Hair v. Williams Bros., Inc.

144 So. 800
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1932
DocketNo. 4357.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 So. 800 (Hair v. Williams Bros., 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
Hair v. Williams Bros., Inc., 144 So. 800 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MCGREGOR, J.

This is a suit brought by the plaintiff under the Employer’s Liability Law (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended). Williams Bros., Incorporated, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Nevada, was carrying on the job of building and constructing a gas pipe line in and through certain parishes in northeast Louisiana during the year 1930. In the conduct of this work motor trucks were used for hauling material, machinery, and equipment. During the summer and fall of 1929 the said Williams Bros., Incorporated, employed Dunn Bros. Construction Company to construct a portion of this pipe line in East Carroll parish in the capacity of an independent contractor. The plaintiff was employed by the said Dunn Bros. Construction Company to drive, operate, and repair motor trucks and to .perform such other labor in connection with the construction of the pipe , line as might be required, all for a daily wage of $6 per day, or $42 per week of seven days.

During the period covering the employment of the plaintiff, Williams Bros., Incorporated, carried employer’s liability insurance covering all employees working on said line, with the Georgia Casualty Company. Subsequently, this casualty company merged with, and became a part of, the Public Indemnity Company, a corporation organized under the laws of and domiciled in the state of New York, and the said Public Indemnity Compány assumed all of the obligations of the said Georgia Casualty Company arising out of, and in connection with, its insurance business in the state of Louisiana, particularly its obligation in connection with the workmen’s compensation insurance issued by it on account of the employees working on the construction of the said pipe line.

On or about July 30, 1929, while performing duties in the regular course of his employment, and while lifting a heavy piece of machinery, the plaintiff fell and struck his side and back on the running board of a truck.'

Plaintiff was sent by his foreman to Dr. Brown, the defendants’ physician in Lake Providence, and Dr. Brown, seeing the seriousness of the plaintiff’s injury, sent him to Monroe where he was treated by the company physician, Dr. George W. Wright.

The pain and disability resulting from the plaintiff’s injury developed to such an extent that he was kept in bed practically all the time until November 12,1929, when an operation was performed on him by Dr. Wright, who had been treating him from the beginning. An incision nine inches in length was made in the region of the right kidney. Upon making this incision Dr. Wright found that plaintiff’s right kidney had been dislocated by the fall on July 30, 1929, and had adhered to tissues in the lower abdominal cavity. The kidney was lifted up and sutured at the proper place and the lacerated parts were repaired as well as could be done. Naturally this serious operation kept the plaintiff confined to his bed for quite a while and it was many weeks before he regained any strength or health at all.

Since the operation there has appeared a kind of knot or tumor on the plaintiff’s right side, which appears to come and go. In fact, some of the physicians who testified in the case were never able to detect it at all, while others say they have seen it very pronounced at times.

There could be no doubt as to plaintiff’s total disability for several months or longer, so compensation at the maximum rate of $20 per week was paid to him for a period of 109 weeks. At the end of that time the defendants refused to pay any more for the reason, as they alleged, that the plaintiff had fully recovered from the injury received, and that, if he was still suffering, it was on account of something that did not arise out of, and which had no connection with, the injury.

On account of the refusal to pay any further compensation, the plaintiff filed this suit against Williams Bros., Incorporated, Georgia Casualty Company, and the Public Indemnity Company, and demand is made for compensation on the basis of permanent total disability for a period of 400 weeks less, of course, the 109 weeks already paid.

In their answer the defendants admit the *801 injury and temporary total disability, and that the operation was performed as alleged. But they allege that they discontinued paying compensation to the plaintiff for the reason that on and after September 1, 19-31, he was able to do and perform the same kind and class of work that he was performing at the time of his injury.

On the issues as thus joined there was a trial in the lower court, resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for full compensation for permanent total disability. From that judgment the defendants have appealed.

Opinion.

The only controversy in the case is as to the condition of the plaintiff at the time of the trial, for it will be conceded that his condition at that time was the same that it was when the defendants ceased the payments of compensation.

In his own testimony the plaintiff testified that he has sharp pains in his right side constantly and that his back gives him trouble at varying intervals. The pain in his right side is connected more or less with a lump or knot that appears in that region. The controversy among the expert witnesses revolves around this peculiar phenomenon. The plaintiff says that this swelling or whatever it may be termed made its first appearance immediately after he recovered from the operation when his right kidney was sutured to its proper position in his body. In describing it he says: “It will go and come just like when you blow up a balloon and let the air out of it.”

On the day of the trial it was impossible to demonstrate the presence of the formation, but that fact does not cause us to doubt its existence, as three reputable physicians testified that they had seen* it on several occasions. The fact that it was not'palpable on the day of the trial simply corroborates the statement of the plaintiff and his expert witnesses that it goes and comes at different times. It is nothing uncommon for the very worst symptoms to disappear by the time a physician arrives in response to a call from a patient.

Dr.-L. A. Masterson, of Columbia, testified that he examined the plaintiff about four times. The first examination was on October 2, 1931, and the last was on March 7, 1932, just two days before the trial of the case. In his testimony he stated positively that the mass or knot was plainly discernible. On this point he said: “The man was complaining of pain in his right side, and complained of a mass in the right side. On physical examination — on October 2nd, 1931, he showed a mass in his right side, this mass was located about halfway between the anterior of the Ileum and o»e Navel, back here (indicating) on pressure it seemed rigid, movable and not attached to the interior wall. The mass was about 2½ inches by three inches, more or less oval in shape. Now this mass was present when the man was sitting or standing and on laying down it disappeared. On my examination on March 7th, 1932, Monday, this mass was found in the same region that I have described, but larger. Again it disappeared when the man was reclining or laying down. It was spongy in consistency and was oval and was not attached to the interior wall.”

It is the opinion of Dr. Masterson that this abnormal condition was caused by the accident and that it is what is known as an merabdominal hernia.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fortenberry v. Kingsville Timber Co.
136 So. 2d 746 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 So. 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hair-v-williams-bros-inc-lactapp-1932.