Gates v. Ashy Construction Company

171 So. 2d 742
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 1965
Docket1332
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 171 So. 2d 742 (Gates v. Ashy Construction Company) 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
Gates v. Ashy Construction Company, 171 So. 2d 742 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

171 So.2d 742 (1965)

Thomas H. GATES, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
ASHY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Inc., Defendant-Appellant.

No. 1332.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana. Third Circuit.

February 10, 1965.
Rehearing Denied March 3, 1965.
Writ Refused April 15, 1965.

*743 Guillory, Guillory & Guillory, by Isom J. Guillory, Jr., Eunice, for defendant-appellant.

John P. Godfrey, Many, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before TATE, FRUGE, and CULPEPPER, JJ.

TATE, Judge.

The plaintiff employee was awarded workmen's compensation for total and permanent disability. The defendant employer appeals. The issue is whether residual disability has been proved.

The plaintiff suffered a low-back injury at work on June 5, 1963. He was paid workmen's compensation through September 12th. The defendant employer contends that as of that date, or at the most by March 1964, the plaintiff was fully cured from a work-caused lumbosacral sprain.

The trial court held, however, that the plaintiff was still indefinitely disabled as of the date of the trial by the resultants from the low-back injury at work. The trial court based this finding primarily upon the testimony of the attending physician, a general practitioner, who had examined and treated the plaintiff numerous times over the seven months between the date following the accident and the time his deposition was taken some seven months later; as well as upon corroborating lay testimony and upon certain symptoms or possibilities noted by the three specialists, orthopedists and neurosurgeons, who had examined the plaintiff briefly during the first four months or so following the injury.

The defendant-appellant contends that the District Court's finding is based upon possibilities and conjecture rather than upon the preponderance of the evidence. Relied upon is jurisprudence holding that the plaintiff in a compensation case bears the burden of establishing his claim by a preponderance of the evidence and to *744 a legal certainty, and "that speculation, conjecture, near possibility, and even unsupported probabilities, are not sufficient to support a judgment." Guillory v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co., 244 La. 225, 152 So.2d 1, 6. (Italics ours.)

The attending physician was of the definite opinion that the plaintiff's complaints of back pain, sometimes radiating into the legs, were genuine and that they resulted from the low-back injury at work. This doctor had examined and treated the plaintiff over a period of almost seven months, from the date following the accident until the note of evidence was closed. The doctor had hospitalized the claimant under traction for about two weeks following the accident, and he had continued to treat him regularly as an outpatient thereafter. While the truly objective symptoms of back disorder had greatly lessened after the first several months, the doctor accepted as genuine the patient's continued complaints of consistent pain, based upon his consistent reactions to examination for pain, his facial expressions, and actions, etc. The doctor felt that the most probable possible explanation for the claimant's continued pain and consequent disability was a mid-line protrusion or bulging of an intervertebral disc in the low back area.

He admitted, however, that he could not make a definite diagnosis to this effect in the absence of a myelogram (since the existence of such a disc injury can not be objectively verified unless the back is cut open). A myelogram is an X-ray procedure requiring the insertion of foreign matter in the spinal column. The preponderant opinion of the specialists herein is that this notinnocuous procedure is not justified unless preparatory to curative surgery.

Three specialists also examined the claimant, two of them on one occasion, and one of them on two occasions.[1] Two of these specialists felt, on the basis of the objective findings of their examinations of August 7, 1963 (Dr. Banks) and of November 18, 1963 (Dr. Boykin), that the plaintiff was no longer disabled by a lumbosacral sprain and that he could return to work.

The other specialist, a neurosurgeon (Dr. Faludi) found the plaintiff still disabled by a lumbosacral sprain as of October 16, 1963. He felt this sprain to be the probable cause of the plaintiff's continued disability, rather than a mid-line disc bulging. The witness further stated that, if the sprain rather than the mid-line disc were the cause of the plaintiff's disability, then the plaintiff's sprain disability should probably be terminated by two to three months following the date of the doctor's deposition in January of 1964.

