Fortenberry v. Kingsville Timber Co.

136 So. 2d 746, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1657
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1961
DocketNo. 5440
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 136 So. 2d 746 (Fortenberry v. Kingsville Timber 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
Fortenberry v. Kingsville Timber Co., 136 So. 2d 746, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1657 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge,

The plaintiff in this suit seeks to recover total and permanent disability benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Act LSA-R.S. 23:1 et seq., for injuries received in an accident which occurred on May IS, 1959. The plaintiff was employed as a member of a logging crew cutting, loading and hauling pulpwood near the Mississippi levee in East Baton Rouge Parish. During the logging operations he decided to cut down two trees with a power saw. When he cut one of the trees it fell against another tree, and as he was cutting this tree in order to free both of the trees, the small tree split, a portion of the tree flying up and striking plaintiff on the right side of his head.

He was taken for immediate treatment to the Reiger Clinic, then was referred from there to the Baton Rouge General Hospital where various tests were run for approximately two weeks. The doctors were of the same opinion, that the plaintiff was able to go back to work, although he complained bitterly of pain, headaches, vomiting, nausea and bleeding. He was paid full compensation benefits up to the time of his discharge from the hospital, and certification as being able to return to work and the compensation payments were terminated.

The plaintiff engaged an attorney and was seen by Dr. Rhodes Spedale of Plaque-mine. Dr. Spedale’s findings supported the plaintiff’s complaint that he was disabled because of the accident, the trauma causing an injury to the vagus nerve which in turn caused ulcers.

In due course, the plaintiff filed suit and after a trial on the merits, judgment was rendered for written reasons assigned, dismissing the plaintiff’s demands, hence this appeal.

It has been repeatedly held that the plaintiff in a Workmen’s Compensation case must, as in other civil cases, bear the burden of proof and must establish his case by a reasonable preponderance of the evidence. Edwards v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Company, La.App., 108 So.2d 126. The establishment of a claim to the extent only of a possibility or even unsupported probability is not sufficient. Page v. Tremont Lumber Company, La.App., 108 So.2d 1.

As a pre-requisite to recover Workmen’s Compensation, an employee must prove an accident within the scope of and in the course of his employment, and also show a causal connection between such accident and the injuries and resulting disability. See Simms v. Brown Paper Industries, La.App., SS So.2d 311; Houston v. Atlas Sewing Centers, Inc., La.App., 121 So.2d 301.

[748]*748The parties to this suit agree that the plaintiff suffered an accident within the scope and in the course of his employment. The compensation payments were made to him for the two weeks that he was in the hospital. Upon his. discharge they were terminated.

The only issues in this case are whether the plaintiff is, in fact, disabled and if his disabilities are the result of the accident.

In order to determine whether there was any causal connection between the tree striking the plaintiff on the head and any resulting disabilities he claims it will be necessary to carefully consider the medical evidence introduced into the record.

Counsel for plaintiff contends that the plaintiff’s employer, by immediately taking him to the company doctor and placing him in the hospital for rather extensive neurological tests, did not do so for the benefit of the employee, but for the benefit of the employer.

The record does reflect that the plaintiff was immediately taken to the Reiger Clinic where he was examined by a Dr. Jere D. Mellili. Dr. Mellili took the patient’s history and in his examination found small abrasions under the left eye with a large lump over the right forehead that the doctor did not feel had any relationship to the injury, since it was soft as opposed to being tight, bluish and painful. The skull x-rays taken of the patient were negative for any type of fracture or increase in pressure in the cranium.

The history given by the patient was that he had been unconscious for five to ten minutes and that the accident caused the knot on his forehead, which it is now admitted was not the truth as he had this enlargement for a number of years.

This is in direct contradiction to the testimony of the only witness to the accident, the defendant, Mr. C. E. White. Mr. White testified that when the tree split and hit the plaintiff, it did not knock him down nor did he lose consciousness. We point this out merely because in the various histories taken by several doctors who examined the plaintiff he gave a history of being knocked unconscious. The plaintiff was given a complete neurological examination on May 16, 1959, and returned again on the 18th, both examinations resulting in negative findings. On the 20th of May he was examined by a Dr. Lloyd Champagne, who also could not find any objective evidence of injury to the plaintiff. The plaintiff was placed on a mild analgesic and told if the symptoms persisted to return, which he did on May 22, 1959 and was given another neurological examination which proved negative.

Upon being cross-examined, Mr. Mellili testified that the vagus nerve could be stimulated by a blow on the head and if the blow resulted in damage to the vagus nerve that it could cause ulcers. However, he qualified this by stating that he did not think there was any damage to the plaintiff’s head because of the various tests being negative. Dr. Mellili also took a test for blood in the stool, finding that he had a normal brown stool, but that there was some evidence of blood in the G. I. tract, which he did not attribute to the accident and injury.

Dr. Champagne’s testimony related only to one visit of the plaintiff, as he was assisting Dr. Mellili on a day that the latter was not present at the Reiger Clinic. However, from his examination he did not feel that there were any substantiated objective symptoms that would support plaintiff’s complaints.

An internal specialist examined the plaintiff on May 22, 1959, in consultation with Dr. Mellili at the Reiger Clinic. After taking a cursory neurological examination, the doctor found no abnormalities.

Since he was complaining of waking up and finding blood in his mouth, he was hospitalized in order that another set of [749]*749skull films could be taken, x-rays of the sinuses, together with a G. I. Series, all of the tests being negative. Neither the hospital records nor any of the doctors testifying on behalf of the defendants, noticed that the plaintiff had spit or coughed up any blood at all.

Dr. Edelman, a neurologist, was asked to evaluate the plaintiff from a neurological standpoint and to make an E.E.G. Plaintiff was given a complete neurological examination, as well as the G. I. Series, chest x-rays, and x-ray of the sinuses, blood •count, and stool examination. The findings from all these tests were essentially negative. Dr. Edelman testified on behalf of the defendants that he examined the plaintiff on May 30th, 1959. The doctor checked the plaintiff from the point of view from all of his cranial nerves finding that all of the cranial nerves were normal. The doctor gave a detailed analysis of his examination of each of the cranial nerves and the reasons that he found that the tests were negative and all of the cranial nerves to be normal. The doctor reviewed the x-ray films finding that they showed nothing to suggest intracranial pressure. His conclusion was that the x-rays of the skull were completely normal.

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Bluebook (online)
136 So. 2d 746, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortenberry-v-kingsville-timber-co-lactapp-1961.