Horton v. Louisiana Veneer Co.

196 So. 363
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1939
DocketNo. 6002.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 196 So. 363 (Horton v. Louisiana Veneer 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
Horton v. Louisiana Veneer Co., 196 So. 363 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

HAMITER, Judge.

On August, 26, 1938, plaintiff was engaged in the performance of his work with the Louisiana Veneer CoApany, a commercial co-partnership, and fell backward against a steam pipe and was injured. Subsequently, he commenced this action against his employer, its individual partners, and its insurer, to recover compensation under the provisions of the Louisiana Employer’s Liability Act, Act No. 20 of 1914, as for total and permanent disability, and also medical expenses and costs.

It is alleged in his petition that as a “result of said fall his back including his spine, the tissues, muscles and nerves of his back were burned and also seriously injured and from which fall he received injuries to his back and spine which totally disabled him from doing any work of any reasonable character.”

Defendants excepted to the petition as being vague, averring that the above quotation was plaintiff’s sole allegation regarding the nature of his disability. The exception was overruled.

The only issues created by defendants’ answer relate to the extent and duration of plaintiff’s disability. It is admitted that the accident occurred, that the provisions of the mentioned act are applicable, and that the wages were as alleged.

Evidence was regularly adduced, after which the district court rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor for the compensation, medical expenses, and costs sought by him. The defendants appealed.

The exception of vagueness, which is reurged here, is not considered or passed on by us in view of our hereinafter announced decision.

At the time of the accident, plaintiff was 46 years of age. He had been an employee of the Louisiana Veneer Company between two and three years, working regularly as a millwright while its plant was operating. No previous injuries had been sustained during the course of the employment.

Shortly after noon on August 26, 1938, a boiler inspector visited the premises of the employer and requested the foreman to cause the escape of steam from the mill’s boilers. The foreman gave plaintiff a short piece of pipe and instructed him to climb on top of the boilers and open the pop valve with it. He ascended to the mentioned location, and while handling the given article, it slipped from the valve and caused him, as he testifies, to fall “approximately six feet *364 back across a piece of steam pipe and it burned a pretty good place on my back.” Without assistance, he descended the ladder and walked to the company’s office where the burn was treated and bandaged by one experienced in first aid. His work was then resumed. This first aid person continued to dress the injury daily for about a week.

Some time later plaintiff entered the office complaining of a swelling in his back and he was sent to the company’s physician. There it was found that the back possessed some limitation of motion and tenderness in the left lumbar region; however, the burned place had completely healed, leaving a scar. Treatment, consisting of the application of heat to and strapping of his back, started on November 9, 1938, and the patient was advised to rest. On December 4, 1938, the physician found no swelling of his back muscles and discharged him as being able to resume his usual work. He was instructed to return in the event of a recurrence of the trouble. No return followed.

The mill operated continuously after the accident until October 28, 1938, or for more than two months. It was then shut down until December 5, 1938, the day following the physician’s discharge of plaintiff, when it reopened and ran for four days, or through December 9, 1938. No further operations are shown by the record. During the entire time that the mill functioned, plaintiff worked at the same job and received the same wage as he did prior to his falling against the steam pipe.

This suit was filed January 18, 1939, and its trial occurred during the latter part of the following March. The evidence, furnished primarily by co-workers of plaintiff and by numerous medical experts, contains many conflicts on material matters.

The first physician testifying in plaintiff’s behalf is engaged in the general practice of medicine and surgery. His physical examination disclosed that the claimant had a low back strain in the sacro-iliac and sacro-lumbar regions, with rigidity and limitation of movement of the muscles, a flattening of the buttocks, and some disturbance of the third lumbar vertebra. He also noticed a leaning to one side when walking, and the experiencing of pain on motion. The burn, which was superficial and did not impair any muscles, produced no disability but left a scar about three inches wide and six inches long. Certain X-ray pictures of the back were examined but no fractures were seen. The explanation is given, however, that a roentgenologist is more qualified to interpret the pictures than he. It was his opinion that plaintiff was then disabled and that the condition found should have produced disability within ten days or two weeks following the trauma.

Another of plaintiff’s medical experts, who conducts a general practice, made examinations on December 17, 1938, and subsequently, and on several occasions X-rayed the affected back. There was noted in his physical examinations the scar and a marked swelling on the back’s left side, rigidity and limitation of motion of the muscles on both sides of the back, but greater on the left, and a lateral curvature of the spine. According to his interpretation of the various X-ray plates, some of which were made by him and others by defense experts, plaintiff possesses, as a result of the fall, a transverse fracture and also a crushed fracture of the third lumbar vertebra, the crushing being from top to bottom and measuring from one-eighth to one-fourth of an inch; chip fractures of the second and fourth lumbar vertebrae; a curvature of the spine at and near the junction of the twelfth dorsal and first lumbar vertebrae; traumatic arthritis at several points around the spine; and abnormal spacing between some of the lumbar vertebrae. The arthritic condition, he states, could have developed in a few months or over a period of years; and that it is not unusual for a person 40 years of age to develop arthritis without the aid of trauma. It was his opinion that plaintiff is totally and permanently disabled to do the work required of a millwright and that the disability results from the accident of August 26, 1938.

Plaintiff’s third medical expert, a general practitioner and surgeon, found on his physical examinations the demarkation resulting from the burn, a slight lateral curvature of the spine, tenderness in the lumbar region, the experiencing of pain on motion, and tenseness and limitation of motion of the muscles on both sides of the back. The burn was superficial, in his opinion, and was of no im *365 portance in so far as disability is concerned. His reading of the X-ray plates revealed no fractures. He states that he can locate a complete fracture in a picture, “but a very fine fracture is pretty hard to be seen by the ordinary man or ordinary surgeon”, and that “An ordinary surgeon depends on his readings from an experienced roentgenologist.” It was his thought that plaintiff is “completely incapacitated, and apparently permanently.”

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-louisiana-veneer-co-lactapp-1939.