Dixon v. Eula Lumber Co.

6 La. App. 206, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 411
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 La. App. 206 (Dixon v. Eula Lumber 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
Dixon v. Eula Lumber Co., 6 La. App. 206, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 411 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

Willie Dixon, a negro man about 34 years old, employed by Gulf Lum[207]*207ber Company as blacksmith’s helper, alleges that, while helping defendant’s blacksmith carry a heavy piece pf iron, he stumbled and fell, straining and injuring himself, producing hernia. That his injury renders him a permanent total disability to do work of any reasonable character. He claims 65 per cent of his daily wage of $8.25 per day for four hundred weeks. Defendant admits that plaintiff was in its employment as blacksmith’s helper and received wages as alleged, but denies that plaintiff received the injury while in his service. In the alternative and in case it appeared that plaintiff had received the injury while in its service, it then denied that the injury was a total disability. It alleged that the injury was not a disability. From a judgment rejecting his demand the plaintiff appealed.

It is established that the plaintiff, on or about October 10, 1925, helped defendant’s blacksmith, Mr. Downs, carry a bar of iron, between 8 and 10 feet long, 7 inches wide and 2 inches thick. Plaintiff, testifying about the matter, says he kinder stumbled, that the end he was carrying hit him in the right side in the groin, hurting him, and that he told Mr. Downs about it after they had put the iron down. That he afterwards noticed that a knot had come, which, every once and a while, would come down. The plaintiff continued working for four or five days and then quit, going to Homer, which he says was his home. While there he consulted Dr. Featherstone, who, after examination, put a truss on him. Pie then wrote Mr. Downs, informing him of the injury he had received while helping him carry the iron. Mr. Downs turned the letter over to Mr. Green, another employee of Gulf Lumber Company, who wrote plaintiff to come back and be examined by the physician of that company. Defendant urges that the evidence does not establish with reasonable certainty that plaintiff received the injury while in its service. We find that the fact is established. Mr. Downs remembered that plaintiff, op or about October 10, helped him carry a bar of iron of the length, breadth and thickness stated by the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff complained at the time that he had hurt himself in doing so. Mr. Downs testified that plaintiff did not stumble, because he would have felt the jar; but his denial that plaintiff stumbled does not establish that palintiff did not stumble, as plaintiff says he did, because the evidence shows that it was about dark at the time and Mr. Downs adds as part of his statement that he was "not paying attention to the matter, that plaintiff was always hurting a finger or stumbling. Defendant alleges in its answer that plaintiff had been in its employ performing manual labor for several years. Plaintiff testified that he had been working fqr defendant for four or five years and had been helping Mr. Downs since March 9. We conclude that he refers to March 9, 1925, and if so he was helping Mr. Downs about seven months previous to receiving the injury; we are satisfied that such was the case. Ndw, if plaintiff had a hernia of the size described by all the physicians, at the time he came on defendant’s works, he could hardly have performed the work he was employed to do for four or five years without a truss. If he had been wearing a truss for such a length of time the truss could hardly have escaped the notice of his fellow employees in their sleeping quarters; while if he had not worn a truss his condition would have been a matter of such general observation and knowledge on the work that it would have been proved on the trial. With or without a truss, his condition could hardly have escaped the notice [208]*208of Mr. Downs during seven months; in fact, the exigencies of his labor would have .made, it almost a matter of necessity to speak of it to Mr. Downs, and the fact would have been proved, on the trial.. If the injury had been received at Homer, either during his visit there after October 10 or on some previous occasion, the fact would have been found out and proved on the trial. Plaintiff’s testimony as to the time and occasion on which the injury was received is supported by his complaint to Mr. Downs and by the fact that he was soon afterwards found in the condition in which he is. We are satisfied that plaintiff received the injury in the service of defendant and as alleged in his petition,

On the question of disability, plaintiff testifies that a truss does him but little good; admits that he can do light work, but claims that he can not walk far and that to stand up for two or three hours at a time hurts him. He claims that * he is in pain all the time on account of his injury and that he is constantly growing worse. That he never had any trouble about work until, he was injured; that he only knows how to do common labor; that the work of a blacksmith’s helper is heavy, and that his injury has disabled him altogether for heavy work.

Two physicians called by plaintiff, apparently without interest in .the result, testified that his hernia was very large, so large that it could not, in their opinion, be held by a truss. That his injury incapacitates him for work that requires Stooping or lifting. That the strain on his back is calculated to cause him pain. That some men with hernia as large as plaintiff’s can do reasonable manual labor, while others can do but very little. That they never knew of a man, able to do heavy manual labor, with si hernia as large' as plaintiff’s; one of them excepted farm labor, which he believed was lighter and easier for a man with hernia than the work of a blacksmith’s helper.

Six other, physicians, called by the defendant, testified that plaintiff had a complete hernia. That they had never known a man to be totally incapacitated to do manual labor by hernia. That plaintiff could, in their opinion, do the work of a blacksmith’s helper, if properly fitted with a truss, and they claimed that they could fit him with one which will hold his hernia and enable him to do such work as he has been doing, without pain or discomfort. One of these physicians, Dr. Carroll, defendant’s chief surgeon, had examined plaintiff in November following his return from Homer. He found him with a well-developed hernia at that time and advised an operation. Dr. Carroll had himself sustained a hernia some twenty-eight or thirty years ago. He had done hard work afterwards, hut was very careful about running, jumping and turning somersaults. That some men with hernia might lift as much as they ever could, and some might not; it depended a good deal on the individual. That some men with hernia suffered pain, while others did not.

Mr. Kenesson, defendant’s master mechanic, had suffered a hernia about thirty years ago. He had been a blacksmith and says that his hernia did not prevent him from doing all kinds of blacksmith work. That- he had lost only four or five days during the last twenty-five years on account of his hernia. He was not doing hard work at the time of testifying, because he had been foreman of the machine shops for the last four or five years, and this position did nqt require him to do heavy work. Two other men with hernia, one 70 and the other 69 years of age, were [209]*209called by defendant and testified apparently without interest in the result. The man of 70 had sustained his hernia about thirty years before. He had been a blacksmith, and for about twenty-five years after receiving the injury had worked at his trade. He testified that the work had been awful severe on him at times. He got along at other times without suffering.

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Bluebook (online)
6 La. App. 206, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-eula-lumber-co-lactapp-1927.