Johnson v. Hillyer, Deutsch, Edwards, Inc.

185 So. 652
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 1939
DocketNo. 1939.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 185 So. 652 (Johnson v. Hillyer, Deutsch, Edwards, 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.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Hillyer, Deutsch, Edwards, Inc., 185 So. 652 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*653 OTT, Judge.

Plaintiff sues for compensation at the Tate of $11.70 per week for four hundred weeks, less the sum of $21.12 already paid. Plaintiff alleges that he is totally and permanently disabled from doing work of any reasonable character on account of an abdominal hernia on both his right and left •sides produced by a strain in pushing a buggy heavily loaded with lumber to or near the rip saw in defendant’s sawmill, and while he was working for said defendant ■on October 4, 1937.

There is no dispute as to the fact that plaintiff did receive an -injury while working for the defendant, nor is there ■any dispute about the weekly wages he was then receiving. The only question in dispute is the extent of the injury received .and whether or not this injury rendered •plaintiff unable to perform manual labor since the injury, the kind of labor that he was performing at the time of the injury. In fact, we might go further and say that the only question presented is whether or not plaintiff sustained an abdominal hernia •on either side — complete or incomplete— by reason of the injury, as there is no difference in an incomplete or reducible hernia and a complete or irreducible one from ■the legal standpoint, if either kind would incapacitate the injured employee from doing hard manual labor, and unquestionably •either kind of hernia would produce this result. Parker v. Weber-King Mfg. Company, 19 La.App. 177, 139 So. 660.

The trial judge held that the plaintiff had failed to prove his claim by a preponderance of the evidence and dismissed his suit. The case is before us on an .appeal by plaintiff from that judgment of dismissal.

The plaintiff, a young man about 21 years •of age, testified that he was pushing a load •of lumber on a buggy to the rip saw when ■the load of lumber started falling back on 'him, and he pushed the load as hard as he could when he felt a severe pain in the low•er part of his stomach on both sides; that he pulled down his clothes and showed the foreman who came up the knots on each side of his abdomen, and the foreman sent 'him to Dr. Gray, the company doctor; that the doctor told him that he had a hernia ■on both sides and told him to go to bed .and lay his feet up on a pillow and stay ■in bed at least five days, and put hot towels ■on his stomach; that he did as the doctor -ordered, .and after a few days the lumps in his side had gone down some, and he returned to the doctor, who gave him a sus-pensory to wear for two we'eks. ■ After that time he went back to the doctor, who told him to go back and try to work; that he was unable to work on account of the pain in his side when he strained or exerted himself; that the lump in his-side became larger when he tried to work; that the lumps are still on his stomach. ■

Another employee working with plaintiff testified that he saw plaintiff endeavor to shove the load of lumber and saw him grab the lower part of his stomach; that plaintiff pulled down his clothes in a few minutes and showed them where he was hurt, but the witness did not pay much attention to the place where plaintiff claimed to have the pain, but he does say that plaintiff was pale in the face.

From this uncontradicted testimony of plaintiff and the other employee working with him, it is clear that plaintiff did suffer some objective symptoms of an injury in the abdominal region. In fact, the defendant admits that the plaintiff -suffered a mild strain to the muscles and fascia in the right inguinal region, but it denies that the injury produced a hernia.

It is on the medical evidence that the conflict exists as to whether plaintiff has an incomplete hernia on his right side and a potential hernia on his left side. It was because of this apparent conflict in the testimony of the six doctors who testified in the case that caused the trial judge to hold that the plaintiff had failed to prove his disability by a preponderance of the evidence. After discussing in his opinion the testimony by each one of the experts, the trial judge says:

“It will be observed that three of these medical expert witnesses testified that there was a definite bulging on the right side and a slight bulging on the left side; that in their opinion, the plaintiff was suffering from an incomplete direct hernia on the right side and a potential hernia on the left side; that in their opinion, the plaintiff was unable to do hard manual work, but might do light work. There were three of these medical expert witnesses called by the defendant and all these witnesses were positive that there was no evidence of any hernia, either potential or otherwise; and that the plaintiff was able to perform any type of work .that he might desire to do.”

Obviously; as; the learned trial judge- well says, there is a conflict in the *654 diagnosis and opinion of the six medical experts as to the vital and only issue in the case; i. e., whether or not plaintiff has an incomplete hernia caused from the injury incapacitating him from doing hard manual labor. These experts are divided in their opinion—three to three. Where there is a conflict in expert medical testimony, and there is no apparent way to reconcile it, the court is not bound by the number of opinions on the one side or the other any more than it is bound by the number of lay witnesses who testify to a controverted fact at issue in a case. It is the duty of the court to arrive at the actual truth of the question involved, whether the disputed fact is sought to be proved by medical or lay testimony, and the same rules apply in either case insofar as the interest or want of interest of the witness, his opportunity for observation, and his incentive for testifying are concerned.

The three physicians who testified that plaintiff has a direct incomplete inguinal hernia on his right side and a potential hernia on his left side are all doctors of long practice and wide experience; one has been practicing since 1905, one since 1912, and the other has been practicing for more than 50 years. So far as the record shows, none of these three doctors has any interest whatever in favoring the plaintiff’s side of the case, unconsciously or otherwise. These long years of practice must have increased their conservatism in expressing their opinions, as well as broadening their experience in making a diagnosis.

All three of these doctors examined the plaintiff on the day of the trial, some three months after the injury. Two of the doctors had examined plaintiff before, one shortly after the injury, and the other some ten days before the trial. They all made the usual examination for hernia, and their findings and their opinions are exactly the same, and we are strongly persuaded by this practically unanimous opinion of these three doctors of long experience. Moreover, their opinion is strengthened from the fact that the evidence shows and defendant admits that the plaintiff did suffer a strain in his abdominal area, to say nothing of the testimony of the-plaintiff himself who testified very positively to the pain in his side and the presence of lumps on straining. We see no reason to disregard plaintiff’s testimony entirely, for if we concede that the medical testimony is evenly balanced, and should be disregarded altogether, there is precedent for allowing him compensation on his statement of his disability alone.

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Bluebook (online)
185 So. 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-hillyer-deutsch-edwards-inc-lactapp-1939.