Hand v. Reeves
This text of 378 So. 2d 1064 (Hand v. Reeves) 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
Bufford HAND, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Johnny REEVES, d/b/a Dixie Self Storage, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*1065 LaCroix & McKeithen by Leslie L. LaCroix, Jr., Monroe, for plaintiff-appellant.
Hayes, Harkey, Smith & Cascio by Thomas M. Hayes, III, Monroe, for defendant-appellee.
Before PRICE, HALL and JONES, JJ.
JONES, Judge.
Plaintiff, Bufford Hand, appeals a judgment in favor of defendant, Johnny Reeves, d/b/a Dixie Self Storage, denying him workmen's compensation benefits for an injury allegedly sustained while plaintiff was employed by defendant.
Plaintiff was hired by defendant as a general maintenance man and commenced work on May 22, 1978. On his first day of work plaintiff and defendant traveled from Monroe, La. to Clinton, Miss. where plaintiff's duties consisted primarily of knocking down cement form boards and loading them upon a truck. Many of the boards lifted by plaintiff weighed 40-50 pounds. In the afternoon of the second day of plaintiff's employment (May 23, 1978) plaintiff allegedly heard his back "pop" while working in Clinton lifting one of the form boards. Plaintiff claims he immediately told defendant of the injury, but defendant denies hearing of the injury at this time. Plaintiff completed the day's work and drove defendant's standard-shift vehicle back to Monroe without further complaint of pain.
The following day, May 24, 1978, plaintiff reported his injury to defendant's secretary. Later the same day plaintiff went to Glenwood Hospital where he saw Dr. Greer, a neurosurgeon, whose preliminary diagnosis was a right L-5 nerve root compression.[1] Because of plaintiff's continued pain and disability, Dr. Greer performed a myelogram 2½ months later, the results of which appeared to confirm Dr. Greer's diagnosis. Plaintiff underwent surgery on October 20, 1978, 4½ months after the alleged injury. The surgery revealed a lateral bulge of the L-4 disc compressing a conjoint nerve root at the right L-5 level. The conjoint nerve root is a congenital defect[2] more susceptible to injury than a normal nerve root.
Dr. Greer testified the history of plaintiff's alleged accident related to him by plaintiff on May 24, 1978 could have caused the injury to plaintiff's back which was revealed by the surgery. The trial court found plaintiff was disabled from May 24, 1978, the day following the alleged accident, until trial date and that disability would continue for an indefinite time in the future. However, the trial court held plaintiff *1066 failed to prove by a preponderance of evidence that his back condition was either precipitated or aggravated by an employment-related accident. The trial judge observed it was more probable than not that plaintiff's injury was caused by normal nonemployment activity or by some occurrence which took place after plaintiff left work on May 23, 1978. The trial court recognized plaintiff's condition could possibly have been caused by his work for defendant, but found it was equally plausible that plaintiff's employment had no relation to his disability. The trial court's conclusion was based upon a finding that plaintiff's past life-style was such as to establish he had no respect for integrity and that he had a large number of past workmen's compensation claims for back injuries. These two factors detracted from plaintiff's credibility to the extent that his testimony alone, supported by some corroborating circumstances, was insufficient to establish a compensable accident on the day of May 23, 1978 even though the trial judge found he was disabled on May 24, 1978.
The issue on appeal is whether or not the trial court erred in holding that plaintiff failed to prove a work-related injury.
The principal assignment of error is that the trial judge was incorrect in failing to accept plaintiff's testimony, as the sole witness to his accident, as sufficient to establish the accident by a preponderance of evidence. Plaintiff is correct in his contention that if the injured employee is the sole witness to the accident, then his testimony alone, if supported by corroborating circumstances, is sufficient to constitute a preponderance of the evidence and prove the compensable accident. West v. Bayou Vista Manor, Inc., 371 So.2d 1146 (La.1979). However, the above principle is true only if there is:
"... absence of circumstances in the record casting suspicion on the reliability of this testimony." West at 1147.
The trial court found an abundance of circumstances throwing doubt upon the veracity of plaintiff's testimony. The following evidentiary elements were found by the trial court to detract from plaintiff's credibility and cast substantial doubt upon plaintiff's claim:
(1) defendant's emphatic denial of plaintiff's having told him of the accident or of plaintiff's having manifested external signs of pain on May 23, 1978 while unloading cinder blocks subsequent to the alleged injury (plaintiff testified he could not bend to unload the blocks but had to do this job in a stiff-upright manner);
(2) plaintiff's driving the standard-shift vehicle back to Monroe, a two-hour drive, without complaint or manifestation of pain;
(3) plaintiff's six prior workmen's compensation claimstwo of which he failed to reveal until cross-examined about them, and five of which were based upon back injuries, five of them unwitnessed and most of which were not reported to supervisors or fellow employees;
(4) three of the persons with whom plaintiff spent most of his time just before and for several months after May 22, 1978 denied having any knowledge of any accident or injury to plaintiff or having been told of any by him, or observing any difference in his general and apparently chronic complaints about his bad back or in his activities and physical movements after the date of the alleged accident as compared to previously;
(5) the testimony of three witnesses who stated plaintiff made monetary offers to them in an attempt to secure their testimony to corroborate his workmen's compensation claim;
(6) plaintiff's acknowledgement of several criminal convictions involving moral turpitude resulting in his serving time in the penitentiary; and
(7) the surgery performed by Dr. Greer in October, 1977 as a result of the alleged accident at Adams Industries, resulted in removal of the major portion of the disc at the same level explored in the instant case. Although the defect observed and removed then was on the left side and was consistent with prior left-sided complaints, the right side was not explored or *1067 viewed by the surgeon in the previous surgery. The doctor's testimony as a whole reveals that scar tissue and other internal developments[3] or any number of accumulations of non-work-related traumas could have caused plaintiff's problems just as well as the specific events plaintiff described here, and that the basic problem could have originated at any time prior to the last surgery.
We find these factual findings of the trial judge are supported by the evidence. He had an opportunity to see and hear the witnesses testify and evaluate their credibility, and his factual determinations are entitled to great weight.
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378 So. 2d 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hand-v-reeves-lactapp-1980.