Corrales v. Travelers Insurance Co.

197 So. 2d 900, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5345
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1967
DocketNo. 6985
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 So. 2d 900 (Corrales v. Travelers Insurance 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
Corrales v. Travelers Insurance Co., 197 So. 2d 900, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5345 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

SARTAIN, Judge.

This case arose out of an automobile accident which occurred on December 4, 1962. The only issue presented on appeal is that of quantum. The trial judge awarded plaintiff-appellant the sum of $1,589.00, which included $1,500.00 for personal injuries.

Plaintiff appeals and contends that the trial judge erred in holding that plaintiff failed to prove that his ruptured disc and resulting laminectomy were caused by the accident of December 4, 1962. Alternatively, plaintiff asks that in the event the ruptured disc was not caused by the accident of December 4, 1962, that the award of $1,500.00 for pain and suffering be increased to $4,000.00.

Defendant answered the appeal urging the correctness of the decision of the district judge.

After this present suit was filed and before trial thereof, plaintiff was involved in a second accident on January 12, 1964. Suit on the second accident was filed on January 8, 1965, involving the same type of accident (rear-end), similar injuries, and the same insurer. The second suit was compromised before trial on the first accident. The trial judge found that as a result of the first accident, plaintiff sustained a lumbo-sacral sprain and awarded damages accordingly.

[901]*901The issue presented here as in the district court is one of fact and involves the evaluation of testimony of the various witnesses, giving to each such weight as good judgment and sound reasoning dictate. The trial judge’s opinion and his findings of fact under these circumstances are entitled to great weight and in the absence of manifest error must stand. We are favored with excellent and detailed written reasons for judgment, which in our opinion are eminently correct and fully supported by the record. Accordingly, we quote therefrom at length and with approval :

“But there is a serious issue over the extent of this liability as the principal injury for which Corrales is seeking to recover is a herniated vertebral disc, for which he underwent an operation, and, as he had a second automobile accident just prior to the operation Travelers contends that the herniation occurred as a result of the second accident, and not the first.
The events that give rise to the issue happened substantially as follows:
Corrales’ first collision was on December 4, 1962, at about 6:45 in the morning. Although he claims that his back, neck and body generally hurt him as a result of the accident, he went to work at about 8:30 A.M. and was able to do his work. He is a shipfitter and does lifting, stooping, welding and carries objects of considerable weight.
He continued to work regularly and did not see a doctor for his complaints until December 16, 1962, twelve days after the accident. He again saw the doctor twelve days later, on December 28th. The doctor is Dr. G. H. Kittredge of Morgan City, a general practitioner and Corrales’ family physician.
Dr. Kittredge diagnosed Corrales’ injury as a lumbo-sacral sprain. He found no evidence of a herniated disc or other serious back injury. He reached this conclusion as the result of hyperextension, inflexion and reflex tests of the lower extremities. He prescribed muscle relaxants and mild sedatives. On the last visit, he added micro-therm treatments. He thought that in two or three weeks Corrales’ pain would disappear.
Corrales kept on working and did not again see a doctor for his back for a long time.
However, he saw Dr. Kittredge on March 22 for the flu, on July 29, 30 and 31 for an infected wisdom tooth, and on December 30 for a cold, all in 1963. The doctor does not specifically recall that Corrales complained about his back on these visits. The next time Dr. Kittredge saw Cor-rales was on February 28,1964 to remove the stitches that were put in the disc operation.
On December 3, 1963 Corrales filed the within suit. But he had not yet been operated on for the disc. The claims for his personal injuries were $1,000.00 for pain at the time of the injury and for the first three or four days thereafter, and $10,000.00 for pain, suffering, mental anguish and humiliation due to pain in the back, neck, headaches and upset nerves for approximately twelve months.
After the operation, and on April 6, 1964, he increased the claims in an amended petition to $3,000.00 for the first claim and subdivided the other into several categories that total a much larger amount. These cover the operation.
But before he filed his suit, Corrales was referred to Dr. S. J. Russo, a general practitioner in Morgan City for evaluation. Dr. Russo gave Corrales the usual examination indicated for neurological injuries of the back, including an X-ray, and found no evidence of injury. The examination was conducted on March 6 and 22 in 1963. The results of the examination did not indicate the necessity for treatment or a myelogram as the rc-[902]*902flexes and other tests were found to be normal.
On January 6, 1964, ab.out one month after filing his. suif, and eleven months1 after the accident, Corrales was examined in New Orleans by .'Dr. Robert M..Rose, án orthopedic surgeon. D'r. Rose could not find any. evidence of a herniated disc but he did conclude that' Corrales had something the matter with his back. Certain of the tests produced some pain and Corrales told him that his back hurt him alm.ost constantly.- The doctor- suspected that Corrales was degenerating a disc.
Pie prescribed a muscle relaxant and gave Corrales another appointment.
The other appointment was fourteen days later, on January 20, 1964. The examination on. that day revealed strong evidence of a herniated disc. Corrales’ condition had deteriorated. The doctor asked him what he had been doing. He said he had been doing-a,-lot'of climbing.
The doctor ordered a myelogram. It showed that Corrales did have a herniated disc. Pie underwent an operation on January 3.0 and'was discharged from the .hospital on February 4, 1964. He went back to work about April 13.
Dr. Rose found adhesions to the nerve roots at the site of the disc and concluded that the herniation had occurred some time before the operation, but he could not say if it was' three weeks or three months. He thought it was longer than ten days.
Thro.ugh .his examinations .after the operation Dr. Rose found that Corrales had made á'normal recovery and that his condition 'was' about normál. ' He had no muscle spasms ' ,
Dr. Richard W.-Levy, a neurosurgeon, and Dr.' Richard M. Paddison, a neurologist, both of New Orleans^ examined Cor-rales for evaluation after the operation. Dr. Levy’s' examination was on June! 2 and Dr. Paddison’s was in September, 1964.
Both doctors believe that the results of the operation were good. They found that Corrales had almost a normal back, can and should work, but that he should not' lift' objects weighing more than 25’ to 30 pounds. The’ ranges .of tibe motions' of his back and legs, and his reflexes, were almost normal. They did not • find any evidence ' of nerve root’ compression. . '
The June examination revealed some' muscle spasm and tenderness at the, site of the operation.'.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 2d 900, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corrales-v-travelers-insurance-co-lactapp-1967.