Jones v. Sampey Bros. General Const., Ltd.
This text of 544 So. 2d 1192 (Jones v. Sampey Bros. General Const., Ltd.) 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
Hillard H. JONES
v.
SAMPEY BROTHERS GENERAL CONSTRUCTION, LTD., et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*1193 Lazard Levy, Marrero, for plaintiff-appellant.
Lozes, Cooper & Cambre, David M. Cambre, New Orleans, for Sampey Bros. General Contractors, Inc., Whiley J. Breaux, Sr., and New Hampshire Ins. Company, defendants-appellees.
Before CHEHARDY, C.J., and BOWES and GRISBAUM, JJ.
CHEHARDY, Chief Judge.
Hillard H. Jones, plaintiff in this personal injury suit, appeals the district court judgment in his favor seeking a quantum increase. We amend the award to include a reasonable sum for economic losses and, in all other respects, we affirm.
On January 29, 1985, Jones suffered injury when he was momentarily pinned between the bumpers of a car and a truck on which he was working. Jones had parked his truck at the edge of an intersection roadway, front bumper to front bumper with a car owned by Ronald Verdun. Jones was standing between the two vehicles attempting to jump-start the car. Wiley Breaux, driving a low-boy tractor-trailer, made a too-wide right turn at the intersection. The 12-foot blade of the bulldozer he was hauling caught the truck and pushed it into the front bumper of the car. Jones' knees were jammed between the two vehicles; his body was twisted sideways. When released, Jones felt pain in his ankles, knees and lower back.
The district judge found Breaux at fault in causing the accident and Jones' injuries, a tear in the cartilage of his right knee and increased degeneration of his low back. He cast Breaux's employer, Sampey Brothers General Contractors, Inc.,[1] and its insurer, New Hampshire Insurance Company, in judgment. On the issue of damages the fact-finder commented, "I think the large part of the man's work history or the loss if you will of work is more because of the absence of work and because [of] the degenerative condition that he was suffering prior to the accident but nevertheless I'm going to include some award for that in the judgment about (sic) which I am about to render." The court awarded Jones $35,000 in damages plus stipulated medical expenses of $24,879.17.[2] No party disputes the liability finding.
On appeal Jones contends that the general damage sum is inadequate to compensate him for the pain and suffering and economic losses he experienced as a result of the accident. Defendants' response is that the award is within the trial judge's discretion. We entertain these contentions in reviewing the in globo award, and consider the legal sufficiency of the proof of the elements of damage that are claimed, in light of the discretion allowed the trier of fact to assess damage or damages. Wactor v. Pickens Lumber Co., 505 So.2d 815 (La.App. 2 Cir.1987).
INJURIES, TREATMENT AND IMPAIRMENT
Dr. Levy Stagni, chiropractor, treated Jones conservatively from February 5, 1985 to November 1, 1985. In light of his physical examination and his reading of Jones' lumbar thermogram, Dr. Stagni believed that Jones had sustained a lumbar sprain with associated sciatic neuralgia (nerve root pressure) and a sprain or other damage to the right knee in the January 1985 accident.
On referral, Jones was treated by orthopaedic surgeons Drs. Neville Reehlmann and Naum Klainer, who performed an arthroscopy to remove torn cartilage from his right knee in April 1985. Jones received an injection of epidural steroids at the L4-5 *1194 disc level in June 1985. At Jones' own request Dr. Reehlmann returned him to light-duty work status on September 4, 1985.
Jones returned to Dr. Klainer in September 1986 with complaints of knee and radiating back pain. The doctor prescribed medication for Jones' back complaints. Because he was concerned with the success of the initial knee repair, Dr. Klainer re-hospitalized Jones in June 1987. The second surgery revealed no tear in the cartilage remnant but documented the presence of severe arthritis at the right knee joint. Jones last visited Dr. Klainer in July 1987.
At trial Dr. Klainer testified that the January 1985 accident had caused Jones' right knee injury and had accelerated the pre-existing wear and tear occurring naturally in his lower back. He did not assign Jones a disability rating but limited him to sedentary activities that would not load or stress the knee and prohibited his lifting more than 20 pounds. The doctor believed that Jones' ability to work depended on his degree of pain.
For trial purposes, Jones was examined by the defendant's expert, orthopaedic surgeon Dr. Harold Stokes. Based on his September 1986 physical examination and his review of numerous diagnostic tests, the doctor considered Jones' arthritis of the lumbar spine to have existed for at least two years prior to examination and found that he exhibited mild arthritic changes in both knee joints. These conditions notwithstanding, Dr. Stokes testified that as a result of the January 1985 accident Jones had experienced a torn medial meniscus of the right knee and had aggravated the pre-existing disc degeneration in his lower back.
The doctor assessed Jones a 10% permanent impairment of the lower right leg. He testified that the restrictions limiting weight-lifting or repetitive stooping or bending, which he would have imposed in regard to Jones' back at the examination, were identical to those which he would have imposed prior to the accident in view of the degenerative spine condition. As a result of the knee injury Jones was prohibited from prolonged squatting or kneeling or excessive stair-climbing, but was not restricted on standing or walking. The doctor testified that Jones was employable at a sedentary capacity such as bench welding and could broaden his activities within his limitations.
PAIN AND SUFFERING DAMAGES
Jones has proved a causal connection between the January 1985 accident and his knee and back injury by a preponderance of the evidence. Jordan v. Travelers Insurance Company, 257 La. 995, 245 So.2d 151 (1971). He is entitled to compensation for the damages he suffered. Thames v. Zerangue, 411 So.2d 17 (La. 1982). Both Dr. Klainer and Dr. Stokes related Jones' right knee injury directly to the accident. Both agreed that the accident had exacerbated the pre-existing arthritis in Jones' low back. Dr. Stagni's initial diagnosis of neuralgia was not borne out by any subsequent diagnostic test conducted on Jones. In interpreting the lumbar MRI test performed July 1987, Dr. Klainer testified that the bulging disc reflected at the L4-5 level was consistent with the aging process.
The measure of recovery for pain, suffering and impairment is fair and reasonable compensation to the extent that injuries can be translated into dollars. Jones is entitled to compensation for his knee injury, resultant post-traumatic arthritis and impairment. He is entitled to recover for pain, which he testified subsided two to three weeks after the first surgery and thereafter occurred upon his squatting or kneeling. Jones is entitled to recompense for the aggravation of the arthritis in his lower spine and the pain which improved after the spring 1985 injection and thereafter occurred intermittently upon his bending forward. Perniciaro v. Brinch, 384 So.2d 392 (La.1980).
The district judge, who had the benefit of the parties before him, fixed Jones' damages at $35,000. After careful review of the instant facts we interpret the award to adequately compensate Jones for the pain and suffering he experienced as a result of *1195 the accident.
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544 So. 2d 1192, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 991, 1989 WL 55434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-sampey-bros-general-const-ltd-lactapp-1989.