Guillory v. Reimers-Schneider Company
This text of 94 So. 2d 134 (Guillory v. Reimers-Schneider 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.
Opinion
Elga Joseph GUILLORY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
REIMERS-SCHNEIDER COMPANY, Inc., Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*135 Ponder & Ponder, Amite, Reid & Reid, Hammond, for appellants.
C. Paul Phelps, Ponchatoula, for appellee.
TATE, Judge.
This appeal is from the award of workmen's compensation benefits to plaintiff Guillory for total and permanent disability.
The accident of January 1, 1954 and the initial disability resultant are not denied. Defendant employer paid compensation to plaintiff for 81 weeks, but resists further liability, allegedly because: (a) the disability from the initial lumbosacral back strain has ceased; (b) even if plaintiff is still disabled, it is due to his failure to lose approximately 50 pounds, since his obesity and poor posture rather than the initial accident are the cause of any residual disability.
Plaintiff had been employed as a gang saw operator in defendant's sawmill for some time before the accident. His duties required the regular performance of heavy lifting.
Dr. Scarborough, general practitioner testifying for plaintiff; Dr. Thames, general practitioner testifying for defendant; and Dr. Bannerman, orthepedic specialist testifying for defendant; all agreed that at time of trial, Guillory was indefinitely disabled for the performance of such heavy duties by chronic lumbar or sacroiliac strain, or by muscular weakness resulting *136 from this original strain, aggravated by Guillory's obesity ("a pendulous abdomen") and his poor posture. The District Court rightly found that the great preponderance of the medical evidence supports a judgment entitling Guillory to workmen's compensation benefits for total and permanent disability.
The period of disability resulting from the initial back strain has been greatly prolonged by plaintiff Guillory's pre-existing and continuing obesity and by his poor posture. This is immaterial as regards liability for workmen's compensation payments during continued disability. "The courts have firmly established the principle that the employer must take the worker as he finds him. The worker who is abnormally susceptible to disability from an accident is entitled to the full protection of the compensation statute," Malone, Louisiana Workmen's Compensation (1951) 278. The employee's disability is fully compensable when precipitated by the industrial accident, even though caused also by a contributing pre-existing or previously dormant physical condition or predisposition, Hemphill v. Tremont Lumber Co., 209 La. 885, 25 So.2d 625; Behan v. John B. Honor Co., 143 La. 348, 78 So. 589, L.R.A.1918F, 862; Michel v. Maryland Casualty Co., La.App. 1 Cir., 81 So. 2d 36.
The record reflects that Guillory has weighed approximately 255 pounds all his adult life, he now being 55 years of age. He claims to have lost 15 pounds over a year as a result of dieting pursuant to doctors' instructions, although the latter wished for him to lose 40-50 pounds and felt he should have lost more. In effect, the defense is that plaintiff's present disability results from his non-cooperation with the medical treatment rather than from the industrial accident.
The burden is upon the employer to prove the defense that the employee's willful failure to cooperate with medical treatment, or his willful misconduct, is the cause of the continued disability, Edwards v. Shreveport Creosoting Co., 207 La. 699, 21 So.2d 878, and the proof to sustain this defense must be "clear, convincing and conclusive," Williams v. Texsun Supply Corporation, La.App. 1 Cir., 47 So.2d 93 99.
There is a complete absence of proof herein as to any willful failure to cooperate with medical treatment. The inference attempted to be drawn from the employee's failure to lose weight is not only contradicted by the employee's heroic loss of some weight from his lifelong norm despite a much more sedentary life, but also by common observation that the Lord Who created some of mankind fat and some lean, also created men with unequal abilities to gain or lose weight, through different metabolisms, degrees of will-power, practical opportunities to follow different diets, etc. Certainly the mere failure to lose weight in accordance with a glib medical recommendation cannot in the light of ordinary observation be characterized as proof of willful failure to cooperate with medical treatment.
By answer to the appeal plaintiff requests allowance of attorneys' fees under LSA-R.S. 22:658 for arbitrary and capricious non-payment of workmen's compensation benefits. This statutory penalty applies only to insurer defendants. The alleged excess insurer of defendant is not a party to this suit, and the relief requested will therefore be denied.
Further, plaintiff prayed for a 10% penalty for frivolous appeal under Article 907, C.P. We do not think the appeal herein so frivolous and totally without merit as to justify such penalty.
Finally, plaintiff-appellee in his answer to the appeal urges that this appeal should be dismissed insofar as it is suspensive, because the defendant-appellant's bond is insufficient. The District Court fixed the bond for the suspensive appeal at $4,500, *137 whereas plaintiff-appellee urges with considerable force that there is no statutory authority for the Court to authorize a suspensive appeal save upon the appellant's furnishing a supersedeas bond in accordance with the literal terms of Code of Practice, Article 575 in an amount equal to one-and-one-half the amount of the judgment (or herein, in the amount of $8,810.70, which is the amount of the weekly compensation for the remaining 319 weeks maximum of total disability, multiplied by one and one-half).
In the first place, "When the appellant gives bond for the amount fixed by the court, the appeal can not be dismissed" on the ground that the bond is insufficient in amount, Elder v. City of New Orleans, 31 La.Ann. 500, at page 501; Succession of Baumgarden, 35 La.Ann. 127. LSA-R.S. 13:4579 provides: "No appeal shall be dismissed * * * on account of any error in the amount of the bond * * * until the party furnishing such bond shall have failed to correct the error, inaccuracy or omission, or to have furnished a supplemental or additional bond, or surety or sureties, as provided in R.S. 13:4570 through 13:4580."
Pertinently in the statutory provisions referred to, LSA-R.S. 13:4573 provides that after the deficiency is called to the attention of the person providing the bond, such person has four days within which to furnish a new or supplemental bond. (In the present instance, by rule and notice the appellee notified appellant of its contention that the bond furnished per court order was insufficient to sustain a suspensive appeal; the District Court denied the appellee's motion for a greater bond.) The statute continues that if the party called upon to furnish greater bond "fails to furnish same, the case shall then proceed without any diminuation of the right of the adverse party, or other party in interest, to test the sufficiency of the bond furnished", LSA-R.S. 13:4573.
Plaintiff-appellee urges that upon seeking an increase in the amount of the suspensive appeal bond in the District Court, which motion was denied, he nevertheless has retained his right to question the sufficiency of the bond in this court under the last-quoted statutory provision.[1]
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94 So. 2d 134, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 1037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guillory-v-reimers-schneider-company-lactapp-1957.