Guillory v. Coal Operators Casualty Company

95 So. 2d 201
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 1957
Docket4403
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 95 So. 2d 201 (Guillory v. Coal Operators Casualty 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
Guillory v. Coal Operators Casualty Company, 95 So. 2d 201 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

95 So.2d 201 (1957)

Terra GUILLORY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
COAL OPERATORS CASUALTY COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 4403.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

May 2, 1957.
Rehearing Denied June 4, 1957.
Writ of Certiorari Granted October 8, 1957.

*202 Gravel, Humphries, Sheffield & Mansour, Alexandria, for appellant.

Paul C. Tate, Mamou, for appellee.

TATE, Judge.

Defendant insurer appeals from a judgment awarding plaintiff workmen's compensation for total and permanent disability, medical expenses, and also penalties and attorney's fees for the arbitrary and capricious nonpayment of compensation due. Plaintiff-appellee answers the appeal requesting an increase in the weekly compensation rate.

At 7:30 P.M. on June 23, 1954, plaintiff Miss Guillory suffered a tear of the medical meniscus or cartilage of her right knee when she stepped into a ditch en route to put out a fire in the "heater-treater" equipment of her employer, The Sunnyland Contracting Company, Inc. As a result of this condition, she suffers pain when walking or climbing, both necessary incidents of her employment, and her knee occasionally locks. It is a progressively worsening condition. There is no serious dispute that at time of trial plaintiff was permanently and totally disabled under our jurisprudence from performing duties of occupations similar to that in which engaged at the time of the accident. See, e. g., Bean v. Higgins, Inc., 230 La. 211, 88 So.2d 30.

At the time of the injury, Miss Guillory was employed at a salary of $75 per month as "pumper" to check and gauge the production of two oil wells situated on her father's property, upon which she resided with her parents and also to "treat" the produced oil for pipeline shipment once or twice a month, when sufficient production had accumulated.

The regular daily duties of gauging the oil accumulating in the storage tanks by the wells took approximately one hour, including about five minutes to record the production findings on a daily report form.

The monthly or semi-monthly regularly recurrent duty of "treating" the oil, which was regarded as the main work of the job (Tr-68), involved lighting the heater of the "heater-treater", which was a large (6' × 8') firebox or furnace, lit by sticking a burning rag therein to light the pilot flame, and then turning the main burner on. (Tr-60.) The oil was then circulated from the well storage tanks through the "treater" tank, where it was heated to 180 to remove the impurities, and then recirculated back to the well storage tanks for shipment in its more purified and fluid state. This process of "treating" the oil took plaintiff from eight to ten hours each time.

*203 Plaintiff further reported any difficulties or disorder in the equipment under her charge to her employers' main office at Rayne. She was in fact at the time of her injury endeavoring to investigate and to extinguish a fire in her employer's equipment situated about 600' from her home.

The District Court correctly found that plaintiff's employer was engaged in one of the trades, businesses, or occupations specifically classified as hazardous by our compensation act. LSA-R.S. 23:1035 specifies among the hazardous businesses: "The operation * * * maintenance * * of * * * oil, gas, sulphur, salt or other wells * * *. The * * * operation of boilers, furnaces, engines and other forms of machinery." Plaintiff's employer was clearly engaged in the operation of oil and gas wells, and the duties of plaintiff clearly included the regular operation of a boiler and/or furnace, namely the "heater-treater".

Plaintiffs' duties are among those within the principal physical operations of a business specifically designated as hazardous by the act so as to entitle her to compensation when injured in the course of these duties. Malone, Louisiana Workmen's Compensation Law, Section 98 et seq., p. 116. When the Legislature has specifically declared a business to be hazardous, "it is not open to the courts to question this classification, or to attempt to segregate the ordinary work involved in such operation into hazardous and nonhazardous duties, and then affirm the coverage of the act as to one and deny it to the other." Fontenot v. Myers, La.App. 1 Cir., 93 So.2d 245, at page 247.

Even were this not a business specifically denominated as hazardous by the act, plaintiff's duties included the regular performance of hazardous work in connection at least with the operation of the "heater-treater", so as to entitle her to coverage of the act when injured whether performing hazardous or nonhazardous duties. Byas v. Hotel Bentley, 157 La. 1030, 103 So. 303. Further, actually plaintiff's injury was sustained in connection with her responsibilities pertaining to the hazardous "heater-treater", as she was on her way to investigate and to put out a fire in this apparatus when she fell, causing the injuries which resulted in her present disability. These observations are pertinent chiefly in relation to defendant's efforts to exculpate itself from liability for penalties arising from non-payment of compensation to a disabled employee which the District Court found to be arbitrary and capricious and without probable cause.

In its defense that the employee's duties were non-hazardous so as not to be within the coverage of the compensation statute, defendant-appellee in a very able brief relies upon such factually inapposite cases as Dewey v. Lutcher Moore Lumber Co., 151 La. 672, 92 So. 273, where the employee was not engaged in the principal physical operations of a business specifically designated as hazardous by the compensation act, and Rayburn v. De Moss, 194 La. 175, 193 So. 579, which the Supreme Court characterized as based upon a finding "as a fact that the defendant's business was not hazardous within the meaning and contemplation of the act `since he was engaged in farming and dairying and not in the repairing or construction business'", Speed v. Page, 222 La. 529, 62 So.2d 824, at page 825.

Computing the compensation rate, the learned District Court divided the annual salary at the time of the accident of $900 ($75 per month) by the 52 weeks of the year, arriving at $17.31 as the weekly wage, 65% of which provided a weekly compensation rate of $11.25.

Defendant insurer urges that it should be given credit against this compensation liability for the continued payment of monthly wages of $75 per month, subsequently reduced to $50 per month (when one of the wells on plaintiff's father's tract *204 of land was closed down). In the first place, defendant is clearly not entitled to any credit whatsoever for payment of wages after December 1, 1954, when the firm of Hicks and LeBlanc bought the lease from plaintiff's employer and defendant's insured, Sunnyland, Hicks and LeBlanc having operated these wells since that date. Although the employer responsible for workmen's compensation may sometime receive credit by payment of wages against such compensation liability, the wages received from other employers are never available for such purposes. Malone, Louisiana Workmen's Compensation, Section 402, p. 517 (footnote 7); Gautreau v. Maryland Casualty Co., La.App. 1 Cir., 28 So.2d 96; cf., Wright v. National Surety Corp., 221 La. 486, 59 So.2d 695.

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Bluebook (online)
95 So. 2d 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guillory-v-coal-operators-casualty-company-lactapp-1957.