Deshotels v. Highway Ins. Underwriters

40 So. 2d 750, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 530
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 1949
DocketNo. 3106.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 So. 2d 750 (Deshotels v. Highway Ins. Underwriters) 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
Deshotels v. Highway Ins. Underwriters, 40 So. 2d 750, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 530 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

This is a suit under the Workmen's Compensation Law, Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended, for alleged injuries sustained in an accident on August 8, 1947, by plaintiff, Hammison Deshotels, in the course and scope of his employment as a truck driver and driver's helper for Nelson Fruge, doing business as the Nelson Fruge Truck Lines of Mamou, Louisiana and being the assured of defendant Highway Insurance Underwriters Corporation. It is shown that at about 2:00 P.M. on August 8, 1947, an accident was sustained by plaintiff in the course and scope of his employment, in that while unloading pipes from a truck, one of the pipes, being a three-inch pipe measuring about twenty-five feet in length and weighing one hundred fifty pounds fell upon his right foot. It is alleged that as a result the plaintiff sustained a fracture of the shaft of the second metatarsal bone and was disabled and remained permanently disabled from performing his usual and customary occupation as a truck driver or driver's helper. It is shown that his average weekly wage was $30 per week and demand is made for compensation at the rate of sixty-five (65%) per cent of said weekly wage subject to a credit of twenty (20) weeks compensation heretofore paid, plus certain medical benefits and legal interest from judicial demand.

The defense is to the effect that while there is no real dispute as to the happening of an accident in the course and scope of the employment, there is a serious dispute as to whether any disability now existing, if any exists, is connected with the accident involved herein. The main contention of the defendant is that the plaintiff is not suffering from any disability resulting from the accident, and that such disability as he may have is due to a condition attributable entirely to his non-cooperation with medical experts and non-use of his right foot which was affected by the accident. In effect, the defendant admits that the plaintiff's right foot was injured by an accident as alleged but that the fracture *Page 751 resulting from the accident completely healed and that after the treatment given him over a period of twenty weeks and the workmen's compensation paid him during that period, he completely recovered from the accident save and except for his failure to reasonably co-operate with the medical experts to whom he was referred by the defendant.

After trial of the case, the lower Court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of 400 weeks compensation from August 8, 1947, at the rate of $19.50 per week less 20 weekly payments of $19.50 already paid, and for the sum of $82.94 medical expenses advanced by plaintiff's attorneys, plus interest from date of judicial demand, and for all costs of this suit.

A review of the evidence clearly shows that the accident on which this claim for workmen's compensation is based actually occurred on the date and place alleged and while the plaintiff was in the course and scope of his employment. There is no dispute on that point. The only real dispute in the case is whether or not the plaintiff has actually sustained an injury to his right foot which has permanently disabled him from doing the work he was performing at the time of his injury and for which he is fitted by training and experience. It is admitted that the plaintiff is an uneducated man and that he must earn his living by hard manual work such as he was doing at the time of his injury. It also appears from the evidence that he has been unable to perform that type of work since his injury. He states that he has tried to do so with no success and is corroborated by at least one witness, to-wit, Mr. Arville Manuel, who testified that he operates a store, meat market and rice mill; that in March, 1948, he gave employment to the plaintiff because plaintiff owed him money for groceries and in order to assist plaintiff in lowering his bill; that he kept plaintiff for two and a half (2 1/2) days but that at noon on the third day, plaintiff's foot swelled and he complained that he could not keep on working; that he then brought plaintiff to Dr. Reed Fontenot at Ville Platte for treatment.

Dr. Reed Fontenot testified that plaintiff came to his office on March 18, 1948 and complained of pain and swelling of his right foot. The doctor states that at that time he examined him and "* * * he had moderate swelling and pain. The medial side of his ankle — that was so I got the history from him and decided to take some X-ray plates on it. At the time of the X-ray plates I told him there was a difference in the two feet. His right foot was more flat than the left. The bone was completely healed. I told him he had fallen arches and some injury to the ligaments." Dr. Fontenot further stated that the plaintiff complained of pain and that considering the discoloration which he found, he felt sure he had pain. He also testified that he noticed pain in testing for spasm under the arch of his foot. Dr. Fontenot testified further that he treated him over a period of weeks, his treatment being diathermy treatment and that he always found plaintiff co-operative during these treatments. He recalls the time when plaintiff's foot was in a cast and complained of pain and blisters and that he told plaintiff to go see Dr. Caldwell; that he did not touch the cast. His final conclusion is to the effect that, in his opinion, plaintiff has a condition that will prevent him from ever doing the same kind of work that he was doing prior to the time of the accident except possibly to a moderate amount. He, in effect, was of the opinion that his condition is one of traumatic arthritis due to the accident.

Dr. Caldwell testified by deposition that he examined plaintiff who gave him a history of an injury sustained on August 7, 1947 in which a 25-foot length of three-inch pipe was dropped on the top of his right foot; that such a blow might reasonably produce a fracture of the second metatarsal bone such as is seen in the X-rays. Upon being asked the question, "* * * doctor, what could be the cause of the condition of traumatic arthritis that you diagnosed?" Dr. Caldwell answered,

"The traumatic arthritis was involving joints in the middle portion of the right foot in and about the arch of the foot, and I think might reasonably be attributed to the same injury."

The doctor further testified with reference to the injuries he found and his ability *Page 752 to perform the duties usually performed by a trucker's helper or common laborer, "I think that would totally incapacitate him for such work." Testifying further, he states that he found no appreciable improvement in patient's condition over a period of three months but he does state that,

"* * * All such cases I have ever seen recover to the point of being able to do — to walk and do some kind of work so that I don't feel that he would be necessarily permanently totally disabled entirely."

Dr. Caldwell's diagnosis from his examination of plaintiff is apparently summed up in his statement as follows:

"I think he has not reached the stage of maximum improvement as yet, and further treatment and time will be necessary before he will reach such a stage and the extent of partial disability that may be permanent can be estimated."

Dr. Hatchette testified that he examined plaintiff on September 29, 1947. He says:

"Mr. Deshotels was sent to my office for consultation by Dr. P. B. LaHaye of Eunice, Louisiana. At that time Mr. Deshotels showed moderate swelling involving the entire right foot but which was more prominent over the metatarsal arch. All of the toes could be moved without pain except the second toe which caused some distress on movement. There was pressure pain over the dorsal and planta surfaces of the metatarsal arch at the second toe.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 2d 750, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deshotels-v-highway-ins-underwriters-lactapp-1949.