Dollar v. Southern States Co.

135 So. 758, 18 La. App. 178, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 577
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 14, 1931
DocketNo. 4023
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 135 So. 758 (Dollar v. Southern States 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
Dollar v. Southern States Co., 135 So. 758, 18 La. App. 178, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 577 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

DREW, J.

This is an action brought under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Louisiana (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended). The plaintiff, an employee of the defendant, a Louisiana corporation with its domicile in Shreveport, Caddo parish, La., was injured by the overturning of a loaded truck that he was driving on the road between Choudrant and Monroe, some.-thing less than a mile north of Choudrant, in Lincoln parish, on May 3, 1930, at about the hour of 8:30 p. m.

At the time of the accident, plaintiff was in the employ of defendant and driving an automobile truck loaded with equipment for drilling oil and gas wells, - defendant being engaged in the work of drilling and -operating gas. wells in Rich-land parish, La. While driving his loaded truck along the graveled road in the dark of the night and on down-grade, in some way the driver lost control of the truck and it ran into the ditch on the roadside, and turned over; plaintiff being thrown underneath the truck and pinioned -to the ground, and remaining there until he was rescued by outside help.

The injuries alleged to have been suffered by him from the said accident were as follows: Fracture of the left clavicle (collar bone); a curved, lacerated wound one inch above the right eye; a lacerated wound three inches long, beginning at a point three inches above -the right eye and extending backward on the top of the head, just to the right of the middle line of the head; a fracture of the nose; a severe lacerated wound-three inches long just beneath the right eye and connecting with the nose at the place of fracture; a lacerated wound of the first finger of - the right hand, the laceration involving the cavity of the second joint; general contusions over the entire body; extensive and noticeable scar tissue about the face and head, causing serious, and permanent dis[180]*180figurement; the injury to the finger causing stiffness in the joint and inability to close the finger.

Plaintiff further alleges fhat by reason of the injury to his nose, there has developed in his nostrils a growth which causes a noise similar to that of snoring every time he breathes through the nasal' cavity, which growth has constricted and narrowed the nasal cavity to such an extent until it now has made it almost impossible for him to breathe through his nose; and that by reason of his said injuries, a neuritic condition has developed in his arms and shoulders, and is threatening to extend, and will become more serious and remain permanent, and has caused him to lose the proper and normal function and use of said organs; that his said injuries, have caused him to be in a weakened and nervous condition, and rendered him totally and permanently disabled from doing any kind of work of any nature or description. .

Alleging his injuries to be permanent and to totally render him unable to do any kind of work, plaintiff claims compensation for a period of four hundred weeks, at the rate of $20 per week, payments to begin May 10, 1930; and he also asks for $250, for surgical, medical, and hospital services.'

The answer of defendant admits, that plaintiff was in the employ of defendant at the time of the injury complained of, at the wage rate alleged in the petition; admits the overturning of the truck as alleged, and that plaintiff received an injury in the said accident; but alleges that the said injury was slight and not serious and that plaintiff has recovered from it; it denies that said injury incapacitated plaintiff for performing his usual and ordinary labors. Defendant further alleges that at the time of the accident, plaintiff was. under the influence of intoxicating liquor, and was intoxicated, and did not have such control of his faculties as would permit him to safely operate a motor vehicle, all of which was unknown to defendant, and that the overturning of the truck was caused by the intoxicated condition of plaintiff, which he alleges precludes plaintiff from recovering; and he pleads the same in bar of plaintiff’s recovery.

On these issues, .the case went to trial, and there was judgment in the lower court in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $20 per week for a period of one year, from which judgment defendant has appealed, and plaintiff has answered the appeal praying that the judgment be increased to four hundred weeks.

There is no dispute on the defendant’s part of .the fact of the injury sustained by plaintiff and of plaintiff’s employment by defendant at the time of said accident, but there is. dispute by defendant as to the extent, the seriousness, and the permanency of- the said injuries, and the liability of defendant for compensation because of said injuries..

Defendant denies liability for the alleged reason that plaintiff was intoxicated from alcoholic liquor at the time and immediately previous to the accident, and claims that said intoxication was the cause of the accident and plaintiff’s, consequent injury.

The case resolves itself down to the pivotal question: Was plaintiff intoxicated at the time of the accident, and, if so, was his intoxication the proximate or sole cause of the accident?

Defendant offered the following evidence on the question of the intoxication of plaintiff:

[181]*181Mr. Leonard Green, of Jackson, Miss., who testified that plaintiff was pretty drunk about dark when he stopped at a filling station just out of Ruston. Plaintiff asked the way to Monroe, and Green wiped off his windshield and put water in the radiator, for which plaintiff thanked him. Green smelled whisky on plaintiff’s breath and said plaintiff was very quiet amd looked as though he was about to go to sleep — was “droll-like.” There was nothing unusual about plaintiff’s talking and he drove the truck away from the station all right, there being nothing noticeable about the way he drove. He saw plaintiff just after the accident and heard him say to be careful to those who were placing him in the car to carry him to the sanitarium. Because plaintiff looked sleepy, and the smell of whisky on his breath, caused the witness to think he was drunk. There was nothing unusual otherwise about his actions.

John E. Ford, a boy eighteen years of age, who rode in the car with plaintiff from the scene of the accident to the sanitarium, taid he could smell whisky slightly at times, and that there was no action from plaintiff to indicate that he was intoxicated, and he did not think he was.

Roy Dorman, who also rode to the sanitarium in the car with plaintiff, testified that he could smell whisky very slightly at times, and that plaintiff did not appear to be intoxicated, and his conduct was not that of an intoxicated man. He testified that plaintiff talked sensibly and wanted to be taken to Monroe and asked that his wife be called. He asked them to get a doctor quick and for Dorman to take his pocketbook out of his pocket and give it to him after arriving at the sanitarium.

Clarence Brewster testified that when plaintiff stopped at the filling station just out of Ruston that there was something the matter with him. He asked the direction to Dubach and then the direction to Monroe. Brewster was within three feet of plaintiff and did not smell whisky. Said plaintiff drove off all right, nothing unusual about his driving, was dressed in a suit of common oil field worker’s clothes, and that he could not positively identify plaintiff as the man whom he testified about, but thought it to be the same man.

N. B. Ford, testified that Brewster- said that plaintiff was drunk: He, himself, did not see the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
135 So. 758, 18 La. App. 178, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dollar-v-southern-states-co-lactapp-1931.