Guillory v. Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Co.

110 So. 2d 188, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 826
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1959
DocketNo. 4730
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 So. 2d 188 (Guillory v. Employers Mutual Liability Insurance 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
Guillory v. Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Co., 110 So. 2d 188, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 826 (La. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge.

Plaintiff has appealed from a judgment awarding him workmen’s compensation at the rate of $35.00 per week commencing Jan. 8, 1957 and ending June 4, 1957 with interest at the rate of 5% on each delinquent payment from due date until paid and further for the additional sum of $182.-60 with interest from judicial demand and costs including the fees of the medical experts.

Plaintiff contends that the lower .court should have awarded him judgment for total and permanent disability subject to a credit for compensation previously paid, as a result of an accident suffered by him on October 9,. 1956.

The defendant also appealed from the judgment of the lower court because he contends that plaintiff had fully recovered from any disability prior to January 8th, 1957, the date to which plaintiff was paid workmen’s compensation. Defendant contends that the medical unqualifiedly showed [189]*189that the plaintiff had no disability subsequent to Nov. 20th, 1956, or in the alternative, no disability subsequent to January 7, 1957 and that any medical testimony of disability beyond Nov. 20, 1956 or in the alternative beyond January 7, 1957, is merely speculative and conjectural and based solely on plaintiff’s subjective complaints.

On October 9th, 1956 plaintiff and a fellow employee were carrying a three inch by eight inch by fourteen foot board when plaintiff stumbled or slipped resulting in the board falling across his back. The back part of the board struck him, however it left no marks, bruises or abrasions. Plaintiff reported the accident to his foreman and continued to do lighter work the rest of the day with pain. The following day, Oct. 10, 1956, plaintiff was sent by his employer to see Dr. J. J. Stagg of Eunice, Louisiana. Dr. Stagg stated that plaintiff was complaining of pain in his back and that he gave him an examination and found that he had tenderness over the lower back or in the lumbar region and he had limitation of forward bending. He gave him diathermy treatment and a sacro-iliac belt and in addition, had an X-ray made of his low back which he found negative. His tentative diagnosis was contusion of the back. The contusion or bruise was to the muscle of the lower back, which he stated were the paravertebral muscles. Dr. Stagg treated plaintiff with heat treatments and during the month of November plaintiff was still complaining of pain and disability. Dr. Stagg could find no reason for plaintiff’s pain and sent him to Dr. Meule-man for an examination, which the latter made on November 20th, 1956. Although Dr. Stagg states that he continued to treat the plaintiff until January 18th, 1957, he is positive in his testimony that he could find no reason for plaintiff’s complaints and was fortified in this opinion by Dr. Meule-man’s report of Nov. 20, 1956 to him that in his opinion the plaintiff had no disability. Dr. Stagg stated that after receiving Dr. Meuleman’s report he continued treatments which consisted of heat application until January 18th, 1957 because Dr. Meuleman had requested that “plaintiff be considered disabled for about another thirty days because he wanted to recheck some X-ray findings.” On the 16th day of January, 1957 Dr. Stagg received a copy of Dr. Meuleman’s report as a result of a visit by the plaintiff on January 2, 1957 in which Dr. Meuleman confirmed his prior opinion as a result of his examination on Nov. 20, 1956 that plaintiff was not disabled and reported to Dr. Stagg on Jan. 16 to that effect. Dr. Stagg, thereupon, on Jan. 18th was of the opinion that the plaintiff had no disability and could return to hard work and discharged him.

Dr. Meuleman gave the plaintiff a thorough examination on November 20th, 1956, and found no muscle spasm or objective symptoms for plaintiff’s complaint of pain. As a result of the test which he described in detail in his testimony he concluded that the plaintiff was not disabled. This conclusion was also based upon X-rays which were taken after Dr. Meuleman’s direction. The interpretation of these X-rays given by Dr. Romagosa, who was referred to by Dr. Meuleman as one of the ranking radiologists, in which Dr. Meule-man thoroughly agreed, were as follows:

“There are bilateral defects in the par-sinarticularis of L-5; this is associated with a minor degree of forward slipping of !L-5 on S-l. There is an irregular radio-lucent line which is roughly vertical in direction crossing the inferior articular process on L-4 on the left. This line can be seen in the same location on three different projections. It is highly suggestive of a possible fracture of the inferior articular process of L-4.”

As a result of the suggestion of a possible fracture of the inferior articular process of L-4, Dr. Meuleman recommended that the plaintiff be considered disabled for an additional thirty days, although he doubted seriously that there was such a fracture. On January 2nd, 1957 additional X-rays were made. An interpretation of the Janu[190]*190ary X-rays resulted in an opinion by this doctor that instead of a fracture it was an additional congenital abnormality. This doctor stated that as a result of his examinations and interpretation of X-rays it was his opinion that the plaintiff had recovered by Nov. 20th, 1956 from his injury of October 9th, 1956 and was again capable of enjoying gainful employment. He described the forward slipping of the body of L-5 on S-l as Spondylolisthesis, which he felt had pre-dated his accident of Oct. 9th, 1956, and that on Nov. 20th, 1956 plaintiff’s condition was the same as it was before his accident. It is shown that plaintiff had a congenital condition of the back known as spondylolisis, which is termed spondylo-listhesis where there is a slippage as described by Dr. Meuleman, supra. Dr. Meuleman and the other doctors who examined plaintiff found his condition to be Grade I, which is minimum.

Dr. Briel, an orthopedic specialist and a witness for the plaintiff stated that he had examined the latter on Feb. 19, 1957, at which time plaintiff was still complaining of pain in the region of the lumbo-sacral joint. He also had X-rays made and as a result of the X-rays and the examination he diagnosed a first degree spondylo-listhesis to be present with anterior slipping of the bodies No. 5 on Sacro-1, for a distance of about 3 millimeters, bilateral defects in the parsinterarticularis between Lumbar-5 and Sacro-1, with no evidence of any fracture or dislocation. He diagnosed the man’s condition from his history and examination as having suffered either a contusion of the tissue in his lower back or a ligamentous strain at the lumbar sacral region of his back. At the time of his examination he still showed a mild residual of his injury as demonstrated by the flattening of the lordotic curve and spasm in the right paravertebral muscles and subjective findings of pain and tenderness. He did not feel that the plaintiff could return to heavy work at that time. He re-examined plaintiff on June 4, 1957, at which time he was still complaining of pain and told the doctor that he had tried to do work in his garden but was unable to prolong it for more than three hours without severe pain in his back. As a result of this examination Dr. Briel stated that he could not find any objective evidence at that time of his original injury. This doctor also stated that as far as the defects in the plaintiff’s back were concerned they were not due to the trauma but were congenital, but as to the slippage he could not say it was due to trauma or whether that was present before or after the accident.

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Related

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483 So. 2d 219 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1986)
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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 2d 188, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guillory-v-employers-mutual-liability-insurance-co-lactapp-1959.