Donahoe v. Scharfenstein & Son

98 So. 256, 154 La. 815, 1923 La. LEXIS 2029
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 12, 1923
DocketNo. 23936
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 98 So. 256 (Donahoe v. Scharfenstein & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donahoe v. Scharfenstein & Son, 98 So. 256, 154 La. 815, 1923 La. LEXIS 2029 (La. 1923).

Opinion

BRUNOT, J.

This is a suit for compensation under Act No. 20 of 1914 and amendments thereto, known as the Employers’ Liability or Workmen’s Compensation Act.

The defendants are a commercial partnership composed of Jacob Scharfenstein and Fredrick W. Scharfenstein, domiciled and doing business in the city of New Orleans.

The prayer of the petition is for judgment against the firm and the individual members thereof in solido for $39.85, the cost of medical services and medicines, compensation at the rate of $13.72 per week for 18 weeks from the date of the injury to the filing of the petition, and a like sum per week during disability, not to exceed 300 weeks, and for costs.

The court gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sums prayed for, and for all costs, including the fees of the examining physicians.

From this judgment the defendants have appealed.

The answer denies that plaintiff was employed subject to the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act. It alleges that the employment was to maintain and repair automobiles used by defendants in their coal and wood business, and that plaintiff was paid a flat wage of $24 per week.

Notwithstanding the allegations in the answer, defendants do not seriously contend that the case does not come within the terms of the Compensation Act, but seem to rely, for a reversal of the judgment, upon the following assignment of errors:

“(1) The trial judge erred in applying the case of John Behan v.’ John B. Honor Co., Limited, reported in 143 La. 348, 78 South. 5S9, L. R. A. 191SF, 862, to the instant case, for the reason that it is in no way analogous.
“(2) The trial judge erred in his finding of fact and in the law applicable thereto.
“(3) The trial judge erred in disregarding other issues raised by defendants which were in no way connected with the Behan Case.”

The defense in the Behan Cáse was that the plaintiff’s disability was not caused by [817]*817the accident, but was the result of a disease that was lurking in his system before the accident. The defense in this case is that plaintiff was not disabled by the accident, but that such injury as he may have thereafter suffered was the result of pre-existing physical, mental, and nervous ailments. It is alleged in paragraph III of the answer:

“That defendants do not know exactly the manner in which the injury was received; that the injury, if any, was slight, and of no consequence, and did not result in all of the injury and damage set out by plaintiff in his petition, and did not result in the total disability on his part to do any labor, and, if any such results as alleged by plaintiff followed the injury, such were due to plaintiff’s poor physical, mental and nervous condition; that defendants are informed and believe, and so allege, that prior to the alleged accident plaintiff was in a highly nervous and in poor physical condition; that he was subject to attacks 'of nervousness, to twitching and jerking of the face, head, arms, and body, and had been Jipr some time, prior to the accident taking medicine to remedy this condition; that plaintiff was guilty of excesses and abuses that have lowered his vitality and weakened him physically, and if he is now permanently disabled, and if he has suffered any of the consequences that he alleges followed from said accident, he has brought them on himself, and defendants are in no way liable therefor, either under the Workmen’s Compensation Act or the general law,” etc.

The facts as disclosed by the record are that plaintiff is a mechanic and machinist. He was first employed by defendants for a few months in 1917. He left this employment to enter the service of the federal government as a machinist at the New Orleans Naval Station, and was thus engaged when he enlisted in the service as a private in Company C, 114th Signal Battalion, United States Army. While in the service he injured one of his anides during bayonet practice at Camp Beauregard. The injured ankle incapacitated him for military duty, and he was discharged from the service on the 21st day ’of March, 1918, from which date he received War Risk compensation from the United States government. After the injury to plaintiff’s ankle he could not jump or run, but by strapping the foot and wearing a tight shoe this disability has not otherwise affected him or impaired his earning capacity as a mechanic or machinist. He was in this condition when he re-entered the employment of defendants, several months before the accident which gave rise to this suit.

Plaintiff was injured on November 19, 1918, while repairing the clutch of one of defendants’ trucks. Jake Scharfenstein, one of the defendants, was helping him. Plaintiff was holding the shaft and pipe, and Scharfenstein was holding the sleeve and forcing the clutch into place. The sleeve slipped, and mashed the first finger on plaintiff’s right hand. A nurse at the hospital dressed the injured finger, and on the following day Dr. Breaux, at the hospital, washed and bandaged the finger and administered antitetanic serum. Plaintiff then reported to his employer and worked until evening. On the following day, November 21st, the plaintiff, over his protest, was sent out to fix a truck. Plaintiff says:

“About 11 o’clock one of the trucks broke down on Magnolia street, the other side of Napoleon avenue, and it was raining, and Mr. Jake said: 'You have to go and fix that truck.’ I said: T have the serum in me; I’m afraid of getting hurt.’ " I went out, and it was raining, and while getting over to the truck and repairing it this side, my right side got hurt, and I fixed the truck, and reported to Mr. Jake on Dryades street, and said: ‘I’m all in; I can’t last any longer.’ I went home, and got to bed, and stayed there a couple of weeks until my mother got the doctor to relieve me; that was Dr. Breaux.”

, The weather report of the Weather Bureau shows a trace of rain on November 21, 1918, and the following temperature: Maximum, 76°; minimum, 59° Fahrenheit.

Dr. Halsey, Dr. Daspit, and Dr. May testified in the case, and Dr. Halsey, for the [820]*820defendants, and Dr. May, for the plaintiff, filed lengthy reports showing the result of their findings after an examination of the plaintiff.

During the trial, about one year after the accident, upon the application of defendants’ counsel, Dr. Halsey was appointed by the court to examine plaintiff, and the report filed by him is as follows:

“There is a partial paralysis of the serratus antieus muscle of the right side. This causes an abnormal position of the right shoulder blade, known as ‘winging,’ and an impairment in the function of the right arm. This impairment consists in a loss of power in this arm when raised above the level of the shoulder. This loss of powér is the result of a neuritis which developed about two days after the injury to the finger, and which at that time involved much of the brachial plexus. (This information as to the condition at that time was obtained from Dr. Henry Daspit, under whose care Donahoe was in the month of December, 1918.) Such paralysis following neuritis usually disappears entirely in the course of time, iand in this case it appears that all the nerves have recovered except the one supplying the serratus muscle.

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Bluebook (online)
98 So. 256, 154 La. 815, 1923 La. LEXIS 2029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donahoe-v-scharfenstein-son-la-1923.