Hall v. Shreveport Medical Arts Bldg. Corporation

39 So. 2d 628, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 467
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 1949
DocketNo. 7310.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 So. 2d 628 (Hall v. Shreveport Medical Arts Bldg. Corporation) 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
Hall v. Shreveport Medical Arts Bldg. Corporation, 39 So. 2d 628, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 467 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Plaintiff was injured on May 20, 1947, when an electric elevator of his employer, Shreveport Medical Arts Building Corporation, went out of control, rapidly ascended, and finally came to abrupt stop after ramming the upper portion of the shaft. He was operating the elevator at the time.

Within a brief time after the accident, Dr. A. P. Crain, whose office is in the employer's building, was summoned to render professional assistance to plaintiff. He had X-ray pictures made of different portions of his body, all of which were negative as to bone fractures or breaks. After this was done, and after having made a physical examination of him, Dr. Crain directed that he be carried to the North Louisiana Sanitarium in the City of Shreveport, where he remained as a patient until May 23rd. With Dr. Crain's consent, on that date, plaintiff was removed to his own home and thereafter continued to be under Dr. Crain's observation and treatment. He visited the doctor's office frequently. After the lapse of some six weeks, Dr. Crain decided that it would be well to have the advice and opinion of Dr. Gene Caldwell, a well known orthopedic surgeon of said city, as regards plaintiff's condition, and directed that he report to Dr. Caldwell for examination. Dr. Caldwell's diagnosis agreed with the X-rays previously taken, but thinking that perhaps there was some injury to the lower part of the spinal column and of the sacroiliac joints, he recommended that what is called "Russell" traction be applied for eight or ten days. This was done on July 6, 1947, after plaintiff had gone to the sanitarium the second time on Dr. Crain's advice. He soon grew tired of *Page 629 the discomfort, and, as he says pain resulting, and over the protest of attending nurses, had his wife remove the traction appliances and he then returned home.

Plaintiff alleged that he endeavored to stop the ascent of the elevator by throwing the cut-off switch and to do so it was necessary that he stoop over and while in this position the elevator came to a sudden and abrupt stop; that from the suddenness of the stop his head was jerked, his neck snapped and his body in other respects was badly jarred and shaken, particularly the lower part of his back and sacro-iliac region; that he was dazed from the impact and intense pain in those regions of his body quickly developed and have persisted since the accident; that he has not recovered the use of his limbs and, as a final consequence of all of said injuries, disability to work became and is now total and permanent. He sued for workmen's compensation on that basis, less eight weekly payments of $17.81 each, and for medical and hospital expenses incurred and to be incurred, to finally restore him to normal physical condition, the amount of which, he alleges, will exceed $500.

The employer and its insurer, Standard Accident Insurance Company, were made defendants. The answer of these defendants narrows the controversial issues to that of the alleged injuries, their nature and possible duration. It is alleged in the answer that plaintiff left the sanitarium against the advice of attending nurses and without Dr. Crain's knowledge and had since continuously refused to accept any offer of treatment by defendants; but, it is not affirmatively asserted that his disability, if any, is now due to the fact that he refused to follow the advice of Dr. Crain. Defendants, of course, resist the suit primarily on the ground that defendant has fully recovered from all injuries from the accident and is now able to operate the elevator or do other work of which he was capable prior thereto.

Defendants further alleged that they expended $179 for hospital and doctors' bills in the effort to determine plaintiff's true condition and to relieve same by appropriate treatment.

There was judgment for plaintiff for compensation at $17.81 per week, during disability not exceeding, however, four hundred weeks, less eight payments made; and for $500 as medical and hospital expenses, less a credit of $158.50, consisting of payments on those accounts made by the defendant. The defendants appealed.

The day following his departure from the sanitarium plaintiff went to his family physician, Dr. Leroy Scott, for treatment. At that time he was complaining principally of pain in the lower portion of his back, and to some extent of pain in his left leg. Based upon physical examination considered in the light of the character and locus of the complaints of pain, his physical movements and negative X-ray pictures, Dr. Scott diagnosed plaintiff's ailment as being sprains of the ligaments and muscles about the lumbo-sacral area. He prescribed infra-red radiation which was applied daily for a time and at time of trial, June 17, 1948, "once in awhile as he comes in". This treatment, in Dr. Scott's opinion, had materially improved plaintiff's condition, but had not fully eliminated the pain and suffering. Dr. Scott testified that as further basis for his opinion, the response to various motions he put plaintiff through, "and the points he complained of pain have been the points upon which I have based my judgment as to his injuries. He has been consistent with that all along." This included his manner of walking and the manner in which he held himself. The doctor further said: "All those things are evidence of it * * * I tried to see whether or not he was malingering and I don't think so." Dr. Scott's opinion as to the duration of the disability was not sought by either side.

Dr. G. H. Cassity physically examined plaintiff on July 11, 1947, and on June 15, 1948. He agreed fully with Dr. Scott's diagnosis of plaintiff's injuries but went further to say that his eight or twelve infected teeth "may very well be aggravating the back pain, and also prolonging it." He was certain plaintiff could not work, on account of the back condition and that which he thought existed in the sacral *Page 630 joint; and that such disability may persist for a year or more. He further stated that if the infected teeth are not removed the disability may become permanent in six more months, due to the likelihood of infective arthritis developing in the lower half of the spinal column. He was sure plaintiff's condition had materially improved between the two examinations made of him, a period of some eleven months.

Dr. Carson Reed physically examined plaintiff on June 16, 1947. He found subjective symptoms to support plaintiff's professions of pain in the lower part of his back, after putting him through different movements to check his reactions, and was of the opinion that he could perform light work if it did not require prolonged standing or walking. He agreed with Dr. Cassity that the infected teeth could be playing an important part in the continuation of pain and consequent disability, and was disposed to believe that plaintiff was to some extent exaggerating the conditions of which he complained. But, he added, if the pain of which plaintiff complains really exists, he is not able to do gainful work. Dr. Reed was not asked to give opinion as to the duration of plaintiff's disability.

Dr. S.W. Boyce also examined plaintiff a few days prior to the trial. His examination was thorough and extensive. He found a narrowing of the intervertebral disc between the fourth and fifth lumbar vertebrae, which he believed to be traumatic in origin and to account for the complaints of radiating pain down the left leg. He found subjective symptoms, the same as were found by other physicians who testified for plaintiff, plus spasms of the gluteal muscles of the left leg and suggested several treatments that might relieve the mentioned conditions, the first of which would be the removal of the teeth.

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Bluebook (online)
39 So. 2d 628, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-shreveport-medical-arts-bldg-corporation-lactapp-1949.