Hicks v. Royal Indemnity Co.

80 So. 2d 553, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 815
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1955
DocketNo. 20534
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 80 So. 2d 553 (Hicks v. Royal Indemnity 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
Hicks v. Royal Indemnity Co., 80 So. 2d 553, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 815 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

In this workmen’s compensation suit plaintiff claims to be totally and permanently disabled. In his original petition he averred that his disability was caused by the rupture of an intervertebral disc. More than two years later, the case not having been tried in the District Court, he amended his petition reaffirming his original allegations except insofar as they might be “in conflict with this supplemental petition,” and in his supplemental petition averred that he was “nervous, neurotic and emotionally upset,” and that his disability resulted from traumatic hysteria.

From a judgment in favor of plaintiff for 400 weeks at $30 per week defendant has appealed.

The only defendant is Royal Indemnity Company, the compensation insurance carrier of the employer.

In the original petition, plaintiff alleged that while breaking concrete,

“he placed a pick under the margin of a concrete block and pulled back forcefully, experiencing a sharp, lcnife-like pain in the center of his lower back, and sustaining as a result thereof a severe injury to his back and left leg.”

Fie further alleged that he had been treated by the physician of the employer until June 4, 1951, and then discharged as able to return to work; that in spite of his discharge he was examined by Dr. Homer D. ICirgis, a neurosurgeon on the staff of the Ochsner Clinic in New Orleans, who diagnosed his condition

“as a herniation of the fourth lumbar intervertebral disc with compression of the fifth lumbar nerve on the left, and stated that he is disabled for the performance of the work he had been performing at the time of his injury.”

It thus appears that in his original petition, which was filed on October 9, 1951, he claimed that he had sustained an actual physical injury of which there was objective evidence.

The defendant, in due course, on November 15, 1951, admitted that it was the compensation carrier of the employer of plaintiff, but denied that plaintiff had sustained any injury which disabled him beyond the time, June 4, 1951, at which time he was discharged by the physician as able to return to work.

No action of any kind was taken by plaintiff or defendant for more than two years after the filing of the suit until, on January 12, 1954, counsel for plaintiff took the necessary action to place the case on the call docket of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans in order that it be fixed for trial. Thereafter the case was fixed for trial on four different occasions, but on each it was continued by preference and not taken up for trial.

On March 29, 1954, this Court rendered a decision in the matter of Ladner v. Higgins, Inc., 71 So.2d 242. In that case we focused attention on the fact that there might be recovery in compensation for disability caused by post traumatic neurosis. In other words, that there might be a case in which an employee, having fully recovered from actual physical injury, might, because of his sincere belief that he was still disabled, be actually disabled as a result of that belief, although there remained no physical residual of the injury.

We cited our earlier decision in Lala v. American Sugar Refining Co., 38 So.2d 415, 421, in which we said:

“There is no doubt in our minds that nervousness, neurosis, or emotional disturbances, superinduced by injuries suffered by a workman, can be just as devastating to the ability to return to work as are physical or anatomical injuries, and are equally as compen-sable under the statute.”

Shortly after our decision in the Ladner case was rendered — to be specific on April 20, 1954, plaintiff in the case at bar filed a supplemental and amended petition in which he reaverred all of the allegations of his original petition “except as may be [555]*555amended or in conflict with this supplemental petition.” In his supplemental petition he made the following allegations:

“That following his discharge as being able to return to. work, your petitioner was examined by Dr. Homer D. Kirgis, prominent neurosurgeon on the staff of the Ochsner Clinic in New Orleans, who .diagnosed your petitioner’s condition as a herniation of the fourth lumbar intervertebral disc with compression of the fifth lumbar nerve on the left, and stated that he is disabled for the performance of the work he had been performing at the time of the injury; that petitioner suffers a traumatic hysteria, is nervous, neurotic and emotionally upset, all of which has the effect of making your petitioner permanently and totally disabled from doing work of any reasonable character.”

While plaintiff, in his amended petition, does not set out with exactness the allegations of his original petition which are in conflict with the amended petition, it seems clear that what he charges in his amended petition is that the actual cause of his disability is post traumatic neurosis and not a rupture of an intervertebral disc as originally alleged. We say this because a careful study of the medical evidence and reports, which obviously must have been in the possession of plaintiff and his several counsel during the more than two years in which no effort was made to bring the matter to trial, indicated that plaintiff had not sustained a rupture of the- intervertebral disc and that accordingly he could not have obtained a judgment had the matter been permitted to go to trial on that issue. It therefore seems clear that when the decision was rendered in Ladner v. Higgins, Inc., supra, it was realized that, though plaintiff could not base recovery in compensation on a ruptured disc, he might possibly be able to persuade the courts that he was suffering from traumatic hysteria and that disability resulted therefrom.

Our conclusion that plaintiff could not have sustained his contention that he had suffered a ruptured intervertebral disc results from an analysis of the medical testimony.

When plaintiff first complained of an injury to his back he was treated by Dr. Geis-mar for about two weeks. Dr. Geismar then strapped his back with adhesive tape and, on June 4th, discharged him as able to return to work. However, before discharging him, Dr. Geismar referred him to Dr. Howard Karr, a neurologist, who, after an examination, reported that he found that plaintiff was not disabled. He said:

“That the patient had no disability as a result of the episode which he described as having occurred four weeks prior to his visit to my office.”

After his discharge by Dr. Geismar, plaintiff, on the advice of his then attorneys, who have since been replaced by his present attorneys, consulted Dr. Homer D. Kirgis, who reported that in his opinion plaintiff had sustained a ruptured disc. He then was sent to the Charity Hospital where extensive examinations and myelograms were made and X-ray photographs were taken. It was concluded that he had no ruptured disc and that there was nothing physically wrong-with him.

He continued to complain and, on July 28, 1952, he was examined by Dr. George Bat-talora, an orthopedic specialist, who found nothing wrong but suggested another neurological examination. In September, 1952, he returned to Charity Hospital where again extensive examinations were made. It was the opinion of the experts at the Charity Hospital that there was nothing wrong with him, and on October 1, 1952, he was discharged with the .diagnosis “malingerer.” However, on the suggestion of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 2d 553, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-royal-indemnity-co-lactapp-1955.