Daniel H. Tuttle v. American Oil Company

292 F.2d 123, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4136, 1961 A.M.C. 1806
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 1961
Docket8241
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 292 F.2d 123 (Daniel H. Tuttle v. American Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel H. Tuttle v. American Oil Company, 292 F.2d 123, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4136, 1961 A.M.C. 1806 (4th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

BOREMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Daniel H. Tuttle, a seaman, against the defendant, The American Oil Company, for maintenance and cure in the amount of $16,360. It is urged that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of Tuttle’s entitlement to maintenance and cure subsequent to June 5, 1956.

While working as a member of the crew of the defendant’s ship at the Port of Aruba on July 4, 1955, Tuttle sustained injuries including broken ribs, bruises and injury to his back. He was *124 assisting in making fast a gangway when it fell to the wharf carrying him with it.

This action was commenced on March 22, 1957. Tuttle claimed the accident was due to defendant’s negligence and asked damages under the Jones Act, 46 U. S.C.A. § 688, and also for maintenance and cure. By agreement of court and counsel, the question of maintenance and cure was reserved for decision by the court on the basis of testimony to be presented at the jury trial of the claim under the Jones Act. On January 29, 1960, the jury found negligence on the part of the defendant and that plaintiff’s damages amounted to $28,333.34 but, because the accident was fifty per cent due to Tuttle’s contributory negligence, the verdict should be for only $14,166.67. The plaintiff moved for a new trial on the ground of inadequacy of the verdict, which motion was denied and he appealed to this court but the appeal was later abandoned. On December 8, 1960, the court awarded maintenance and cure computed as follows:

There was evidence to show that, following the accident, Tuttle received treatment in Aruba and, upon his vessel’s return to the United States, he was a patient in the Marine Hospital in Baltimore for a short while and then in the Marine Hospital at Savannah, Georgia. The broken ribs healed without difficulty but the plaintiff was troubled by pain in his back which improved under treatment until he was discharged on September 20, 1955, as fit for duty. However, since he still complained of his back he was readmitted to the hospital on November 22, 1955, and was treated until January 5, 1956, when he was again discharged as fit for duty. The plaintiff offered the testimony of two of the doctors on the staff of the Savannah Marine Hospital, Dr. Cameron, a surgeon, and Dr. .Amburgey, an orthopedist to whom the plaintiff was referred for examination. Dr. Cameron said that Tuttle had a lumbo-sacral strain which was treated by physiotherapy and rest on a hard mattress. X-rays were made. Dr. Cameron found no indication of a disc injury nor did Dr. Amburgey. Dr. Amburgey used the term, “lumbar fasciatis,” rather than “lumbo-sacral strain.”

On June 5, 1956, Tuttle was examined by Dr. Siegling, a leading orthopedist of Charleston, South Carolina. This was at the instance of the defendant shipowner acting through counsel. Dr. Siegling testified that Tuttle’s only complaint at that time appeared to be stiffness and discomfort in his back and difficulty in lifting more than fifty pounds and that, “careful physical orthopedic examination revealed no evidence of physical trouble.” There was no muscle spasm, no limp, no> atrophy and reflexes were normal. The X-rays showed an entirely normal back and spine. There was no indication of disc injury. Dr. Siegling thought Tuttle to be thoroughly fit to resume work as a seaman.

*125 In June 1957, some three months after the institution of this action and about a year after Dr. Siegling’s examination, Tuttle, still complaining of his back and legs, was sent by his own counsel to Dr. Manganiello, a neurosurgeon of Augusta, Georgia. This doctor found spasm of muscles of the low back, slight interlineal tenderness over the base of the spine, weakness in the left foot and bilateral numbness from the knee down. Dr. Manganiello determined that there must be a herniated disc, that Tuttle should have a myelogram done and that he probably needed an operation. The myelogram was not performed until October 31,1957. Dr. Manganiello concluded that it disclosed a herniated disc and recommended “that the patient have an excision of his disc with a hemilaminectomy and a fusion” which, in his opinion, would greatly reduce the existing disability. At the time of the trial and the entry of judgment for maintenance and cure, no operation had been performed. Dr. Manganiello did not see Tuttle again until January 1960, a few days before the jury trial. Except for an alleged mental degeneration, the doctor observed no further change of condition other than some slight diminution of ankle reflexes. On motion of the defendant, Tuttle was examined on January 18, 1960, by Dr. Smith, also a neurosurgeon of Augusta, Georgia. Dr. Smith found Tuttle limping, rotating his left leg out and using a cane, and complaining of pain in the back and pain and numbness in the left leg but found no symptoms indicating a herniated disc and testified that Tuttle’s behavior during the examination was “the usual pattern for an individual that is not completely acquainted with the anatomy to simulate sensory findings or numbness. It is the usual pattern for a simulation.”

The plaintiff himself was not produced as a witness. There was testimony to the effect that he was mentally disturbed although it does not affirmatively appear from the record that his failure to testify was due to mental incapacity. Dr. Johnson, a psychiatrist to whom Tuttle had been referred by Dr. Manganiello for mental examination, testified that Tuttle was suffering from delusions, that he had severe paranoid reactions which condition would progress and “deteriorate into the condition that is commonly called paranoid schizophrenic.” He further testified that the plaintiff had a persecution complex, that he was mentally disturbed to the-extent that he was then totally and permanently disabled and unfit to work as a seaman. There was testimony to the effect that his mental disturbance could have resulted from his injury.

Dr. Ackerman testified that he had been the Tuttle family physician for years and that he had known the plaintiff since childhood; that he knew of the back injury and had prescribed medicine to afford the plaintiff relief from pain in his back and legs since the accident. Dr. Ackerman observed a change in plaintiff’s personality and mental condition, stating “for the last few months he is gradually getting worse.”

The brief of the defendant shipowner contains the following:

“There appears to be no dispute between the parties as to the applicable law in this case. Tuttle, having been injured in the service of the ship, became entitled under the ancient admiralty law to maintenance and cure and wages to the end of the voyage. There is no claim that wages were not duly paid. While it does not appear in the record, it was agreed between counsel that maintenance was payable at the rate of eight dollars per day. Tuttle was entitled to such maintenance and to necessary medical and hospital treatment until he was cured of his injuries or, if a cure was not possible, until he reached maximum improvement.”

We find no fault with this statement of the principles to be applied.

But the defendant contends that there is a sharp disagreement as to the facts and that certain findings of the District Court are not supported by the evidence. *126

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Bluebook (online)
292 F.2d 123, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4136, 1961 A.M.C. 1806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-h-tuttle-v-american-oil-company-ca4-1961.