Fourchea v. Maloney Trucking and Storage

88 So. 2d 82, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 783
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1956
Docket20763
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 88 So. 2d 82 (Fourchea v. Maloney Trucking and Storage) 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
Fourchea v. Maloney Trucking and Storage, 88 So. 2d 82, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 783 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

88 So.2d 82 (1956)

Readley FOURCHEA
v.
MALONEY TRUCKING AND STORAGE, Inc.

No. 20763.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

May 28, 1956.
Rehearing Denied June 25, 1956.

*83 John F. Caraway, New Orleans, for plaintiff and appellee.

Jones, Walker, Waechter, Dreux & Poitevent and John V. Baus, New Orleans, for defendant and appellant.

McBRIDE, Judge.

Plaintiff, who is 43 years old, was in the employ of defendant as a laboror in its drayage and storage business, admittedly of a hazardous nature and subject to the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Statute. On November 8, 1954, as he was shoving some machines off a wagon, plaintiff slipped, fell and injured his back and was sent to see Dr. John D. Andrews, the employer's physician, who diagnosed the injury as a moderately severe lumbo-muscle strain and treated plaintiff for about five weeks therefor. Dr. Andrews, who is a surgeon, then concluded there were no further symptoms of an injury, so he sent him to Dr. H. R. Soboloff, an orthopedic surgeon, for an examination. When Dr. Soboloff saw plaintiff, which was in December of 1954, his opinion was that any injury plaintiff might have sustained in the accident had been cured and there was nothing to prevent him from returning to the same type of work he had been doing when the injury occurred. Dr. Andrews discharged plaintiff on January 4, 1955, and he returned to his job and worked for a few days, although he declares his back was hurting him, and that while he was engaged in loading a bale of cotton with a hook, the weight of the cotton fell on him. The next morning upon complaining to his employer's *84 representative that he could not continue to work, he was sent back to Dr. Andrews on January 26. At that time plaintiff says he told Dr. Andrews his back had never been completely well and that his condition became worse after he returned to the job. Dr. Andrews made a full examination and discerned tenderness over the spine at the site of the third and fourth lumbar vertebrae and over the lower left lumbar musculature and that the left thigh flexion and the left straight leg raising tests were positive, and so once again he started rendering treatment to plaintiff which lasted for another six weeks. On March 9, 1955, Dr. Andrews again sent plaintiff to see Dr. Soboloff, who examined him, and Dr. Soboloff reported that he could find nothing wrong. For the second time Dr. Andrews discharged plaintiff, but some few days thereafter at the instance of a Mr. Burk, the representative of defendant, Dr. Andrews resumed the treatment of plaintiff for the reason, as he states, to eliminate all possibility that plaintiff still suffered from any residual effects of the injury.

This third course of treatment continued to April 4, 1955, and then the patient was discharged finally. Dr. Andrews admits that plaintiff was still complaining of feeling no better and of pain in his back.

Plaintiff filed this suit against Maloney Trucking & Storage, Inc., claiming workmen's compensation at the rate of $30 per week for a period of 400 weeks under LSA-R.S. 23:1221(2), and after a trial on the merits in the lower court he recovered judgment for compensation at the weekly rate of $27.30 for a period not to exceed 382 weeks. Eighteen weeks' compensation had been paid. The judgment also made an allowance for future medical expenses. Defendant has appealed.

After his discharge by Dr. Andrews on April 4, 1955, plaintiff sought no further medical treatment until October 18, 1955, when he went to the Charity Hospital in New Orleans. The certified copy of the hospital record shows that he was discharged about a month later for the reasons: "Symptoms are not clear. Complains of lack of compensation from insurance papers."

The defense tendered is that plaintiff has been completely cured and is fully able and competent from a physical standpoint to return to and do any of the duties of his occupation and that the compensation already paid is all he is entitled to receive from defendant.

Plaintiff produced only one medical expert as a witness, namely, Dr. Blaise Salatich, who examined him on June 10, September 7 and December 1, 1955. Dr. Salatich testified that he found a consistent pattern of positive symptoms of an injury on all three examinations, such as, pain through the right lumbosacral region, numbness in the right lower extremity, moderate erecti-spini muscle spasm, restricted trunk movement, and positive body tests. His opinion of the X-ray showings was that there is a narrowing of the fifth lumbar vertebral interspace which gives him the impression that the patient had sustained a torsion exertion-type low back injury involving a reptured intervertebral disc with herniated nucleus pulposus and nerve root compression. Dr. Salatich states that he found plaintiff to be cooperative in respect to his several examinations and that he felt plaintiff was sincere in his complaints. He states that plaintiff is totally disabled from returning to work.

Dr. Andrews, called by defendant, outlined his course of treatment which need not be detailed. His opinion was that when plaintiff was last discharged there was absolutely no reason why he could not return to his occupational duties.

Dr. Soboloff, the orthopedic surgeon to whom plaintiff had been sent by Dr. Andrews, stated that he not only examined plaintiff on the two occasions already mentioned, but that he also saw him in September and December of 1955. His opinion was there was no residual disability which would prevent plaintiff from returning to work. Dr. Soboloff claims he detected some inconsistent responses by plaintiff to the various tests and called plaintiff's complaints of pain from the neck down to the *85 feet incompatible with nature's distribution of the nerves in the anatomy of the human body. He admitted there was atrophy of the right calf but stated that this condition resulted from the voluntary favoring of the extremity. The witness in commenting on the narrowing of the interspace between the vertebrae said that he believed this was no more than a normal condition which might be expected in a person of plaintiff's age and it did not indicate a ruptured disc.

Plaintiff was examined by Dr. Irvin Cahen, an orthopedic specialist, on September 27 and December 2, 1955. Dr. Cahen, testifying for defendant, stated he reached the conclusion that whatever restrictions in motion were demonstrated by the plaintiff were voluntary because he gave inconsistent responses to several tests and his characterization of plaintiff's complaints was that they were "bizarre." The summation of Dr. Cahen's testimony is that he found no orthopedic evidence of residual disability during either examination and he was certain there was no rupture of an intervertebral disc nor was there anything at all physically wrong with plaintiff. He made the statement that plaintiff did not cooperate with sincerity during the examinations.

The plaintiff testified that he had suffered pain since the accident; that he has worn a back corset; that the pain occurs in the middle back and he cannot stoop; that his right side and leg "get sleepy" and "stiff like"; that he uses a cane while walking; and has to be assisted in arising from his bed. He declares he cannot engage in any strenuous exercise.

Plaintiff's wife stated he had always been a regular worker but he is now disabled; since the inception of his injuries he has continually complained of back pains, and she had to procure a hard bed for him to sleep on.

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Bluebook (online)
88 So. 2d 82, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fourchea-v-maloney-trucking-and-storage-lactapp-1956.