Able counsel for the defendant-appellant persuasively contends that this evidence proves, at the most, only a conjectural possibility that the claimant is still disabled by reason of a mid-line disc; for none of the specialists were of the opinion that the symptoms had as yet indicated this to be the cause of the plaintiff's continued complaints of pain, and even the attending physician admitted that the existence of this condition was only an objective possibility, unless verified by further diagnostic procedures.

However, the plaintiff's complaints of pain, disability to bend, etc., were at all times consistent with his having sustained a mid-line disc bulging, as well as, also or instead, a continuing prolongation of a lumbosacral sprain. Essentially, the testimony *745 of the medical witnesses indicates that, if the plaintiff continues to suffer from genuine pain at the time of and during a period of time following their examinations, then the plaintiff may be disabled by reason of a back injury resulting from the accident, whether it be a mid-line disc bulging or a prolongation of the initial lumbosacral sprain. The specialists further admitted that, if genuine disabling pain persisted, then certain minimal symptoms discounted by them in their examinations during the initial period, might be indicia of a disc involvement; they referred to minimal lordosis (spinal column curvature), reflex, and possible-atrophy symptoms.

If indeed the plaintiff has proved that he continues to suffer genuine pain, which the medical evidence indicates could reasonably be a disabling residual of the work-accident, the plaintiff has borne his burden of proving a residual disability by a preponderance of the evidence, even though he may not have proved the precise cause thereof. Disability from workcaused condition, either of sprain or mid-line disc, is compensable. The plaintiff is obliged only to prove disability and not the precise medical cause thereof. Williams v. Travelers Ins. Co., La.App. 3 Cir., 157 So.2d 356, and cases cited therein.

As stated in Schram v. Lake Charles Ready-Mix, Inc., La.App. 3 Cir., 125 So.2d 213, 215, "proof of disability arising by reason of subjective pain must of necessity depend to a great extent upon the evaluation of the truthfulness of the claimant's complaints, and proof of such disability based essentially upon such evaluation has been held sufficient to support an award of workmen's compensation when medical testimony shows that such disabling pain may be residual from the industrial accident. [Citations omitted]." We find no manifest error in the trial court's evaluation of the plaintiff's testimony as truthful of continued disabling pain, as corroborated by the attending physician and the lay witnesses.

Some of the medical specialists may have opined that the plaintiff was not disabled, considering the objective symptoms only and not the plaintiff's subjective complaints of pain.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bradford v. Citgo Petroleum Corp.
237 So. 3d 648 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2018)
Emma Bradford v. Citgo Petroleum Corporation
Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2018
Simar v. Nowcam Services
617 So. 2d 164 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1993)
Clouatre v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.
557 So. 2d 696 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1989)
Clark v. Pernie Bailey Drilling
445 So. 2d 183 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1984)
Schouest v. J. Ray McDermott & Co., Inc.
411 So. 2d 1042 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1982)
Veuleman v. Sims
382 So. 2d 245 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1980)
Thompson v. NATCHITOCHES PARISH HOSPITAL ETC.
365 So. 2d 57 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1978)
Lucas v. Ins. Co. of North America
342 So. 2d 591 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1977)
Williams v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company
327 So. 2d 462 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1976)
Chelette v. Travelers Insurance Co.
324 So. 2d 915 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)
Horn v. Vancouver Plywood Co.
322 So. 2d 816 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)
Roberson v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.
316 So. 2d 22 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)
Tantillo v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.
315 So. 2d 743 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1975)
Grigsby v. Argonaut Insurance Company
297 So. 2d 698 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Malone v. Yager
295 So. 2d 604 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Babin v. Highlands Insurance Company
290 So. 2d 720 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Buxton v. Evangeline Timber Co.
286 So. 2d 100 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
White v. EA Caldwell Contractors, Inc.
276 So. 2d 762 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Barbay v. Fireman's Fund American Insurance Co.
275 So. 2d 492 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 So. 2d 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-ashy-construction-company-lactapp-1965.