Khoury v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.

149 So. 469, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1946
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1933
DocketNo. 1190.
StatusPublished

This text of 149 So. 469 (Khoury v. Fidelity & Casualty 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
Khoury v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 149 So. 469, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1946 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

*470 MOUTON, Judge.

In Ms petition, plaintiff alleges that, as employee of the Union Sulphur Company rendering services on one of its drilling rigs, and while handling an iron drill collar, he sustained a severe injury in his stomach on May 17, 1932, causing a hernia.

This suit was brought for compensation for the injuries suffered against the Fidelity & Casualty Company, defendant, which it is admitted had assumed all the obligations of the Union Sulphur Company to its employees under the Employers’ Liability Act of this state (Act No. 20 of 1914 as amended).

The district court first rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor of the amount claimed, and, on a new trial, reversed itself, rejecting the demand.

Plaintiff prosecutes this appeal from the second judgment.

In 1929 plaintiff applied to the Vacuum Oil Company for work, and, as was required by its rules, was examined by Dr. Holcombe, the physician of that company, who testifies that, after examining plaintiff, he found that he then had a well-developed left inguinal hérnia which was complete, and plaintiff was refused employment in that company.

In May, 1932, a short while after May 17th, the date plaintiff alleges he suffered the hernia while then working for the Union Sul-phur Company, he was examined for that company by Dr. Watkins, its regular physician.

This physician testifies that plaintiff had then a hernia on his left side, and that it was an old one. He also found that plaintiff had a large congenital ring on the right side which indicated a potential hernia and advised an operation on both sides. The operation was performed also on the right side, which Dr. Watkins explained was done as a preventive measure for the future. He further explains that you cannot, from an examination, say whether the hernia is old or recent, but that, after you have operated on the patient, you have then a “very clear idea,” and can tell that the hernia is old or néw.

Plaintiff admits that, after the examination in 1929, Dr. Holcombe told him he had a hernia, and that the Vacuum Oil Company refused to keep him in its service as an employee. Plaintiff says, however, that he did not believe he had a hernia, although Dr. Holcombe so stated.

As Dr. Watkins found that plaintiff had a hernia on the left side in May, 1932, there can be no doubt that it was the hernia which Dr. Holcombe had located on the same side in 1929.

It is shown that, after the Vacuum Oil Company refused to keep plaintiff as its employee, he was employed by the Union Sul-phur Company for which he was working in May, 1932. It is evident that he was suffering with that trouble when he entered into the service of that company, and hence did not sustain the hernia on May 17, 1932, as it is by him alleged.

The allegation of the plaintiff is that he sustained the hernia while he was handling an iron drill collar. His testimony is that, as he made an effort to grab it, he suffered the injury. Although he alleged that he had then sustained the hernia, the issue presented for determination revolves around the proposition as to whether or not'his condition had been aggravated by the strain to which he had been subjected in his attempt to lift this iron drill collar.

Plaintiff testifies that, when he pulled on this collar, which weighed about 375 pounds, he felt a pain like a needle sticking in his left and right sides; that he walked off, sat down for ten or fifteen minutes, thought he had a cramp in the stomach but which would soon pass off. He rested there a while, went back to his work for the rest of the night, suffering pain all night.

It appears that Mr. John Trump was a fellow workman on the derrick and was helping plaintiff in handling the drill collar at the time plaintiff says he was hurt. It is shown, however, that neither Mr. Trump, his helper, nor Mr. Burleson, the driller who was a few feet then from where the collar was pulled by plaintiff, ever noticed that he had walked away or sat down, as he says he did. Neither Mr. Trump nor Mr. Burleson, the driller, heard any expression from plaintiff indicating he had been injured or suffered any pain at that time, nor did plaintiff tell either of them about suffering any injury when he returned to work on the derrick, if in fact he had temporarily absented himself and returned to his work, as was testified to by him.

Plaintiff continued two days thereafter to work on the derrick, rendering his customary services and without mentioning either to Sir. Burleson, the driller, nor to his helper, Mr. Trump, that he had been injured. About three days after the incident detailed by plaintiff, he made a report of the injury he claims to have suffered to Mr. Burleson, the driller, who sent him to Mr. Scott, who brought him over to see Dr. Watkins, the physician of the Union Sulphur Company, by whom plaintiff was examined, with the result hereinabove stated.

Neither Mr. Trump nor Mr. Burleson, both of whom were working on the derrick with plaintiff at the time of his alleged injury, had any intimation whatsoever of such injury, until plaintiff made this report to Mr. Burle-son about three days after the alleged incident. These two witnesses, it is true, remembered when plaintiff made a grab at the *471 drilling collar at tlie time stated by him, bnt that was all they remembered of this incident, to which the driller says he paid little attention, as it is not an unusual happening in the day’s work around a derrick.

It is indeed singular, if plaintiff suffered an aggravation of his old hernia on that occasion, as claimed by him, that he said nothing about it to his fellow workmen on the derrick, did not give the least manifestation of pain or suffering from injury, continued working as usual during the whole of that night, returned to his work for a couple of days thereafter without complaint, rendering his usual services. It is impossible from such conduct on his part to infer that plaintiff had suffered an accident of the nature complained of.

The only proof that the court could rely upon to solve this question would have to depend on the testimony of the plaintiff, and, if possible, with corroboration of his evidence by facts or circumstances gathered from the record.

It will be seen from the opinion of the district judge given on the new trial that he entertained grave doubts as to the truthfulness of the statement made by plaintiff in reference to the aggravation of his condition, and that he found no corroborative evidence to support that statement. In referring to this lack of corroboration, the court referred .to the fact, strenuously emphasized by counsel for plaintiff, that the evidence showed that plaintiff had for two years performed hard work for the Union Sulphur Company, and that his hernial condition had not begn interfered with during that period of time. In reference thereto, the court said that several of the physicians who testified in the case had stated that men frequently work under such conditions “with little apparent inconvenience.”

Dr. Watkins, the record shows, said, it must be said on this subject, that men work all of their lives with hernias.

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