Daly v. LE Myers Const. Co.

419 So. 2d 512, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 7876
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 1982
Docket14902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 419 So. 2d 512 (Daly v. LE Myers Const. 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
Daly v. LE Myers Const. Co., 419 So. 2d 512, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 7876 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

419 So.2d 512 (1982)

James Richard DALY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
L. E. MYERS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 14902.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

August 17, 1982.
Rehearing Denied September 24, 1982.

Roland V. McKneely, Jr., Bossier City, for plaintiff-appellant.

Mayer, Smith & Roberts by Alex F. Smith, Jr., Shreveport, for defendant-appellee.

Before PRICE, MARVIN and FRED W. JONES, JJ.

MARVIN, Judge.

In this worker's compensation action, the trial court awarded benefits under LRS 23:1221(4)(p) for serious permanent disfigurement about the face. The claimant appeals the judgment, contending that he is totally and permanently disabled because he can work only in substantial pain and seeks attorney fees and penalties, which were denied below. We amend and affirm. Jacks v. Banister Pipelines America, 418 So.2d 524 (La.1982).

Claimant had been employed about five years as a journeyman lineman by a utility construction company when the accident occurred the day after the tornado struck *513 Bossier City on December 5, 1978. Claimant was working above the ground in a hydraulic basket lift doing repair and clean up work near a bank of transformers. As claimant was sawing a twisted and partially broken utility pole it abruptly snapped and struck claimant across the face. Plaintiff was rendered unconscious and sustained a deep laceration of his left eyelid and cheek, a deviated septum, and a fracture of the cartilage of the nose.

Claimant was initially hospitalized for five days. His treating opthalmologist referred him to a plastic surgeon to correct an "ectropian" (an eversion caused by the scar on the eyelid that affects the function and lubrication of the lid against the globe of the eye). The plastic surgeon discovered the deviated septum and nose fracture and surgically corrected them when the other surgery was performed on April 22, 1979.

On July 5, 1979, the opthalmologist released claimant to return to work. Claimant sought and obtained a higher paying job as an "inside" electrician.[1] He worked at this job for eight months until March 5, 1980, when the job terminated because of economic conditions.

Claimant last saw his opthalmologist on March 19, 1979. The plastic surgeon referred claimant to a neurologist who saw claimant in June and October 1979, and on March 10, April 21, and May 30, 1980. The neurologist testified that claimant complained of daily headaches, some lightheadedness, and blurring of vision. Claimant took Tylenol with codeine, and later took other drugs such as Elavil and Midrin that were prescribed by the neurologist for pain and to induce sleep.

Claimant's complaints of headaches and dizziness were generally corroborated by two neighbors and by his foreman who supervised claimant for four months of the eight month period claimant worked as an inside electrician. The foreman testified that claimant's work did not require much physical strain, but that the mental strain of correctly installing cable that would carry high voltage was "really great". The foreman said that "once or twice during the day [the claimant] would be [seen] holding his head or leaning back with his eyes closed and [that claimant] had complained about headaches and sometimes dizziness... Sometimes [claimant] would start to work and complain about a headache or something like that and go on home, and a few times [claimant] would call and say that he would be unable to make [work] because of a headache." The foreman added, "whenever these headaches would get to a point to where [claimant] couldn't go on... he would stop and wait until the pain subsided and then he would ... finish up but ... would lag behind the other men..." The foreman explained that some of the work required the men to be 35-40 feet off the ground and that "you had to have real good balance and if ... you ... had any kind of history [of dizziness] then I wouldn't send anybody up there like that... if we couldn't move them to a different crew where they weren't doing high work we would ... have to lay them off."

For another employer, claimant worked for about 3½ weeks renovating and cleaning out a refinery reactor after his employment as an inside electrician ended. He was not employed at the time of the trial. Claimant complained that his daily headaches grew to such severity two or three days each week that he became dizzy and found it necessary to rest and take the prescribed medication to gain relief. Medical testimony relates the headaches to the trauma of the accident and predicts that the headaches will abate with time.

During the four months preceding the trial in September 1980, claimant sought work every week through his union hall by signing the lineman's book for work "out of classification".

We are thus presented with a claimant who worked nine of the fourteen months between his release to return to work and the trial of the case and whose claims of *514 substantial pain are corroborated by medical and lay testimony.

Total disability, whether permanent or temporary, is "disability ... to engage in any gainful occupation ..." § 1221(1), (2). Arguably, the claimant could be classified under lenient standards as totally disabled because he works in substantial pain. See Malone-Johnson §§ 276-277 and cases cited and discussed therein such as Phillips v. Dresser Engineering Co., 351 So.2d 304 (La. App. 3d Cir. 1977), writ denied. That authority cautions us, however, that this is probably the type of case which the legislature specifically intended to exclude from the total disability classification. Malone-Johnson, § 277 at p. 629. As suggested therein, the oddlot concept of classification, when coupled with the partial disability subsection, is appropriate to afford some relief to a claimant in such a situation and who is at a disadvantage in the competitive labor market. §§ 276-277.

Partial disability, as defined in § 1221(3), is disability "to perform the duties in which he was customarily engaged when injured or duties of the same or similar character... by which he was fitted by education, training, and experience."

We cannot fault the trial court, however, for awarding benefits under the specific loss-disfigurement subsection, § 1221(4)(p). In Jacks v. Banister Pipelines America, 418 So.2d 524 (La.1982), the trial court, affirmed by the court of appeal, awarded benefits for permanent partial disability. The same injury caused the permanent loss of vision in the employee's right eye. The employee lost three weeks of work following the January 1979 accident but continued to work thereafter essentially in the same capacity as before for the same and other employers at the same or higher wages. The supreme court approved the award for permanent partial disability and, "to assure that the employee is permitted to recover under whichever provision [specific loss or partial disability] affords him greater compensation", held that the employee "should be awarded compensation for the specific loss as a minimum, with reservation of his right to recover under the partial disability provision in the event it proves to be the more favorable." The decree of the supreme court, amending the judgment, was for "100 weeks of compensation according to the schedule for the specific loss ... and 350 weeks of partial disability compensation, subject to a credit for the portion of the compensation which has been paid."[2]

Here the evidence is uncontradicted that claimant has not been able to perform *515

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419 So. 2d 512, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 7876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daly-v-le-myers-const-co-lactapp-1982.