Hall v. Travelers Insurance Co.

251 So. 2d 120, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5892
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1971
DocketNo. 3459
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 251 So. 2d 120 (Hall v. Travelers 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
Hall v. Travelers Insurance Co., 251 So. 2d 120, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5892 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

HOOD, Judge.

This is a workmen’s compensation suit instituted by Kenneth F. Hall against Travelers Insurance Company, the latter being the insurer of plaintiff’s employer, Gulf Machine Shop. Judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiff, awarding him compensation benefits based on total and permanent disability. Defendant has appealed.

The issues to be determined are whether plaintiff is totally and permanently disabled, and whether the sum awarded to him for medical expenses is excessive.

Hall sustained injuries to his neck and back on August 14, 1967, during the course of his employment as a welder by Gulf Machine Shop, in Lake Charles. He was operating a crane moving a 2S0 pound steel plate at the time the accident occurred. A clamp on the crane accidentally released the plate, causing it to fall and to strike plaintiff on the back of his head and shoulders, knocking him to the ground.

Compensation benefits were paid to plaintiff by defendant for a total of 45 weeks, from September 1 to September 5, 1967, and from October 25, 1967 until September 3, 1968. The payment of these benefits was discontinued on the last mentioned date because the medical reports submitted to defendant indicated that plaintiff was able to return to work by that time.

Plaintiff resumed the performance of the duties of his employment within a few minutes after the accident occurred, and he continued to work regularly for the defendant’s insured, Gulf Machine Shop, from the date of the accident until October 25, 1967, at which time he voluntarily terminated his employment because of a wage dispute — not because of disability or inability to do the work. He instituted this suit oil December 6, 1967.

Hall was 59 years of age when the accident occurred. He testified that about one week after the accident he began to suffer severe headaches, neck pain and stiffness in his back and shoulders, but that he nevertheless continued to perform all of his duties as a welder for Gulf Machine Shop during the remainder of the day of the accident and for more than two months after that date. After he quit working for Gulf Machine Shop on October 25, 1967, he obtained other jobs and he kept on working regularly for more than two years, until December 23, 1969. He stated that he has not returned to work as a welder since the last mentioned date because of “severe headaches and hurting and stiffness in my shoulders,” and that “I tired a whole lot easier and it was harder for me to get around to do a day’s work.” He, of course, was at least 61 years of age when he felt that these symptoms were severe enough to prevent him from continuing to work as a welder.

Stacey W. Smith, president and general manager of Gulf Machine Shop, testified that after the date of the accident, and up to the time plaintiff quit his job, Hall “worked when he felt like it,” but that he never complained about an injury and that he never indicated that he was disabled from performing the work of a welder. Smith also stated that during the three month period immediately prior to the accident, Hall was absent from work occasionally for as long as a week at a time because of illness in his family. And, he testified that Hall was absent on other occasions before the accident, giving as his reasons for being absent that “he had a headache or his neck hurt or his shoulder hurt,” that “he had arthritis,” and that “it was his arthritic condition that was causing this discomfort.” According to Smith's testimony, therefore, plaintiff had the same symptoms before the accident as he has now.

The record contains the testimony or reports of five medical experts, four of whom treated plaintiff. Dr. Gerald N. [122]*122Weiss, a surgeon, examined him on August 28, 1967, and concluded that plaintiff had sustained contusions of the right leg, right forearm and right shoulder as a result of the accident. He treated plaintiff from that date until September 20, 1967, a period of a little more than three weeks, and discharged him on the last mentioned date as being fully recovered and as being able to return to his regular work on September 25, 1967.

Dr. Jerome W. Ambrister, an orthopaedic surgeon, saw and treated plaintiff five times from October 23, 1967, until February 5, 1968. He discharged plaintiff on the last mentioned date as being able to return to work. After discharging him, Dr. Ambrister, examined Hall again on August 14, 1968, and on June 24, 1970. All of his clinical and x-ray examinations were negative for injury or disability, except that he found “arthritic changes of the cervical and dorsal regions of the vertebral column, which were of long standing.” He testified, however, that the arthritic changes were “minimal,” that they “pre-existed the injury,” and that they were not disabling. He concluded that as a result of the accident of August 14, 1967, Hall had sustained a “straining type of injury to the cervical and upper dorsal region of the vertebral column,” but that he had recovered from that injury, that he was not disabled and that he could return to work as a welder as of February 5, 1968.

Dr. Heinz K. Faludi, a neurosurgeon, examined and treated plaintiff on December 12, 1967, and on February 21 and May 22, 1968. His examinations were negative as to injury or disability. Based on history and complaints, however, Dr. Faludi concluded that Hall had sustained an injury on August 14, 1967, but that he had recovered from all of his injuries by the time he first examined him, except for a “mild tenderness” in the arch of the shoulder blades, and a “mild occipital neuralgia.” He felt that plaintiff would recover fully within three or four weeks after that examination. In the second examination, made about two months later, the doctor found that plaintiff had improved and that “he could go back to any type of work.” In May, 1968, the doctor again concluded that plaintiff was not disabled. He testified that Hall did not have an unstable back, that there was nothing to indicate that he might have an intervertebral disc injury or a nerve involvement, and that he saw no need for performing a myelogram.

Dr. Melvin H. Gold, a specialist in occupational medicine, examined plaintiff on December 28, 1967, about four and one-half months after the accident. He found no signs of injury, except for a complaint of tenderness in the right suprascapular area, and he testified that he found no evidence of a ruptured disc. He felt that plaintiff had suffered some disability after the accident, but he stated that he “could find no reason why with one or two months symptomatic treatment this patient should not be rehabilitated with no residual disability.”

Finally, plaintiff was examined on March 3, 1969, by Dr. A. E. Minyard, an orthopaedic surgeon of Galveston, Texas. At Dr. Minyard’s request, an x-ray examination was made by a radiologist who reported: “The bones show no indication of injury. There is some osteoporosis. There are arthritic changes present which are mild except at C-5 where there is some joint narrowing, lipping and spur formation.” Dr. Minyard testified, however, that he was “not in total agreement with the radiologist’s report,” and he concluded that plaintiff “had injury to his C-5-6 disc, * * * causing nerve route irritation,” and that this disc injury resulted from the accident which occurred on August 14, 1967. Dr. Minyard treated plaintiff from March 3 until September 29, 1969, and he examined him again on May 12, 1970.

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Related

Hall v. Travelers Insurance
253 So. 2d 61 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
251 So. 2d 120, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-travelers-insurance-co-lactapp-1971.