Hampton v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York

197 So. 2d 911, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5708
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1967
DocketNo. 2411
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 197 So. 2d 911 (Hampton v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York) 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
Hampton v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York, 197 So. 2d 911, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5708 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinions

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit for workmen’s compensation brought by direct action against the insurer of the employer. From a judgment in favor of the employee for $35.00 a week for a period not in excess of 400 weeks, the defendant insurer has appealed suspensively, asserting that the employee has completely recovered from the injury, which admittedly resulted from an occupational accident, and that full compensation was paid during the period of actual disability.

Rudolph C. Hampton, employed by Clarke’s Garage as a car “hiker”, was required to park cars brought into the garage by customers and to return them to the customers when called for. He says that his “take home” pay was “around” $38.00 or $40.00 a week and that his tips from customers amounted to “about” $2.00 or $3.00: per day. There is no dispute about the amount of the award if plaintiff is entitled to compensation.

In order to expeditiously move the “hikers” from one floor of the garage to another, there was provided a belt lift or escalator to which were attached small' foot platforms on which they would stand in going up and down between the several floors.

On February 3, 1965, Hampton slipped from one of these foot platforms and fell a few feet to the concrete floor. While the exact é height from which he fell is not shown, apparently it was about four or five feet. He did not at first realize that he had sustained injury more serious than superficial bruises, and, after resting for a short time, he attempted to go back to work. When the rush period, which was from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m., arrived he found he could not do the work. He reported the matter to the floor captain, who apparently is an employee with little or no superior authority. At home his wife attempted, with hot bath and rubbing, to relieve the pain, with little or no success. On the next day he reported but suffered so that he could not work. He was sent to the doctors of the insurer of the employer, Drs. Houston, Roy & Faust. There he was examined by Dr. Frank E. Taormina, who was not a member of the [913]*913medical firm, but was employed by them. Dr. Taormina testified that:

“Mr. Hampton had tenderness on the left lateral hip and thigh. He had pain on rotation of the left leg. He had no limp, and had good posture, and the remainder of the examination was negative for any positive findings.”

Hampton was treated by Dr. Taormina or other doctors in that office for six weeks, and, at the request of Dr. Taormina, was examined by Dr. G. Gernon Brown, Jr., on March 4, 1965, which was about one month after the accident. On March 11 he was discharged as able to return to work. He says that he attempted to work for one day but could not stand the pain and that he went to the Charity Hospital but treatment was refused there since compensation insurance was involved.

The testimony on his behalf as to his condition, particularly as to whether he could or could not return to work, was given by Dr. Vernon R. Kroll and Dr. Raeburn C. Llewellyn.

The testimony to the effect that he was able to return to work was given by Dr. Taormina, Dr. Richard W. Levy, Dr. G. Gernon Brown, Jr., and Dr. Russell C. Grunsten.

It thus appears that, of the six doctors who testified, two were of the opinion that plaintiff could not return to his former employment and four felt that he could. Of these only Dr. Taormina treated him during the five or six weeks following the accident, though apparently he was treated during that time by some of the other doctors in the office in which Dr. Taormina was employed.

Dr. Kroll testified that he had examined plaintiff twice, once in June, 1965, which was about five months after the accident, and again on March 17, 1966, for the purpose of preparing to testify. The testimony of Dr. Kroll shows that, on his second examination, Hampton had improved considerably and that the area in which he claimed to suffer had to some extent changed its location. Dr. Kroll’s statements were based almost entirely on subjective findings, though he did state he found atrophy in the left leg which he attributed to the injury. He was asked whether he had made a measurement of the left calf, which had shown a decrease in circumference on one and one-half centimeters. He said that he had and that this showed that plaintiff had not been using his left leg as he had before and that such condition usually means “that there is some immobilization to the extremity * * * ” Finally, when asked whether he thought that plaintiff could return to work, he said that he did not suggest that he return to work, but added “if you want a good test on the man, make him go back to work, and if his back gets worse, I think you have a pretty clear cut picture.” And he further said: “If I were treating this man — and I am not, and I did not give recommendation — I would say that he go to the neurosurgeon and see whether or not this man should have further investigative studies.”

Dr. Llewellyn, who testified that plaintiff could not return to work, examined him on August 2, 1965, at the request of Dr. Kroll. The testimony of Dr, Llewellyn is criticized on the ground that it is to some extent based on incorrect statements which were made to him by plaintiff as to how he had been treated after the accident. Apparently, plaintiff told him that Dr. Kroll had treated him on the day of the accident and that he had been under his treatment during the period, of about seven months, between the time of the accident and the time at which Dr. Llewellyn examined him. The fact is that Dr. Kroll did not treat Hampton at all, but merely examined him on the two occasions already mentioned and that instead of Hampton receiving treatment of seven months, as a matter of fact, he had only been treated during the period of less than [914]*914six weeks and that in the • office ’ of Dr. Taormina. . This-is of importance only in that Dr. Llewellyn said that he-based his opinion, that plaintiff could not return to work, on the fact that “he had not gotten well iii my opinion and was not improving despite having received accepted forms of treatment * *

Dr. Llewllyn based his ultimate opinion, to a considerable extent, on statements made by plaintiff as to his suffering though he did make some objective findings, saying that on the day on which he had examined him “there was an objective sign of back soreness in my opinion. That is, something that I could see and feel, not something that the patient simply told me. There was visible and palpable spasm of the low back muscles on the left.”.

There was a suggestion by Dr. Llewellyn that there might have been injury to an in-tervertebral disc, though it is shown that no myleogram was performed. He was asked whether he had made any “positive finding sufficient to warrant or justify a diagnosis of a herniation of an intervertebral disc,” and he answered “ * * * I was unable to make a clinical diagnois on the basis of these findings. I felt that the patient should have additional studies to exclude the possibility of a ruptured disc.” The X-ray photographs, which were taken by Dr. Brown, showed no such injury, though it is conceded, of course, that sometimes X-rays do not show up such conditions.

The four doctors who testified for the defendant were positive in their opinions. Dr. Levy, after giving in detail his reasons for his conclusion, said: “It was my conclusion that this man did not have evidence of injury or disease of the lumbar spinal cord or nerve roots.

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197 So. 2d 911, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hampton-v-fidelity-casualty-co-of-new-york-lactapp-1967.