Cripps v. Urania Lumber Company

213 So. 2d 353, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4589
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 29, 1968
Docket2414
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 213 So. 2d 353 (Cripps v. Urania Lumber Company) 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
Cripps v. Urania Lumber Company, 213 So. 2d 353, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4589 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

213 So.2d 353 (1968)

Charlie B. CRIPPS, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
URANIA LUMBER COMPANY, Ltd., Defendant and Appellee.

No. 2414.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

July 29, 1968.
Rehearing Denied August 20, 1968.

*354 Garrett & Ryland, by Donald M. Garrett, Alexandria, and Long & Sleeth, by Lewis R. Sleeth, Jena, for plaintiff-appellant.

Gaharan & Richey, by L. W. Richey, Jena, for defendant-appellee.

Before TATE, HOOD and CULPEPPER, J.

CULPEPPER, Judge.

The plaintiff, Charlie B. Cripps, seeks workmen's compensation benefits for total and permanent disability allegedly resulting from an accident while working for the defendant, Urania Lumber Company, Ltd. From an adverse judgment, plaintiff appeals.

There can be little dispute that when workmen's compensation payments were stopped eight weeks after the accident of July 14, 1965, plaintiff was disabled by mental and emotional symptoms. The substantial issue is whether these mental problems are causally related to the accident. Defendant contends plaintiff suffered with pre-existing mental disease and that the present symptoms were neither caused nor aggravated by the accident. Plaintiff contends the accident caused the present disability.

The facts show that plaintiff, a white male, was born in 1931 on a small farm in north Louisiana. He continually failed in school. At the age of about sixteen he dropped out, after completing only the third grade, and worked on his father's farm. Tests show that he has an I.Q. of about 61, which is marginal retardation.

In about 1957, at the age of twentysix, he obtained employment as a laborer for International Paper Company, where he worked for two years. While working for International, he allegedly sustained an injury, a strain of the muscles of the diaphragm. Dr. Bernard Doughty, a general practitioner of Jena, Louisiana, reported that the muscle strain healed, but nervous tension from the accident aggravated a pre-existing "severe psycho-neurotic" condition resulting in a disabling psycho-neurosis. Plaintiff's compensation claim against International was settled for $2,500.

A short while thereafter plaintiff returned to work on his father's farm. Then later he re-entered the common labor market and held various jobs, such as roughnecking, hauling pulpwood, working in service stations and general saw mill work.

In September of 1964 he obtained employment as a laborer for the defendant, Urania Lumber Company. A pre-employment physical by the company physician, Dr. F. A. Thomas, approved plaintiff for work as a laborer.

During the ensuing period of about one year that plaintiff worked for Urania, he sustained three accidents. The first was on October 1, 1964. He was working at the "green chain" when a board struck his head over the left eye. The wound was sutured by Dr. Thomas and plaintiff lost only one-half a days' work.

The second accident was on June 28, 1965. A board fell from over-head and *355 struck him behind his left ear. This laceration was sutured by Dr. T. L. Tannehill, and plaintiff again returned to work.

The last accident, on which this workmen's compensation suit is based, occurred on July 14, 1965. A 1" × 8" board, fourteen feet long, fell on plaintiff while in a stopped position, striking across the left part of his head, his neck and his shoulder. A cut on the back of his head was sutured by Dr. Tannehill and he was released from the clinic but did not return to work.

After continued complaints, during the next five days, of pain in his neck and shoulder, he was hospitalized, from July 24 through July 29, 1965, in the Urania Hospital. The treatment was traction and drugs for pain. He was again hospitalized from August 3, 1965 to August 6, 1965. Then the physicians in Urania referred plaintiff to Dr. C. W. Lowery, an orthopedic surgeon in Alexandria. This specialist examined plaintiff on August 11, 1965 and diagnosed a mild cervical strain with "exaggeration of symptoms" and predicted recovery in about four weeks. Dr. Lowery thought most of plaintiff's trouble was due to apprehension and tension and he prescribed librium and a cervipillow for sleep and rest.

Apparently plaintiff did not see any doctors during the next few days. On about August 17, 1965, at his home in Urania where he lived with his wife and two children, plaintiff became violent. He tore up the furniture and other family possessions. Mrs. Cripps called the sheriff and finally plaintiff was committed by the coroner to Central Louisiana State Hospital in Pineville on about August 18, 1965, where he remained for six weeks.

On his release from Central Louisiana State Hospital, plaintiff apparently went to Dr. D. L. Trax, a general practitioner in Jena. Actually, Dr. Trax had been plaintiff's family physician before the accidents in question here. This doctor's testimony is confused as to the dates on which he saw plaintiff, but it is safe to say he examined plaintiff after his discharge from Central Louisiana State Hospital and was of the opinion that due to complaints of headaches and the history of head injuries he could possibly have a brain injury. Accordingly, Dr. Trax referred plaintiff to Dr. Phillip Bonn, a neurosurgeon in Shreveport.

Dr. Bonn examined plaintiff on November 17, 1965. He ordered an EEG which was reported as "mildly abnormal", showing dysrhythmia, i.e., slow, diffuse or misfiring of the brain. On the basis of the history, a clinical examination and the EEG, Dr. Bonn was of the opinion that plaintiff was disabled by headaches. He said the man's nervous condition and the dysrhythmia of the brain was enough to explain the headaches. However, not being a psychiatrist, he would express no opinion in this field. Also, he would express no opinion as to whether the dysrhythmia preexisted the accident or was caused by it. He was of the definite opinion that there was no subdural hematoma or other residual contusion to the brain.

Dr. Charles Armistead, a psychiatrist and neurologist of Shreveport, prepared and read the EEG for Dr. Bonn. Dr. Armistead testified the EEG was "mildly abnormal", but there was no evidence of subdural hematoma and no way to tell from the EEG whether the slight brain abnormality pre-existed the accident. He said the condition could be congenital or could result from trauma, infection or other such causes.

In January of 1966 plaintiff was admitted to the Huey P. Long Charity Hospital in Pineville with complaints of headaches and nervousness. The attending physician there decided to send plaintiff to the Charity Hospital in New Orleans for further study and in connection with this transfer wrote a letter in which he summarized plaintiff's condition as follows:

"In essence this is a 34 year old, white male with a past history of a head trauma who in all likelihood is suffering *356 from post traumatic neurosis, however, because of the history of abnormal EEGs in face of a cerebral spinal fluid protein[1] elevated to 63 mg%, he is being sent to Charity Hospital for further evaluation (i.e. angiograms, brain scan).

Plaintiff was in Charity Hospital in New Orleans only one night when he "deserted" before any tests could be run. He said he just got upset and left.

At the request of his attorney, plaintiff was examined by Dr. Giles R. Morin, a psychiatrist of Lake Charles, on March 9th and 18th of 1966.

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Bluebook (online)
213 So. 2d 353, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cripps-v-urania-lumber-company-lactapp-1968.