Gorley v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co.

49 So. 2d 628, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 806
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 5, 1950
DocketNo. 7584
StatusPublished

This text of 49 So. 2d 628 (Gorley v. Tennessee Gas Transmission 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
Gorley v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., 49 So. 2d 628, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 806 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinions

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff was injured on July 13, 1949, while working as welder for the defendant. He sued his employer for compensation at .the rate of $30.00 per week for four hundred weeks, and for physician’s and medical expenses incurred to relieve his pain, etc., and to be incurred, to the amount of $500. Specifically, he alleged that the following described injuries to him were the result of the accident, and have produced total permanent disability, viz: Contusion of the upper part of the chest and of the head; compression fracture of the fifth lumbar vertebra with anterior displacement; incomplete fracture of the left ilium near the sacro-iliac joint.

He further alleged “that he has suffered constant and continuous pain since the date of the accident * * * and would not have been able to work during the time which he did for Tennessee Gas Transmission Company except the type work provided allowed him to sit down and rest for the greater portion of the working day.”

The defendant denied each and every essential allegation of the petition save those relating to its corporate capacity and to the identity of its Louisiana agents for service of legal process.

Defendant appealed from judgment in plaintiff’s favor.

The defendant was engaged in the laying of a thirty inch (30”) pipe (gas) line in Ouachita Parish, and plaintiff’s duty required him to tie the - ends of the sections of pipe by welding. To accommodate the pipe as it was being laid, a trench some eight feet deep was dug. ' While plaintiff was bending over in the act of Welding the ends of- sections of the pipe, one side of the ditch bank caved or sloughed off and buried him against the pipe. Fellow workmen quickly. came to his rescue, and he says that in five or ten minutes, by means of shovels, he was extricated from the uncomfortable predicament. He was immediately driven to a clinic in the City of Monroe, and was there closely examined, X-rayed and given treatment by Dr. Bendel. Very soon thereafter the defendant’s employed physician, Dr. Watts, transferred him to another sanitarium in said city, where he stayed for one day and night. Dr. Watts treated him for one week and advised him to return to light duty. He reported back for duty and worked one day and then was absent from [629]*629duty for twenty-eight days consecutively. During this period he did not complain to any officer or agent of defendant, nor to Dr. Watts, of suffering pain of any sort, nor of being disabled to do his work.

On August 5th plaintiff consulted an attorney in the City of Monroe, who sent him to Dr. J. W. Cummings, general practitioner there, for examination, etc. Dr. Cummings made the examination and also made X-ray pictures of his body. On August 9th plaintiff again reported for duty arid continued to do the work of welder until November 10th. His employment terminated then because the job on which he was working had been completed. He was the last welder to be discharged. He admits that from August 9th to November 10th he did not inform any of defendant’s officers or agents to whom injury or disability should be reported, that he was paining from the accident, nor that he was performing his work under difficulties; nor did he go to a physician for relief during that period. He returned to Monroe and again on November 18th, he consulted Dr. Cummings. Additional X-rays were then made. Soon thereafter demand upon defendant for payment of compensation was made by his attorney and on its refusal to do so, this suit was filed. He returned to his home in Os-kaloosa, Iowa, and stayed there until a few •days prior to trial of the case on March 8, 1950. While in Iowa he did not seek the' services of a physician to alleviate his pain and suffering.

When Dr. Cummings first examined plaintiff he was then complaining of pain in the left side of his head, left upper chest and in the lower part of the back, which plaintiff said, radiated down both legs. Dr. Cummings says the back then showed “spasm of the lumbar-sacral muscles, with pain and tenderness over the sacrum, with an increase in the normal anterior lumbar curve.” In all other respects the physical examination was negative. The X-ray pictures, according to Dr. Cummings, revealed no pathology save that the fifth lumbar vertebra “shows anterior displacement in relation to the first sacral, with narrowing of the posterior part of the body of the fifth lumbar vertebra", and an “incomplete fracture line running laterally and downward” of the left ilium.

At time of the second examination by Dr. Cummings, the patient was complaining of the same symptoms as previously. Physical examination was again negative, excepting the “lower lumbar area which showed an increase in the anterior curvature in the lower lumbar region with muscle spasm and tenderness over this area.” Disclosures of thé X-ray pictures at that time were the same as the former ones. Dr. Cummings considered the incomplete fracture of the ilium of “minor consideration”. It had healed. He diagnosed the injury to the fifth lumbar as being compression fracture with anterior or fórward' displacement. This pathology of the vertebra, Dr. Cummings says, causes loss of normal weight bearing, with consequent pain, particularly upon bending and straining. He did not believe plaintiff would ever be able to again do the work of welder and did not advise hospitalization. He was not asked to prescribe treatment for the injuries, but was simply requested by plaintiff’s counsel to make examination and pictures in order to determine the cause of the pain of which plaintiff complained.

In answer to a question by defendant’s counsel, Dr. Cummings outlined appropri-áte treatment in- a case of this character. He said:

“A. Well, you place them on a frame with extension of the back, probably with or without traction of the legs, depending upon the force under treatment and then the use of either a cast or a supporting brace after a period of approximately two to three weeks.
“Q. Would that normally require hospitalization ? A. It would.”

. It is certain plaintiff has not undergone such treatment, nor has he intimated a willingness to do so.

Dr. A. Scott Hamilton, whose practice is limited to orthopedic surgery, called as a witness for the plaintiff, did not physically examine him. He was shown and interpreted the X-ray pictures made by Dr. Cummings. He interpreted some of the films as disclosing a “spondylolisthesis or a forward [630]*630gliding of the fifth lumbar vertebra one cem timeter or .4 of an inch, practically, together with some compression of the posterior portion of the body of that vertebra * * * also a defect of the lamina is 'seen, which is the underlying pathological change necessary in the usual case for a spondylolisthesis to 'occur.” He also found a fracture line in one of the iliums. He was of the opinion that the deformity of the vertebra and fracture of. the ilium could have been caused by the heavy quantity of dirt falling upon plaintiff. His idea of appropriate treatment for injuries of the sort mentioned, differed widely from that stated by Dr. Cummings. However, plaintiff has not seen fit to submit to either formula. Dr. Hamilton was unable to say whether the spondylolisthesis was congenital or due to trauma. He found evidence of a mild compression deformity of the back portion of the body of the fifth vertebra, which he says “may have been the result of compression injury”, but he declined to give the opinion that it was really a fracture.

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49 So. 2d 628, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorley-v-tennessee-gas-transmission-co-lactapp-1950.