Huval v. Sexton Corp.

139 So. 739, 19 La. App. 198
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1932
DocketNo. 936
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 139 So. 739 (Huval v. Sexton Corp.) 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
Huval v. Sexton Corp., 139 So. 739, 19 La. App. 198 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

On the first trial of this case, a compensation suit, the court rendered judgment against defendant for partial disability, and, on the second, granted on a motion for a rehearing; plaintiff was allowed compensation for total disability which is claimed in his petition.

Plaintiff, at the time he was hurt, was employed in laying gas pipe lines for defend-, ant company.

He. Says he had gotten down in a ditch where the pipes were being laid, and, when injured, was standing in water which covered his boots. He testifies that he was digging in the ditch with a shovel; that, as he tried to get out of the mud, he pulled his shovel at the same time, thus causing a hernia. He says, “The boss near told the time-keeper to make a report that I had been [740]*740hurt and send me to the hospital,” where the record shows he was sent. It is not contradicted that he was sent to the hospital by his “boss.” His further statement is that he had to pull his legs out with his hands, and that he felt a pain “in his side — it was burning,” he says.

Dr. Dauterive, testifying for plaintiff, said that a hernia was always the result of sudden effort or strain. He examined plaintiff on February 4, .1931, the day of the accident, and found that plaintiff was suffering with incipient hernia on the left side. After stating that a hernia was always caused by a sudden strain or effort, Dr. Dauterive said there was a possibility, but not a probability, that this incipient hernia could have resulted instantly.

Counsel for defendant, with the evident purpose of showing that plaintiff was suffering with hernia prior to the alleged accident, asked Dr. Dauterive if it was not his conclusion that plaintiff had been previously so affected. His answer to that was: “I cannot say. Possibly he was.” Further, he said a very small proportion are probably affected as plaintiff was.

Plaintiff can neither read nor write, is very ignorant, as the testimony reveals, and says he did not know anything about the rights of an employee to recover compensation in such cases against his employer, and we have no hesitancy in believing that this statement on his part is .true. His ignorance in that respect affords' little reason to believe that he had premeditated an action in damages on the pretense that he had been injured as claimed by him.

The ‘work in which he was' engaged, and the strain to which he was subjected, as described by him in his simple narration of the occasion, lend the color of truth to the cause he gives for the hernia.

The fact also appears that he immediately stated to his “boss” that he had been injured, upon which he was sent to the hospital for treatment, and was found by Dr. Dauterive to be suffering with a case of incipient hernia. This physician also said that, when herniá is caused from sudden strain, “it is usually accompanied by sharp pains.” In describing the way the accident occurred, plaintiff said that he felt a pain in his side, and that “it was burning.” This statement is in keeping with the statement of Dr. Dau-terive that, when a sudden hernia occurs, it is usually accompanied by “sharp pains.” This burning sensation which plaintiff says he suffered with immediately after the occurrence characterizes his trouble as a hernia. It is not believable that plaintiff knew that such hernias were 'followed with burning sensations or sharp pains, and could have feigned such a condition to fabricate a claim for compensation when he did not know he had a right to ask that from his employer.

Counsel for defendant, on this feature of the case wherein he contends that the proof is not sufficient to establish the alleged injury, refers us to the compensation statute where it says that proof of injuries must be shown by competent evidence “of which there are or have been objective conditions or symptoms proven, not within the physical or mental control of the injured employee.” Act No. 85 of 1926, p. 120, § 18, subd. 4.

In referring to his examination of plaintiff, Dr. Dauterive said: “I had to accept his statement on his mannerisms and also finding the opening larger than normal that helped me to conclude.” There the doctor says he found the “opening larger than normal.” This part of the physician’s testimony shows that there were present “objective conditions or symptoms” to which the above quotation of the statute refers.

Dr. Sanders, called by defendant company, as an expert on the second trial, in speaking of his examination of the plaintiff, says: “I found that his left engino canal was enlarged sufficient to allow the introduction by the usual method from the end of my small finger.” Further he says that “the ring of the external canal was large enough to allow a small recurrent hernia.”

Here, again, according-to the statement of Dr. Sanders, there appeared “objective conditions or symptoms” which were certainly “not within the physical or mental control of the injured employee,” spoken of in the Compensation Daw.

In support, of his contention that plaintiff has not established his alleged ailment by competent evidence, as required under the provisions of the above excerpt of the statute, counsel for defendant refers us to the ease of Rutley v. Honor & Co., 7 La. App. 164.

In the course of the opinion the court in the body of the opinion said that plaintiff had not made it “reasonably certain that the infirmity of his eye is due to the accident or to creosote in his eye, but, in the language of the trial judge in his reasons for judgment, ‘that the vast preponderance of evidence in this case negatives the fact that the condition of plaintiff’s eye is a result of the accident.’ ”

In another case, Elix v. Glassell-Wilson Company, 9 La. App. 209, 119 So. 147, the court reached a similar conclusion where the testimony of skilled physicians showed that the employee was suffering from a chronic disease different from the trouble of which he was complaining.

Obviously, under the decisions above referred to, a situation essentially different [741]*741from the-one here was presented, as we have not in the instant case the positive practically unanimous opinion of physicians negativing the idea that plaintiff was not suffering with a hernia, incipient or recurrent. We find that plaintiff has shown that he suffered the injury complained of, and that we cannot say that the court has fallen into an error in so holding.

This brings us to the consideration of the question as to whether the injury caused total disability at the time of the trial, incapacitating plaintiff from doing work of any reasonable character, as was held by the district judge.

The record shows plaintiff was wearing a truss when he was examined by Dr. Sanders, and which he had been advised to wear by Dr. Dauterive.

Dr. Sanders said that the wearing of a truss was a makeshift, and believed in operations, which, he said were now-a-days successful, and entailed no danger. In referring to recurrent hernias, this doctor explained thát they brought about different results. In illustration of that statement, he said he saw a negro working in the field when so affected, and saw men miserable with a small one in the engino canal. Further he says on this subject as follows: “Considerable pain is manifested at each. pain. There is a small muscle that comes down and causes intense pain.” Asked if his expert testimony did not show that plaintiff was not suffering with a partial, but with total, disability, Dr.

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139 So. 739, 19 La. App. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huval-v-sexton-corp-lactapp-1932.