Gaudet v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.

143 So. 2d 252, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2149
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1962
DocketNo. 647
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 143 So. 2d 252 (Gaudet v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity 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
Gaudet v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., 143 So. 2d 252, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2149 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

The defendants appealed from the judgment of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, awarding the plaintiff maximum compensation for total permanent disability.

The plaintiff had been employed by Falstaff Brewing Corporation for about thirteen years. He had been assigned to various jobs from time to time, but his regular job was termed relief man in the warehouse. Warehouse work was commonly referred to as the “rock pile.” The duties of the relief man were to work in the place of any of the warehouse employees who needed to be absent from the job for short duration, vacation or otherwise. When there was no occasion to relieve someone in the warehouse the plaintiff would do any other job by assignment, such as clean up the floors, handle empty cases, inspect containers. The work on the “rock pile” in the warehouse was heavy labor. This work necessitated the handling by one man of crates of full beer containers, which weighed about forty-seven or forty-eight pounds.

On the night of November 10, 1958, the plaintiff went to the warehouse to relieve an employee named R. J. Blanchard. Plaintiff testified that while Blanchard was away from the warehouse on his relief, and while other warehousemen, Clarence Jeanfreau and C. D. Powell, were outside the warehouse, he stooped to handle a full case of beer, his back “suddenly grabbed,” and the pain was so severe he fell to his knees. He was alone at that time. When Blanchard returned he told Blanchard about it. The plaintiff said he had only one more relief to do that night and he felt he could do it as it was only a short time before the end of the work shift. He then went to relieve one of the other men, and told Jeanfreou and Powell about what happened. They asked him what he was going to do, and he told them that if it was not better the next day he was going to see the doctor. He said he also told the night superintendent that he was going to the doctor the next day. Pie did go to see Dr. Leon and while at the doctor’s office the next day he called the Falstaff office (he thinks he talked to a Mr. Abadie), and told him where he was and why he was there and that he could not come to work.

R. J. Blanchard gave the insurance adjuster a written statement shortly after that date, in which Blanchard is quoted as saying that plaintiff did not report the accident to him. However, Blanchard testi-[254]*254ficd in Court that plaintiff did tell him about what happened that night when he returned to resume work. Jeanfreau and Powell also acknowledged that plaintiff complained to them about hurting his back. Blanchard’s affirmative testimony under oath must be considered over his negative statement to the insurance adjuster.

Plaintiff said he was no better the next day and went to see Dr. Leon, from whom he took treatment daily until December 8, at Touro Infirmary. Dr. Leon examined him again and recommended that he return to light work. In addition to the treatment Dr. Leon prescribed a corset, which plaintiff said he has worn continuously since that time.

Plaintiff went back to work on December 9, 1958. He said he started to work in the warehouse but was unable to handle the filled cases, because it aggravated the pain in his back so much that he could not endure it. There are a number of jobs around the brewery to which plaintiff had been assigned at different times, but he said that for a period of about two years up to the time of the accident he worked almost entirely as the warehouse relief man which required lifting, carrying, handling full cases or crates of beer containers. Plaintiff said he had to work and he couldn’t afford to take any more time off, because supporting his family came first. Not being able to perform the work in the warehouse because of the pain in his back, he asked Anthony Hebert to swap jobs with him. Hebert was then inspecting empty cases and cleaning up. This work did not entail heavy labor. Hebert testified that they got permission from the night superintendent to swap jobs, and thereafter plaintiff did Hebert’s light work and Hebert went to the warehouse. The evidence shows that plaintiff continued to do the lighter job from then until Friday night before, the day of the trial of this case. On that Friday plaintiff and some other employees, because of a cut back in production, were laid off.

The night superintendent referred to was not called as a witness by defendants, and actually there was no attempt made by defendants to discredit any of the salient facts recited above, except by medical testimony on the question of plaintiff’s disability. Defendants did question Falstaff’s personnel manager to show that all of the jobs performed by various employees in the department in which plaintiff, Blanchard, Jean-freau, Powell and Hebert, worked drew the same pay, with an increase of ten cents an hour for those on the night shift,

We, therefore, conclude that there is sufficient corroboration of plaintiff’s individual testimony to establish the occurrence of an accident and injury on November 10, 1958. France v. City of New Orleans, La.App., 92 So.2d 473; Broussard v. Dumas Chevrolet Company, La.App., 120 So.2d 863, and authorities cited at page 867.

On the question of this plaintiff’s disability, if any, the plaintiff testified that about three weeks before November 10, 1958, he felt some pain in his back on occasions, but it was not severe and was not disabling until the sudden attack on the above date when he was carrying the cases of full beer containers, and that he has not been able since to perform his regular work in the warehouse without extreme pain.

Dr. Leon examined plaintiff the next day after the accident. Dr. Leon is a general surgeon and saw plaintiff after November 11a number of times. He found tenderness over the fifth lumbar vertebra to the right of the middle of the back, with muscle spasm and limited motion in both flexion and extension of ttie back. X-rays were made and disclosed a congenital sacralization of the fifth lumbar vertebra with the sacrum. That deformity did not contribute to plaintiff’s trouble. Dr. Leon diagnosed plaintiff’s condition as lumbosacral sprain. He prescribed a narcotic for pain, a back brace and physiotherapy treatments. On December 8, this doctor found full range [255]*255of motion, no tenderness, no muscle spasm and recommended that plaintiff return to light work on “November” 9th and to full work on December 22nd. The date “November” 9th is evidently a typographical error and should have been written December 9th. Dr. Leon did not see the plaintiff any more. The doctor made his report to defendant, Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, and that company paid his bill. He was called as a defense witness.

Dr. Salatich, an orthopedic surgeon, saw the plaintiff the first time on February 19, 1959. Dr. Salatich found painful tightening of muscle, loss of flexibility of the lum-bosacral movements, tenderness to the right of the middle of the back over the lumbo-sacral junction, and said the plaintiff complained of numbness in the right leg. This doctor thought he may have an interverte-bral disc involvement related to the accident of November 10th. Dr. Salatich was of the opinion that plaintiff needed treatment and he strongly advised that plaintiff refrain from demanding physical activities and particularly thought he could not perform labor safely and without pain. Plaintiff was re-examined by this doctor on October 20, 1960, when plaintiff was given another complete orthopedic examination.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 2d 252, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaudet-v-hartford-accident-indemnity-co-lactapp-1962.