Collins v. Armour Co.

11 So. 2d 621
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1942
DocketNo. 6553.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 So. 2d 621 (Collins v. Armour 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
Collins v. Armour Co., 11 So. 2d 621 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Plaintiff instituted this suit under the Workmen's Compensation Act (No. 20 of 1914, as amended) seeking to recover 65% of his weekly wages for a period not to exceed 400 weeks. He contends that he is totally and permanently disabled from performing any work of a reasonable character due to an injury he received in an accident arising in the course and scope of his employment.

Defendant admits the occurrence of the act and that plaintiff was injured and that the case falls under the Workmen's Compensation Act, but denies that the plaintiff was disabled for more than ten weeks, the period for which it paid compensation.

The lower court rejected plaintiff's demands and he is prosecuting this appeal.

The admitted facts of the case are that plaintiff was receiving a weekly pay of $12 per week and if he is entitled to compensation it should be at the rate of $7.80 per week; that he was injured by an accident arising out of and in the course and scope of his employment; that the doctor and hospital bills incurred during the ten-week period following the accident were paid by defendant and that plaintiff was paid $78, or ten weeks' compensation. *Page 622

Defendant is a wholesale packing company. In the cellar or storage room of said plant are located the machinery and freezing unit in the operation of which ammonia is used. Underneath the cellar floor there is a sump tank approximately four feet in diameter and seven or eight feet deep, the top of which is flush with the cellar floor. The top is covered with a steel cover on which sits a pump that extends down into the tank and has a motor on top which automatically operates the pump when the fluid in the tank reaches a certain stage and pumps the fluid through a pipe into the sewer. The pipe leading to the sewer has a gate valve, or butterfly valve, which prevents the sewer water from coming back into the tank.

The tank is used as a drainage tank for the purpose of collecting the water and grease on the floor, or whatever one might get in washing the floor, and for the purpose of collecting that water before it gets to the sewer. The meat and other produce stored in the packing plant causes much grease and other substance to collect on the floor and requires that the floor be scrubbed with some kind of washing powder to cleanse it. All of this goes into the tank and is finally pumped from the tank to the sewer. If any ammonia used in the freezing unit should get on the floor it of course would be washed into the tank and if any substance or object should prevent the tight closing of the butterfly valve in the pipe leading to the sewer, there would be nothing to prevent the gas from the sewer coming into the tank.

On October 9, 1941, plaintiff and another employee who had been assisting the traveling mechanic of defendant corporation in overhauling and putting in shape the refrigerators, elevators and all other mechanical equipment in the plant, were ordered to bail out the sump tank. The process used was a bucket attached to a rope. The sliding opening in the cover or top of the tank through which one could enter the tank was approximately one-third the size of the cover. There was a ladder set on the bottom of the tank extending to the top opening. Plaintiff entered the tank and was standing on the ladder where he could dip the bucket in the fluid and his fellow employee would then hoist the bucket by the rope and empty it into a barrel which had been provided for that purpose.

Plaintiff was a small man and while performing this work his head was below the top of the tank. He began this particular job soon after one P.M., and after approximately fifteen minutes his fellow laborer called to him to come on with the bucket. Receiving no reply he looked to see what was the matter and discovered plaintiff still standing erect on the ladder with one hand grasping it, his body perfectly stiff and, as he said, — "He had a peculiar look on his face". Help was called for by the employee who discovered plaintiff's condition and he was pulled out of the tank and placed on the floor on some sacks. Plaintiff was perfectly stiff and unconscious. At approximately one-thirty P.M. the Manager of the plant returned from lunch and suggested that artificial respiration be given plaintiff and at the same time had an ambulance called. The artificial respiration was successful in starting plaintiff to breathe again and soon thereafter he was raised to his feet again but could not stand. He was carried to the outside where he sat until an ambulance came. Just how long a period of time elapsed before the ambulance came is not shown and plaintiff was carried to the sanitarium. The record does not show at what hour he entered the sanitarium.

Plaintiff testified he did not regain consciousness until he was entering the sanitarium. Some of the defense witnesses say he was conscious before he left for the sanitarium and other witnesses say he had limbered up some before he left for the sanitarium. There is no evidence of anything plaintiff said before leaving for the sanitarium that would indicate he had fully regained consciousness. He remained in the hospital for seven days under the treatment of a physician chosen and paid for by defendant and was then sent home. When plaintiff was conscious at the sanitarium he complained of dizziness and severe pains in his chest, stomach and between his shoulder blades. He states that when he coughs a severe pain strikes him and cuts his breath off. He has continuously complained of these pains since leaving the hospital and at the time of trial his cough had grown much worse — this was four months and sixteen days after the accident. It is certain that plaintiff has not performed any labor of any kind since the accident and claims he is not physically able to do so. He has been confined to his bed on several occasions and called in physicians to give him something to ease his pain. Plaintiff walks from his home to *Page 623 the business section when necessary but always using a stick or cane. A number of his neighbors and friends testified that plaintiff was unable to do any kind of work and several of them testified that they had gone to his home, cut wood and made fires for him to keep warm because he was unable to do so for himself. Plaintiff's only means of livelihood was the help of his mother with whom he lived and small amounts of money his friends either gave him or loaned him. His mother testified that he did not sleep well at night and often would get up and come into her room complaining of severe pain.

Only one witness claims to have ever seen plaintiff away from home after nightfall since the accident and he was a negro who was paid by defendant to watch plaintiff for the purpose of testifying in the case. He was most exact in his testimony, giving the exact hour and minute where he saw plaintiff, what he was doing and those he was with, but did not produce anyone to corroborate his testimony. Such testimony would be dangerous indeed to consider in attempting to render justice in any case.

Plaintiff either has been totally disabled since the accident or he is the most astute malingerer that has ever appeared before this court. The evidence would not justify us in finding him to be a malingerer. The record shows that he is approximately forty years of age and has worked fairly regular all his life. We are convinced plaintiff is totally disabled and the only question now is, — Was the accident the cause of his disability?

Defendant does not contend there was any other cause for disability but stands on the theory that plaintiff is not disabled and has not been since ten weeks after the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 2d 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-armour-co-lactapp-1942.