Davenport v. Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp.

146 So. 2d 834, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2591
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 1962
DocketNo. 5647
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 146 So. 2d 834 (Davenport v. Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp.) 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
Davenport v. Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp., 146 So. 2d 834, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2591 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

REID, Judge.

Plaintiff, Walter Davenport, prosecutes this appeal from a judgment dismissing his suit to recover workmen’s compensation benefits against defendant, Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corporation. Plaintiff alleges he is totally and permanently disabled as a result of having sustained an injury to his back which caused the aggravation of a pre-existing back ailment, following an accident which occurred on May 16, 1960, while he was performing his duties as a common laborer in the course and scope of his employment with Defendant Corporation. Defendant denies plaintiff has sustained disabling injuries and alternatively pleads, if plaintiff suffers from any disability, such was not incurred due to his employment with defendant.

Plaintiff testified that on the date of the accident he bent over to turn off a pump and in raising up hit his back on an H beam. No one witnessed the accident. Plaintiff was first treated at defendant’s infirmary by Mrs. Marlene Zuccaro, a registered nurse, who testified at the trial she observed a contusion and minor abrasions on plaintiff’s back and treated the injury with a dressing and an ice pack. She then referred plaintiff to Dr. McVea, who testified he examined plaintiff on May 17, 1960.

The record discloses that the plaintiff’s employment was terminated as a part of a reduction in the work force at the defendant’s plant, effective on the 30th of May. However, the record is not clear as to whether or not the plaintiff knew of his impending termination prior to his accident on May 16 or not. This fact is alleged by the defendant in its answer but is not clearly brought out by the record itself.

[835]*835After trial on the merits the Trial Court rendered a judgment on November 3, 1961 in favor of the defendant, Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation and against the plaintiff, Walter Davenport, dismissing plaintiff’s suit at his costs. The Trial Judge did not render written reasons.

For the purpose of this appeal the issues are as follows:

1. Whether or not the plaintiff sustained an accident in the course and scope of his employment.

2. Whether plaintiff sustained physical injuries rendering him totally and permanently disabled.

3. Whether plaintiff is totally and permanently disabled by reason of a post-traumatic neurosis or from any other nervous or emotional disorder.

This Court by not having the benefit of the Trial Court’s reasons for judgment cannot, of course, presume as to the basis of the Trial Court’s decision. However, after an examination of the entire record this Court can only conclude that the Trial Judge must have based his decision not on the fact of a non-occurrence of an accident but upon the failure of the plaintiff to prove that he sustained any physical injuries which would render him totally and permanently disabled and that he failed to prove that he suffered any disability by reason of post-traumatic neurosis.

The plaintiff alleged in his petition that he suffered an injury while working for the defendant on May 16, 1960. The defendant did not produce any evidence at the trial which would contradict the plaintiff’s testimony in this regard. In addition to this fact Ruckins McKinley, a witness for the defendant, who was working with the plaintiff on that date, testified that although he had not seen the plaintiff hurt himself the plaintiff had told him that he hurt his bade and that Ruckins McKinley advised the plaintiff that if he had hurt his back he should go to the Infirmary. It is true that Ruckins McKinley could not testify as to whether the plaintiff had gone to the Infirmary and that he had not seen the plaintiff sustain any injury, yet there is nothing in the testimony of Ruckins McKinley to indicate that the plaintiff had not sustained the alleged accident.

Mrs. Marlene Zuccaro, who was employed by the defendant as a Registered Nurse and who was on duty on May 16, 1960, at the defendant’s Infirmary testified that she was on duty when Walter Davenport came to the Dispensary; that he told her that he had injured his back; that he had a small abrasion on the back, and that he had informed her that he had raised up under a beam and that she had put an ice pack on it, and had referred him to Dr. McVea. She further testified from a medical record, which is filed in this suit as plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 16, that the plaintiff had reported to the Infirmary at 13:10 hours of 1:10 P.M. The medical report contains a notation under May 16, 1960, “Cont. to back — minor abrasions to Dr. McVea.” Mrs. Zuccaro further testified that the back had been bleeding and that she had placed a dressing on it.

Mrs. Jewel James, the other nurse who was on duty, testified that although she had not seen the plaintiff on May 16, 1960 she recalled the incident and remembered that Mrs. Zuccaro took care of him, and that Mrs. Zuccaro made arrangements to send him to the doctor.

Dr. McVea, to whom the plaintiff was referred by Mrs. Zuccaro, testified that he saw the plaintiff on September 17, 1958 and he had a contusion of his back. There is no question but what Dr. McVea felt that the plaintiff did sustain an accident on May 16, 1960. It is difficult to see, in view of the above, how the Trial Judge could have based his decision dismissing plaintiff’s suit upon the fact that no accident occurred.

Before going into the specific medical evidence introduced at the trial it should be pointed out that the plaintiff’s medical records disclose a long history of back [836]*836complaints. These medical records which form part of the record of this suit show that the plaintiff reported to the Infirmary 42 times from October 17, 1955 through June 3, 1960 for treatment of his back. The medical records show that on October 17, 1955 plaintiff was treated for a contusion of the right side of his back. During the summer of 1957 he was treated both at the Infirmary and by Dr. McVea for an alleged back injury which will be discussed in greater detail in connection with Dr. Mc-Vea’s testimony. He made three trips to the Infirmary in 1958, six in 1959 and six trips in 1960 prior to the occurrence of the alleged accident of May 16, 1960. In addition to these visits to the Infirmary for injuries to his back, plaintiff from 1949 to 1960 reported to the defendant’s Dispensary a total of 208 times for other various and sundry ailments.

The record does not disclose that the plaintiff was disabled as a result of his back complaints nor is there any evidence that his back ailments caused him to miss any appreciable amount of work.

The record discloses that at approximately 1:10 P. M. on the date of the accident the plaintiff went to the Dispensary and was treated by Mrs. Zuccaro, who testified that the plaintiff had a small abrasion to his back and a contusion. She treated it with an ice pack, bandaged his cut and referred him to Dr. McVea for further treatment. The plaintiff was treated at the Infirmary on May 23, 1960, May 25, 1960 and June 3, 1960. On May 23, while leaving the Dispensary, the plaintiff apparently fainted and was instructed to lie down.

Dr. McVea testified that on May 17, 1960, was the only time that he had ever found any organic back trouble and at that time upon examination of the plaintiff he found he had a contusion of his back and an abrasion of his back, but at no other time had he ever found any physical findings which would make him feel that the plaintiff had suffered an injury or disease of his back. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 2d 834, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-kaiser-aluminum-chemical-corp-lactapp-1962.