Guidry v. Seacoast Products, Inc.

220 So. 2d 570, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5353
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1969
DocketNo. 2616
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 220 So. 2d 570 (Guidry v. Seacoast Products, Inc.) 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
Guidry v. Seacoast Products, Inc., 220 So. 2d 570, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5353 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

FRUGÉ, Judge.

This is an appeal from an award in a Workmen’s Compensation suit. Plaintiff, Simuel Guidry, was employed by defendant, Seacoast Products, Inc., primarily in the capacity of unloading vessels loaded with fish. On September 3, 1966, while he was working in a ship’s hold, a stack of fish caved in on plaintiff and, as he attempted to escape therefrom, he injured his left knee.

After this accident the defendant paid to plaintiff compensation benefits for a total of seventeen weeks. The payments were discontinued upon receipt by defendant of the second medical report indicating that plaintiff should be able to return to work.

Suit was filed on June 14, 1967, and after trial on the merits, judgment was rendered in plaintiff’s favor for one hundred weeks’ compensation, subject to credit for seventeen weeks’ compensation already paid. From this award defendants have appealed and plaintiffs have filed an answer to the appeal asking that the judgment be amended so as to increase the award and to include penalties and attorney’s fees.

There seems to be little dispute that the plaintiff was in fact injured, and that at the time of the trial he had some residual injury. The essential question to be answered is whether plaintiff is suffering from pain and discomfort from the injury which would entitle him to compensation, even though since the time of the injury he has been employed at the same work as that at the time of the accident.

The trial court gave no written reasons for his finding, but after a close reading of the record, which included both lay and medical testimony, this court is in agreement with the findings of disability of the trial court, although we think the award is insufficient.

To show the basis of this agreement with the trial court, we shall discuss only briefly some of the evidence. The medical testimony shall he discussed by dates in an effort to follow the injury chronologically.

I-THE EVIDENCE

September 3, 1966 — plaintiff was sent by his employer to Dr. Howard Alleman, a general practitioner in Abbeville, Louisiana. Dr. Alleman diagnosed plaintiff’s injury as “a contusion involving the medial, anterior and lateral aspects of the knee and considerable tenderness of those areas”. After giving plaintiff something for pain, he instructed him to return to his home, not to put any weight on the leg, and to return after three days.

September 6, 1966 — Dr. Alleman found “more swelling” and that the knee was “very tender to palpation and there was increased warmth of the entire knee”.

September 9, 1966 — Dr. Alleman found there was “effusion of the knee” and he found it necessary to “aspirate” (drain) the knee.

September 11, 1966 — Dr. Alleman found that the swelling of the knee had reaccu-mulated to a greater extent than on the previous visit, and he therefore referred plaintiff to Dr. Webre, an orthopedic surgeon in Lafayette, Louisiana.

September 12, 1966 — Dr. Webre examined plaintiff and found that he “had a sprain of the knee manifesting considerable effusion of the knee * * * He found no specific evidence of internal derangement of the knee and thought that plaintiff would be disabled from performing his normal work. Dr. Webre recommended that the patient go to a physical therapist in Abbeville, Louisiana.

October 5, 1966 — Plaintiff was again examined by Dr. Alleman who found that the swelling had disappeared, but that “there was still much pain, subjective pain, and tenderness on palpation of the medial aspect of the knee”. Two weeks later, be[572]*572cause of the time lapse and the continued condition of the knee, the doctor considered surgery.

October 24, 1966 — Plaintiff was returned to Dr. Webre, where it was found that he had some increase in joint fluid and that he was complaining of pain with forced flexion of the medial, as well as the posterior aspect of the knee.

November 14, 1966 — Dr. Webre found that plaintiff had a “very small amount of increased joint fluid”, and that he appeared to be gaining strength in his thigh, although still having a slight persistent limp.

November 28, 1966 — On this, the last visit to Dr. Webre, it was found that plaintiff’s limp had all but disappeared, that he seemed to have good strength clinically, and that although the patient complained of pain with forced flexion of the knee, there was no other symptomatology about the knee. For the first time, it was advised by this physician that the plaintiff return to his previous employment, but it was noted by Dr. Webre, however, that he would have some pain “upon strenuous activity.”

December 27, 1966 — Plaintiff did not return to work, and he again saw Dr. Alle-man, who upon finding that the patient’s knee had little improved, decided to refer him to another orthopedist, Dr. James H. Larrivierre, in Lafayette, Louisiana.

December 30, 1966 — Dr. Larrivierre made findings not unlike Dr. Webre’s original diagnosis, but in addition he recommended injections into the knee of Decadrone with Xylocane. According to these instructions, said injections were administered to plaintiff by Dr. Alleman on December 30, 1966, and on January 16, 1967.

January 23, 1967 — The patient was again referred to Dr. Larrivierre who still found that conservative treatment would be best, and in addition, now recommended that the plaintiff go back to work, the work being physical therapy.

February 10, 1967 — Plaintiff returned to Dr. Alleman, who although he found that plaintiff “still had some tenderness on palpation and walked with a limp”, felt that since two specialists had advised him to return to work, he had no alternative but to do likewise. Dr. Alleman testified that at this time, April 10, 1967, it was his opinion that the plaintiff was still suffering and that he expected the knee to be uncomfortable for some time to come.

After February 10, 1967, plaintiff continued to experience pain and discomfort in his left knee, but he attempted to return to work. When he returned to his former employment, fish season was not open, and instead he was assigned to cutting grass, chipping and painting around the plant. It was not before May that plaintiff was again seen by a physician.

May 9, 1967 — Dr. James Gilly, an orthopedist from Lafayette, examined plaintiff and found that he had a “so-called traumatic Pellegrini-Stieda, that is a partial tear of the upper fibres of the medial collateral ligament with calcification occurring”.

When asked about pain, Dr. Gilly noted that plaintiff was experiencing pain when he attempted to flex his knee. When walking up and down stairs or working in piles of fish and so forth, the plaintiff would encounter either discomfort or a sense of mistrust of the knee joint.

May 25, 1967 — Plaintiff was referred to yet another orthopedic surgeon, Dr. William Zink. Dr. Zink found that the patient had a normal range of extension but lacked about twenty degrees of full flexion when he compared the left knee to the right. There was tenderness over the medial portion of the left knee in its lower part and the knee seemed to contain some fluid within it. The back of the knee was swollen. Upon examination of X-Rays, Dr. Zink found “calcification adjacent to the medial aspect of the medial femoral condyle”, which he interpreted as a residual of the tear of the ligament that had [573]*573healed, with some little calcium deposits as a result of the healing.

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Related

Sanders v. Boh Bros. Construction Co.
304 So. 2d 812 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Weidert v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.
247 So. 2d 215 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)
Guidry v. Seacoast Products, Inc.
222 So. 2d 68 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
220 So. 2d 570, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guidry-v-seacoast-products-inc-lactapp-1969.