Cordray v. Standard Oil Co.

121 So. 220, 9 La. App. 458, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 328
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1928
DocketNo. 3418
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 121 So. 220 (Cordray v. Standard Oil 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
Cordray v. Standard Oil Co., 121 So. 220, 9 La. App. 458, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 328 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

STATEMENT OF THE CASE.

REYNOLDS, J.

Plaintiff alleges that he was employed by defendant in operating machinery in drilling a well for oil,. and that in the course of his employment it became his duty

“To stoop and lift a heavy ‘sheave wheel,’ weighing approximately 200 pounds, around which a cable runs, which caused petitioner to have to brace himself against a pole and lift the heavy implement, while the cable was around it, and because of a sudden slip of petitioner’s foot, or a jerk of the ‘sheave wheel’ which petitioner was lifting, and because of the sudden, severe and heavy strain upon petitioner, his intestine, known as the duodenum, was torn from petitioner’s stomach at or in the region of the pyloric orifice or opening at the lower extremity of the stomach; that said injury caused immediate and excruciating pain to petitioner, and necessitated his calling an attendant for relief at once, which he did, whereupon petitioner immediately collapsed, and it took several hours to revive him at a hospital later”

He further alleges that he was earning $5.00 a day or $35.00 a week and that in consequence of his injury he is permanently totally disabled to do work of any reasonable character.

He asked for judgment for $20.00 a week for 400 weeks, the first installment to be decreed due August 17, 1927, with legal interest on each payment from its maturity until paid, and for the further sum of $250.00 for medical, surgical and hospital expenses.

Defendant admitted that the plaintiff was in its employ and was earning the wages alleged, but denied all of the other allegations of his petition.

On these issues the case was tried and there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $20.00 a week for 26 weeks, the first payment being decreed due August 17, 1927, and for $10.00 a week for an additional period of 26 weeks, the first payment being decreed due February 17, 1928, with legal interest on each installment from its maturity until paid, and for the further sum of $250.00 for medical, surgical and hospital expenses, with legal interest thereon from the date of the judgment, and for all costs of suit, and the defendant appealed.

[460]*460OPINION.

The record presents for our decision a question of fact, namely, was the perforation of plaintiff’s duodenum caused by

“A sudden slip of petitioner’s foot, or a jerk of the ‘sheave wheel’ which petitioner was lifting, and because of the sudden, severe and heavy strain upon petitioner”

as petitioner avers, or by the sloughing off of the tissue of the intestine in the regular course and as a natural result of the progress of an ulcer of the duodenum from which petitioner was suffering, as contended by defendant.

Plaintiff was employed by defendant in connection with the operation of a well-drilling rig, and he testified:

“Q. Mr. Cordray, what were you doing on the day that you claim you were hurt?
“A. We was lifting pipe — tubing.
“Q. Well, explain to the court how you did that?
“A. You have to string up a block— string up three lines and slip the pipe up. You could not pick it up with one line; you have to string with three, so there would be strength; it would be strong.
“Q. Well, does that necessitate your going up on the derrick?'
“A. Yes, sir; you have to.
“Q. Why?
“A. You pick the sheave .up to cross the line to string up.
“Q. Pick up the sheave?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. How high was this 'sheave wheel on this day, above the bottom of the derrick?
“A. Prom the derrick floor to the top?
“Q. Yes.
“A. I think it was about sixty-four feet; double derrick.
“Q. Well, what were you doing at the time you say this accident happened?
“A. I had went up there to change the line back to string the block.
“Q. Who, if any one, went with you to assist you?
“A. Kilpatrick.
“Q. Well, in doing that work, just what did you have to do?
“A. We had to pick our line up and tie it to the gin pole and then we had to pick our sheave out of the crown block and turn our line back.
* # *
“Q. How large a wheel, and approximately what did that sheave wheel weigh?
“A. It is a pretty large wheel. In my estimation it weighs something like two hundred pounds.
* * *
“Q. Well, when you went to pick up that, or did pick it up, or endeavored to pick it up, what, if anything, • happened to you, what did you experience?
“A. Well, when I picked up that sheave, it seemed that Kilpatrick didn’t make an effort to pick it up and I went ahead and picked it up — it seemed like something grabbed me in my side.
“Q. In the right side of your stomach?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What did you do, immediately after that?
“A. Right after that, I came down the derrick.
“Q. What did you do then?
“A. I walked over to the brake with the thought that maybe it would quit, and it didn’t, and I asked Atwood to take the brake, that I was getting sick and cramping. I went out and taken a drink of water, and when I did, I could not get up, C was cramping so I couldn’t move.”

He further testifies that this occurred about 11 o’clock in the forenoon and that he lay around until about 7 o’clock in the evening of the same day, when he was taken to a sanitarium and there he was operated on the same night.

Doctor C. O. Woolf testified that he was the -surgeon in charge of the sanitarium to which plaintiff was brought and that he operated on him, and that:

“Q. Detail, doctor, what you found the patient suffering with at the time?
“A. He had a large ruptured duodenal ulcer.
“Q. To what extent, doctor, had the duodenum been ruptured?
[461]*461„ “A. There was a .hole in the base of the ulcer about large enough to admit a lead pencil.
“Q. The portion of the human anatomy-known as the duodenum is the extended lower region of the stomach?
“A. It is the first part of the intestines just below the end of the stomach. This was about an inch from the pylorus.
“Q. What did you do, doctor? What did you do? State what you did?
“A. I resected the ulcer; closed that opening, and did a gastrojejunostomy.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
121 So. 220, 9 La. App. 458, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordray-v-standard-oil-co-lactapp-1928.