total permanent disability, that the defendant, notwithstanding proper notice and demand, had arbitrarily and without probable cause, failed to pay the compensation benefits due, and is, therefore, liable to a 12% penalty as well as for attorney fees in the amount of $750 under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 22:658.

The answer of the defendant denies that plaintiff sustained injuries to his hand and thumb on the day alleged but avers that compensation benefits' in the amount of $30 per week were paid from October 22, 1951, to about January 15, 1955. It is averred that the plaintiff has, since long before January, 1955, been able to return to work and perform all the duties of his previous employment. Alternatively, it is pleaded that should the court find that plaintiff did sustain injuries on October 22, 1951, and that he was disabled as a result of same, that defendant is entitled to a credit for compensation and medical expenses heretofore paid, the latter amounting to the sum of $474.38. A supplemental and amending answer was subsequently filed which alternatively set forth that if the plaintiff is disabled as the result of the alleged accident, and if the disability is due to the presence of bone spur and/or neuroma at the amputation site, that then and in that event such bone spur and/or neuroma can be removed by a relatively simple operation which would not endanger plaintiff’s life or cause any undue suffering. The amended answer then goes on to specifically tender such operation, to be performed by a doctor of plaintiff’s choosing at defendant’s expense, and alleges that compensation benefits in the amount of $30 per week from January 8, 1955, through the period of plaintiff’s recuperation from the operation, will be paid.

Following trial on the merits in the court below, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff awarding him benefits at the rate of $30 per week beginning October 22, 1951, for and during the period of his permanent partial disability, not to exceed 300 weeks, less the compensation previously paid by defendant at the rate of $30 per week from October 22, 1951, through January 8, 1955. The judgment also ordered the plaintiff, within 60 days after entry of the judgment, to submit to an operation by a doctor of his own choosing, said operation to consist of the removal of bone spur and/or neuroma at the site of the amputation of his right thumb, said operation to be at defendant’s expense and upon plaintiff’s failure to submit to said operation within 60 days from the entry of the judgment, his right to compensation benefits.to cease. Plaintiff’s demand for penalties and attorney fees was denied.

Although we cannot find in the transcript, either in the minutes or otherwise, a motion and order for appeal, we do find at page 146 of the transcript a motion suggesting to the court that a motion for a devolutive appeal had theretofore been granted in behalf of the plaintiff and the devolutive appeal bond fixed at $350. This motion goes on to suggest that the plaintiff had theretofore been granted leave to prosecute the suit in forma pauperis and therefore the order fixing the devolutive appeal bond at $350 is set aside and plaintiff granted leave to prosecute his appeal in forma pauperis. On appeal, the plaintiff assigns as specification of errors on the ■part of the court below, the failure to award him benefits for total permanent disability and the failure to award him penalties and attorney fees. The appeal has been answered by the defendant who alleges that the judgment appealed from is correct except insofar as compensation benefits were allowed. Alternatively, it is set forth that should this court conclude that plaintiff ia entitled to compensation benefits, the judg« ment appealed from should be affirmed.

[677]*677In their brief filed with this court, the attorneys for the plaintiff vigorously contend that the record shows the latter to be totally and permanently disabled rather than permanently and partially disabled as found by the trial court. The record discloses without question that the plaintiff is presently totally and permanently disabled and entitled to the sum of $30 per week. This fact is made obvious by the testimony of Dr. George B. Briel, an orthopedic specialist who examined the plaintiff in both 1952 and 1955. At the time of his first examination, on June 19, 1952, Dr. Briel found the following:

“This man had an amputation of the right thumb at about the level of the metacarpal phalangeal joint. He had an area of hypoesthesia and anesthesia which suggests destruction of the lateral branch of the radial nerve in the hand. The area of tenderness and the pain up the arm were due to pressure on the end of the branch of the median nerve to the thumb, probably due to a neuroma at the cut end of the nerve.
“Q. Well, assuming that at the time of the accident he was engaged in shooting and loading stumps, which work included drilling holes in the •stumps with a large auger and chopping of stumps with a large axe, a six pound axe, loading heavy pieces of stump wood into a truck and other work of similar nature in the stump wood business, as of the date of your examination on June 19, 1952, what was your opinion as to his ability to do that type of work?
“A. I do not believe he could handle that type of work with only the four fingers because he had no grasp in his hand.”

Testifying with respect to his examination of May 27, 1955, this doctor reached the following conclusion:

“Q. What was your conclusion as of the date of this examination?
“A. I was of the opinion as I had been on the previous examination, that this man still had evidence there of tenderness over the stump and still showed evidence of irritation probably of that spur and of a possible neuroma of the median nerve.
“Q. Was your opinion the same as to his ability to perform his usual type of work?
“A. Yes. I didn’t feel that the man could do any type of work' ivith that hand because in my examination when I tried to force things into his hand at that point, as •soon as you touched the points which I have described as being tender his hand would back off from the object and I do not believe, that he could grasp anything because of the tenderness'-.which was present at that point.” (Italics ours.) •

While it appears that the plaintiff was either examined by or treated, at the defendant’s' requést, by three other doctors, none of these gentlemen were called upon to testify. A review of the lay ■ testimony with regard to plaintiff’s disability would not only be lengthy but .would' add nothing to the case in view of Dr. Briel’s testimony as set out above.

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Bluebook (online)
85 So. 2d 675, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clements-v-liberty-mutual-insurance-lactapp-1956.