Eldridge v. Federal Compress Warehouse Co.

24 So. 2d 492, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 499
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1945
DocketNo. 6798.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 492 (Eldridge v. Federal Compress Warehouse 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
Eldridge v. Federal Compress Warehouse Co., 24 So. 2d 492, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 499 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

This is a compensation suit in which plaintiff claims total and permanent disability. After trial there was judgment in favor of defendant rejecting plaintiff's demands, from which judgment plaintiff has appealed.

About 4:30 or 5 o'clock on the afternoon of December 27, 1943, plaintiff was standing beside a cotton press sewing heads of bagging on a bale of cotton. While no exact description of the press is given in the testimony, we assume that it was of the kind in ordinary and common use by cotton compresses. Certain parts of the press extended above plaintiff's head as he worked, and some 12 feet above him there was a walkway, used at necessary times by employees for the purpose of oiling and cleaning parts of the press. Several other employees were working at or near the press. At the time set forth, without warning, and from some undetermined cause, the press burst, and pieces of cast iron and timber showered the area at and about the spot where plaintiff was working. *Page 493

In close proximity to the press, only a few feet behind the spot upon which plaintiff stood, there was a trap door covering a hole several feet deep, which led down to and under the press and afforded a means of access for cleaning trash from under the machine.

The force of the explosion or collapse of the press knocked plaintiff back to a point directly above the trap door described, and he was struck by an indeterminate number of pieces of the debris. There is a distinct conflict of testimony on the point as to whether plaintiff was simply knocked down upon the trap door, or whether he was knocked through the door into the hole beneath. This point is immaterial and unimportant. The testimony clearly establishes the fact that plaintiff was practically covered with pieces of iron and timber, and it is further established that some of these pieces were of considerable weight.

It is evident that immediately following the accident the scene thereof was a place of confusion. An automatic sprinkler had been torn loose and water was flooding the spot. A fellow employee of plaintiff's who was working at the press, suffered a shoulder injury. A foreman ran to the scene, called upon some of the employees for assistance, removed the metal and wood from plaintiff, and pulled him outside the compress where he was covered with bagging until an ambulance arrived, in which he and the employee suffering from the shoulder injury were placed and removed to St. Francis Hospital in Monroe.

Plaintiff testified that he remembered nothing after the bursting of the press until some time later when he recovered consciousness in the hospital. There is some testimony to the effect that plaintiff complained of being cold, specifically, that he was "freezing". In view of the injuries suffered by plaintiff and the preponderating testimony as to his condition immediately following the accident, we find no inconsistency in plaintiff's statement that he remembered nothing and the statement of one or two other witnesses that he complained of cold. The testimony of the other injured employee, which is uncontradicted on the point, establishes the fact that when directions were given for making X-rays of plaintiff upon his arrival at the hospital, one of the nurses expressed some hesitancy on the ground that plaintiff appeared to be dead.

Plaintiff remained in the hospital from December 27, 1943, to January 6, 1944, and was under treatment of defendant's physician until February 21, 1944, at or about which time he was discharged as being able to return to work. Compensation, covering a period of nine weeks, was paid to plaintiff at the rate of $12.35 per week, based on a weekly wage of $19. On February 27th, without having returned to work, plaintiff was discharged from the employ of the defendant.

The disability alleged by plaintiff is claimed to have resulted from injuries to his head, back, chest and hip, and, in addition to these injuries, plaintiff claims that he suffered a left inguinal hernia, as the result of the injuries sustained in the accident. The testimony of four doctors testifying on behalf of plaintiff, and five testifying for defendant, all qualified as expert medical witnesses, discloses the usual irreconcilable difference of opinion which has come to be expected in cases of this character. However, there is no dispute as to certain of the injuries caused plaintiff, namely, a rather severe laceration of the scalp at the base of the skull, at least one fractured rib and numerous bruises and contusions about the upper part of the body. The testimony is particularly controversial with respect to the back injuries, but it is upon the question of the cause of the hernia that the testimony of the learned gentlemen of the medical profession differs to such a degree as to be impossible of reconciliation.

On arriving at a decision of this matter it is necessary that we discuss the several alleged injuries, and the testimony bearing thereupon, in more or less detail in an effort to arrive at a determination of the facts actually existing, as disclosed by the record.

Plaintiff is a 47 year old negro, who had been a common laborer all his life, and who has no history, in so far as is disclosed by the record, of any physical infirmity or disability prior to the accident. He complains, as a result of the injuries suffered from the accident, of the continued existence of pain in his neck, head, back and chest, a definite restriction of freedom of movement as the result of the back injuries. In addition to these complaints, plaintiff further contends that the hernia causes severe pain and is in itself totally disabling. It goes without saying that none of the witnesses can with certainty eliminate *Page 494 these subjective symptoms of pain, nor do they attempt so to do. As to the fact that plaintiff suffered a blow upon the back of the head, which was severe enough to lacerate the scalp, there can be no doubt. Dr. Guerriero, defendant's physician who attended plaintiff after the accident, testified that he first stopped the bleeding and then sutured the scalp; that he found no fracture or concussion of any degree which would indicate a continued disability. This witness further testified that plaintiff complained only of pain in his head, back, chest and hip during the time he was under treatment, and that he knew nothing of any hernia condition until several months after he had discharged plaintiff from treatment. The doctor made no examination except at the time plaintiff was received at the hospital, and at that time he made no examination of the abdominal region which might have disclosed the existence of a hernia.

The testimony of Drs. Moore and Smith, specialists in roentgenology, witnesses for the defendant, limits the findings, as disclosed by their X-ray examinations, to two fractures of one rib, and a chipped fracture of the right ilium. These witnesses found no evidence of any fracture of the skull. They found certain deformities and maladjustments of the vertebrae, the cause of which they attributed to hypertrophic arthritis, eliminating any causal connection with the accident. No examination for hernia was made, and, as a matter of fact, neither of these specialists made any physical examination of plaintiff, but confined their examination to the X-ray plates, in the interpretation of which they are qualified experts. Dr. Moore testified that the fractures of the rib had "practically healed", and that no difficulty or ill effects could be anticipated or expected from the chipped fracture of the ilium.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 492, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eldridge-v-federal-compress-warehouse-co-lactapp-1945.