Fontenot v. Travelers Insurance Co.

112 So. 2d 175, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 699
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 1, 1959
DocketNo. 4812
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 So. 2d 175 (Fontenot v. Travelers Insurance 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
Fontenot v. Travelers Insurance Co., 112 So. 2d 175, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 699 (La. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

HOOD, Judge ad hoc.

This is a workmen’s compensation suit instituted by Sabay Fontenot against the Travelers Insurance Company, the latter being the compensation insurer of Brown Oil Tools, Inc. Plaintiff alleges that while in the course of his employment by Brown Oil Tools, Inc., he accidently sustained an injury to his right knee, which has rendered him totally and permanently disabled from the performance of his trade and occupation. After the trial of the case on its merits, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for the full amount of compensation claimed, plus penalties and attorney’s fees. From this judgment defendant has appealed.

The evidence establishes that on June 10, 1956, plaintiff sustained an accidental [176]*176injury to his right knee while in the course of his employment by Brown Oil Tools, Inc. The accident occurred about 3:30 o’clock in the afternoon while plaintiff and some follow employees were testing a pipe for leaks. Plaintiff was endeavoring to connect a 4-inch water hose to an iron pipe, when the foreman suddenly turned on the pressure, causing the metal nozzle of the hose and the pipe to strike plaintiff’s right leg, just above the knee. Plaintiff continued to work the rest of that day and he worked until noon the following day when the job was completed. The accident was not reported to the foreman or to any officer of the employer at that time. Defendant received its first notice of the claim on July 12, 1956, and this suit was filed 26 days later, on August 7, 1956.

Defendant has paid to plaintiff all compensation due from the date of the accident up to and including May 19, 1957, together with all medical expenses incurred in the treatment of plaintiff’s injuries. One of the issues presented is whether plaintiff had recovered by May 19, 1957, from the in-: juries sustained by him as a result of that accident. The trial judge concluded that plaintiff was still disabled on that date, and appellant contends that the court was in error in arriving at that conclusion.

The evidence establishes that on June 11, 1956, or the day after the accident occurred,1 plaintiff was examined by Dr. R. A. Fonte-not, a physician engaged in the general practice of medicine, who at that time diagnosed the injury as “a sprain of the right knee with probable injury to the tibial collateral ligament.” After further examination he concluded that plaintiff also “might have some injury to the anterior arcuate ligament, also in the knee joint.” Dr. Fon-tenot saw plaintiff and treated him for several months after the date of the accident. He testified that all objective signs of the injury disappeared by September, 1956, except for a slight atrophy of the right thigh muscles. Because of this atrophy plaintiff was referred to Dr. James Gilly, an orthopedic surgeon, who also treated plaintiff. Dr. Fontenot further testified that by May, 1957, the atrophy had completely disappeared, and that in his opinion plaintiff had fully recovered from the injury to his knee. Plaintiff made no complaints of injury to or pain in his back at any time, so Dr. Fonte-not made no examination of that part of his body.

Dr. Gilly examined plaintiff on September 25, 1956, and on January 28 and May 6, 1957. On the first examination he tentatively diagnosed the injury as a “tear of the medial semilunar cartilage.” Subsequent examinations and treatment, however, proved this diagnosis to be incorrect, and Dr. Gilly finally concluded that as a result of the accident which occurred on June 10, 1956, plaintiff had sustained a “sprain of the knee with prolonging convalescence due to muscular atrophy.” Physiotherapy treatments were administered to plaintiff from March 7 to about the fix*st of May, 1957. On May 6, 1957, Dr. Gilly found that the atrophy in plaintiff’s thigh muscles had completely disappeared, that the ligamentous structures, were intact, that tests for tear of the cartilages -were negative, and that full range of motion was. pres.ent in the joint. He concluded, therefore,- that plaintiff had completely recovered from his injury by that date and that he had no residual disability from that injury. There was nothing in -the history given by plaintiff or in the examinations made by Dr. Gilly which indicated any traumatic involvement of the back or sciatic nerve, so no examination was made by him for such injury.

Dr. George B. Briel, an orthopedic surgeon, made a complete orthopedic examination of plaintiff’s back and legs on June 7, 1957. He testified that as far as he could determine at that time plaintiff’s knee was perfectly normal in all reactions to all tests that were performed. Dr. Briel, however, did find an abnormal condition of plaintiff’s back, which he described as “a moderate posterior narrowing of the lumbosacral disc interspace and a spina bifida occulta of sacral 1,” together with a "C”- curve scolio[177]*177sis caused by the fact that plaintiff’s right leg is shorter than the left. Dr. Briel concluded that this abnormal condition of plaintiff’s back was causing a sciatic nerve irritation with pain radiating down plaintiff’s right leg. The spina bifida occulta, of course, is congenital, and the scoliosis and the difference in the length of plaintiff’s legs existed long before the accident occurred. Although Dr. Briel concluded that plaintiff had a very definite sciatic nerve irritation, which he described as being either sciatic neuritis or sciatic neuralgia, he could find no connection between this condition and the accident which occurred on June 10, 1956. Plaintiff, in fact, told Dr. Briel, as he did the other doctors who examined him, that he did not hurt or twist his back at the time of the accident.

In his petition plaintiff alleges only that he sustained an injury to his right knee, and he specifically described the injury as follows: “* * * his knee was sprained and the collateral tibia ligament was injured.” He does not allege any injury to or disabling condition of his back or of the sciatic nerve. The evidence indicates that plaintiff has never complained of an injury to his back to anyone, including the doctors who examined him. At the trial he testified as follows:

“Q. Now Mr. Fontenot, did you ever have any trouble with your back? A. I never noticed that my back bothered me.
“Q. You never did tell Dr. Briel there was anything wrong with your back, did you? A. I told him I had nothing wrong with my back.
“Q. And that was true, wasn’t it? A. Yes.
“Q. And you never told Dr. Gilly there was anything wrong with your back, did you? A. No, I didn’t say anything.”
***** *
“Q. When did you start having trouble with your back ? A. When my knee stopped swelling and hurting it hurt in my hip, it’s not in my back, it’s in my hip.”

We interpret plaintiff’s testimony to be that the pain in his “hip,” which we assume to be the pain caused by the sciatic nerve irritation, did not appear until after his knee “stopped swelling and hurting.” In his testimony he fixed the time when his knee stopped swelling as being a few days before his last visit to Dr. Gilly on May 6, 1957. It appears from plaintiff’s testimony, therefore, that the pain resulting from the sciatic nerve irritation first appeared in April or May, 1957, or at least 10 months after the accident occurred. This seems to confirm Dr. Briel’s conclusion that there is no connection between the accident and his present symptoms.

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 2d 175, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontenot-v-travelers-insurance-co-lactapp-1959.