English v. Kellogg Lumber Co.

200 So. 167
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1940
DocketNo. 6199.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 So. 167 (English v. Kellogg 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
English v. Kellogg Lumber Co., 200 So. 167 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, while working for defendant, the Kellogg Lumber Company, a copartnership, on September 30, 1939, suffered injury to his back and ribs when, while lifting a heavy cross-tie, he slipped and fell across the end of another tie. Disability to continue work was recognized. He was paid compensation at the rate of $7.15 per week to November 17th and was then discharged by defendant’s physician as being well and able to resume work. Pie thereafter filed this suit against the company and its component members to recover compensation at said rate for 400 weeks, less amounts paid him, on the theory that he is totally and permanently disabled to do work of any reasonable character. Defendant *168 contends that plaintiff’s injuries were not serious and that he was well when discharged and has continued in that physical condition. Plaintiff was awarded judgment as prayed for, but limiting payments to the period of disability, and defendants appealed.

Motion to Dismiss Appeal.

Judgment was signed on March 21, 1940. Orders of appeal were moved for in open court and granted on that date. Appeal bond was approved and filed on March 25th. The filing fee of $5 was deposited with the clerk of this court on April 25th. Return day was fixed for April 29, 1940. Thereafter it was discovered by appellants’ counsel that the minutes of the court did not show that appeals were taken, and that the transcript had not been lodged. On May 27th appellants’ counsel ex parte moved the court to correct the minutes of March 21st to show that after judgment was read and signed, orders of devolutive and suspensive appeal were entered, the amount of appeal bonds and return day fixed. This motion was sustained and the minutes accordingly corrected. Transcript was filed here on June 19, 1940. Appellee in this court moves to dismiss the appeals, and, as basis therefor, alleges:

(1) That there were no orders of appeal on the record and that no effort was made to correct the minutes or to lodge the transcript in this court until after the expiration of sixty days and after demand for payment of the judgment had been made.

(2) That the correction of the minutes is null and void because done ex parte and after the expiration of sixty days and prior to the transcript being filed here.

We do not think there is any merit in the motion. Mover does not contend that orders of appeal were not asked for and granted in open court; nor does he contend that the minutes, as corrected, do not truly reflect the facts. He simply assails the correction because done without notice to him or his counsel, and because done after the expiration of the return day at which time the transcript had not been lodged.

It is now settled beyond dispute that when the transcript of appeal, without fault on part of the appellant, has not been timely filed in the Court of Appeal to which appeal is taken, no penalty may be visited upon him therefor. The return day is automatically extended by the clerk’s .delay, error or dereliction. Wilson v. Lee, La.App., 196 So. 373.

• In this instance, it clearly appears that the failure to file the transcript before the expiration of the return day was due to error on the part of the minute clerk of the district court in omitting from the minutes the fact that appeals were asked for and allowed. Appellants filed bond and deposited the filing fee timely. This was all the law required of them.

No good purpose would he promoted by remanding this case so that facts, not really denied, might be definitely established. A court has the inherent right at any time to correct its own minutes to conform to true facts transpiring therein. No one may complain of such action unless injury or impairment of rights result therefrom. Certainly appellee has no good ground to complain on this score. The motion to dismiss is overruled.

Plaintiff was hurt between 9 o’clock and 10 o’clock, A. M., but continued to work until the noon hour. He then reported the accident to the company’s sawyer, under whom he was working and was by him advised to consult the company physician, Dr. Walsworth, in the City of Monroe. He did so. Dr. Walsworth made a physical examination and thinking that perhaps there was a rib fracture sent plaintiff to Dr. Moore, a radiologist, for X-ray-ing. Pictures revealed that the fifth rib was fractured. Plaintiff then complained of his left side. This side and part of the hack were immobilized and the patient sent home for convalescence. The injury was not considered serious by Dr. Walsworth. He saw no clinical reason why plaintiff should not be well in a brief time. However, plaintiff continued to complain of pain to Dr. Walsworth. Another physical examination was made and other pictures taken on November 17th. Dr. Walsworth testified that this examination and the pictures confirmed his prior examination and the first pictures made. Plaintiff was then discharged as well. However, Dr. Wals-worth did discover arthritic changes in practically all of the vertebrae.

Dr. Moore confirmed Dr. Walsworth’s interpretation of the pictures and his physical findings. Neither found any injury of recent date to the left eleventh rib, nor to any part of the back or spine, excepting the fifth rib.

*169 Dr. C. P. Gray made a general physical examination of plaintiff on February 12th and had pictures made of portions of his back and sides. He found no rigidity of muscles but did find pronounced evidence of arthritic changes in several of the vertebrae. He also found that the fifth rib had been fractured and had healed. In all other respects he found nothing wrong with plaintiff’s back or side.

After being discharged by Dr. Wals-worth, plaintiff testified that his back and left side continued to severely pain him and for this reason he consulted Dr. Hirsch. This doctor, after close physical examination and tests, satisfied himself that the complaint of pain was not assumed; that there was very limited motion of the back, rigidity of muscles and flattening of the left buttock, characteristic of lesions of the lower spine. These physical findings motivated the making of X-ray pictures. These, in Dr. Hirsch’s opinion, confirmed his physical examination and diagnosis. Recent fracture of the eleventh rib, left side, was disclosed, the end thereof attached to the spine being displaced upward. A lime deposit was shown to have been knocked from a vertebra. This was accredited to the trauma. Appropriate treatment was administered.

Dr. Mosely examined and X-rayed plaintiff on October 7th. This picture, according to Dr. Mosely, reflected fracture of the eleventh rib and of the fifth lumbar vertebra. Injuries of this character, he says, grow progressively worse.

Dr. W. L. Smith, who made the pictures for Dr. Hirsch, testified as follows:

“This film shows an old healed transverse fracture of the shaft of the left eleventh rib in its mid-portion. The fragments are in good position. The appearance of the head and neck of the left twelfth rib are suggestive of another fracture at this point. There is slight dislocation of the head of the eleventh rib upward.

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Bluebook (online)
200 So. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/english-v-kellogg-lumber-co-lactapp-1940.