Hebert v. South Louisiana Contractors, Inc.
This text of 238 So. 2d 756 (Hebert v. South Louisiana Contractors, 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.
Opinion
Allence HEBERT
v.
SOUTH LOUISIANA CONTRACTORS, INC.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*757 James H. Drury, of Drury, Lozes & Curry, New Orleans, for appellant.
Johnny X. Allemand, Thibodaux, Harvey J. Lewis, New Orleans, for appellee.
Before LOTTINGER, BLANCHE and PICKETT, JJ.
LOTTINGER, Judge.
This is a workmen's compensation proceeding instituted by the plaintiff, Allence Hebert, against the defendant, South Louisiana Contractors, Inc. The Trial Court found in favor of the plaintiff, and from this judgment the defendant has appealed, and the plaintiff has answered this appeal.
The Trial Judge rendered written reasons for judgment, which we have adopted as the opinion of this Court, as follows:
"This is a suit for workmen's compensation for permanent total disability and for penalties and attorneys' fees.
Plaintiff, Allence Hebert, was in the employ of defendant, South Louisiana Contractors, Inc. hereinafter sometimes called Soloco, at LaPlace, Louisiana, where he was seriously injured on July 3, 1966, when struck by a large tree that was being moved.
It was stipulated that plaintiff was acting within the course and scope of his employment and that the employment was hazardous.
The injuries suffered by plaintiff were described by his treating physician, Dr. Raymond J. Calecas, as follows (Letter of Aug. 14, 1967, introduced with deposition of Dr. Calecas as P-2):
`The patient states that he was injured when he was struck by a large tree that was being moved by a dragline. The tree apparently struck across the truck of his body, his right shoulder and chest area and also included *758 injuries of the head. The patient was rendered unconscious and was hospitalized on July 2, 1966 in a comatosed condition with multiple injuries of his body which included comminuted fractures of the right scapula, fractures of the right clavicle, there were multiple right rib fractures with a hemopneumothorax (blood and air in the right chest cavity). The head injury was diagnosed as a cerebral contusion and the patient had numerous lacerations and abrasions of the body in the area where the tree struck him.'
Defendant paid maximum compensation to plaintiff through June 12, 1967, and medical expenses totalling $1986.00. Compensation payments were stopped after plaintiff was discharged by Dr. Calecas on May 27, 1967.
Plaintiff was also examined by Dr. Irvin Cahen, an orthopedic surgeon, initially, on November 14, 1966. He was referred to Dr. Cahen by Dr. Calecas.
The depositions and reports of both doctors have been introduced in evidence in the record and are in substantial agreement that plaintiff has a residual disability of 15% in his right shoulder. Dr. Cahen in his letter of November 7, 1967 states (Letter, p. 5):
`In accordance with the irregularities of the clavicle, the narrowing of the shoulder girdle and the capsular restrictions of complete elevation, the examiner would indicate that the patient has a 15% partial impairment of the extremity. It is again stated that the patient may experience some discomfort in continued work assignment above shoulder level for prolonged period of time * * *'
Dr. Cahen had already stated that `The examiner has no information as to his physical assignments * * *'
Dr. Calecas also testified (Calecas Dep. p. 19) that when he discharged plaintiff and told him he could go back to work, he meant he was discharging him from active treatment; he was not giving his `complete opinion as to whether his injuries would impair his ability to carry out his full job duties.'
The doctors refer to Plaintiff's difficulty in `utilizing the extremity against heavy resistance.' (Cahen letter, p. 4) and his difficulty in maintaining `a resistive force against weight' (Calecas Dep. p. 18).
Plaintiff has been described in the pleadings and memoranda as a `swamper'. There is nothing in the record to show that a swamper performs more than common labor or requires any skill. He was required to lift heavy objects and twice a day to climb the dragline leads to grease the boom.
The testimony indicates to us that plaintiff, following his discharge attempted to work at other jobs. He tried to work on a shrimp boat, but was unable to haul `the easy line' on the trawl or handle shrimp basketsneither of which jobs require activity above shoulder level. In our opinion this inability was a manifestation of the doctors' diagnosis of difficulty in `utilizing the extremity against heavy resistance' or `maintaining a resistive force against weight.' Nor was plaintiff able to do sustained carpentry work.
We have been made aware of the jurisprudence which, in accordance with the circumstances presented, has permitted recovery by an injured laborer only for temporary partial disability or permanent partial disability. But in our opinion, from all of the evidence and the absence of any indication of malingering on the part of plaintiff, we should apply and follow the rationale expressed in the following quotation from Easterling v. Employers Liability, La.App., 203 So.2d 852 at p. 855:
`* * * we see that plaintiff was a common laborer whose duties involved *759 heavy lifting and other tasks requiring physical strength. Thus there could be no doubt that plaintiff would be substantially handicapped in competing with other able-bodied workers in the regular common labor market, and therefore totally disabled within the meaning of the Louisiana Workmen's Compensation Act. Young v. Southern Casualty Insurance Company, 188 So.2d 437 (La.App. 3d Cir. 1966); Thomas v. Gates, Inc., 157 So.2d 263 (La.App. 3d Cir.1963).'
and in the following language from Young v. Southern Casualty Insurance Company, La.App., 188 So.2d 437:
`A common laborer will be considered as being totally disabled from doing "work of any reasonable character" within the meaning of the Louisiana Workmen's Compensation Act if his injury is of such a character that it appears that he will be substantially handicapped in competing with other able-bodied workers in the regular common labor market. Thomas v. Gates, Inc. (La.App. 3d Cir.1963), 157 So.2d 263, and authorities therein cited.
`Each case must rest upon its own facts. While it would certainly be true that there are any number of specific tasks one could do satisfactorily without using the left arm above shoulder level, it is the view of this Court that plaintiff has nevertheless been substantially handicapped in the general labor market. Regardless of the specific requirements of a given job, in hiring common labor the primary criterion is the applicant's ability to do all things; that is what makes it common labor. Any substantial physical handicap, therefore, places the applicant at a distinct disadvantage in the broad labor field. He cannot assume that, with luck, the specific tasks assigned to him will be such as to minimize a physical handicap.'
We note that judgment in this case was for less than four hundred weeks, because the testifying doctors predicted complete recovery within six months of the last examination. Such prognosis does not exist here.
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238 So. 2d 756, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hebert-v-south-louisiana-contractors-inc-lactapp-1970.