Kirby v. Terminal Paper Bag Co., Inc.

6 So. 2d 562
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 5, 1942
DocketNo. 6375.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 So. 2d 562 (Kirby v. Terminal Paper Bag Co., 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
Kirby v. Terminal Paper Bag Co., Inc., 6 So. 2d 562 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Plaintiff, a colored man, age thirty-five years, was injured on June 3, 1940, while performing the duties embraced in a contract of employment with the defendant, Terminal Paper Bag Company, Inc. He seeks to be adjudged entitled to workmen's compensation on the basis of permanent total disability or sixty-five per cent of his weekly wage for 400 weeks, being $7.80 per week. Medical and physicians' bills to the extent of the statutory maximum or $250 is included in the demand. In addition to the employer, its carrier of compensation insurance, Central Surety and Insurance Corporation, was made party defendant. In solido judgment is prayed for.

The defendants' answers reduce the issues solely to whether plaintiff has recovered from his injuries sufficiently to enable him to do manual labor, this being the only means whereby he may earn a livelihood. The employment, wage rate, hazardous character of the employer's business and original disabling injury are all admitted. Compensation at the rate of $7.80 per week was paid to October 21, 1940, being 20 weeks.

There was judgment for plaintiff and defendants appealed.

In limine, appellants filed and urged an exception of vagueness. Because of an adverse ruling thereon, they here complain. The exception is leveled against the allegations descriptive of the injuries. After relating the facts of the accident, among which are that several bundles of paper bags weighing not less than 75 pounds each, fell upon his head, shoulders and back, from a distance of 20 feet, knocking him down, plaintiff alleges: "As a result of the bags falling on him as aforesaid, his spine, back, neck, head and other parts of his body were seriously injured and he has been totally unable to do any work of any kind since."

The exceptors contend that plaintiff should have been ordered to clarify his complaint by specifically alleging "the nature of any and all injuries claimed, whether or not he contends that any particular bones were broken or fractured", etc.

It is certain that plaintiff, as has often occurred with others, when suit was filed, did not know definitely whether any bones were broken or fractured and he may not know today. After reading the medical testimony in this case, somewhat prolix, we ourselves, cannot say with perfect confidence whether or not any bones were fractured. When eminent physicians of long experience, aided by X-ray pictures, do not *Page 564 agree on such an issue, how can an ignorant negro laborer be expected to do so? He should know whether he is disabled to do manual labor and knows further that if disabled, the accident produced such result. He alleged all facts within his knowledge and that is sufficient in a case of this character; one in which the technical rules applicable to pleadings generally are not strictly enforced. Pierre v. Barringer, 149 La. 71, 88 So. 691; Stockstill v. Sears-Roebuck Company, La.App., 151 So. 822; Clark v. Alexandria Cooperage Lumber Company, 157 La. 135,102 So. 96.

We are in accord with the trial judge's ruling on the exception and affirm it.

Plaintiff was injured by several bundles of paper bags, measuring 18" by 16 1/2", and weighing about 70 lbs. each, falling against him and knocking him down on the floor. The accident happened in defendant's warehouse wherein large quantities of paper bags are stored for shipping. In order that light weight four-wheeled trucks, operated by man power, may be conveniently loaded, aisles 6 1/2' wide were left open. One of such trucks was being loaded when the accident ocurred. L.C. Taylor, an employee, was standing erect on a stack of bags 6' high adjacent to which was another stack 12' high. He was lifting bundles from the higher stack and handing same to plaintiff who would then place them on the waiting truck. The stack on which Taylor was standing became unsteady and began to wobble. He jumped therefrom and averted injury to himself, but in so doing unbalanced the higher stack from which several bundles, together with some from the lower stack, fell toward the aisle and against and upon the plaintiff, who, as stated above, was knocked to the floor on his stomach and face.

Plaintiff was assisted to a standing position and "hobbled", as said by one witness, with the assistance of two men, to a room near by where he lay down for some thirty minutes. He was then in like manner taken to an automobile and driven by an employee named Banks to the Vaughn-Wright Bendel Clinic in the City of Monroe, Louisiana, a few miles away, and placed in charge of Dr. Bendel, the employer's regularly retained physician, for treatment.

On the way to the doctor's office plaintiff experienced considerable pain and complained that his shoulders, back and knees were hurting him. He was a patient in the clinic for 14 days. Dr. Bendel testified that plaintiff then complained of pain only in the lumbar-dorsal regions. The back was strapped with adhesive tape. After discharge from the clinic he returned for treatment intermittently until September 19th. He was treated with diathermia machine or heat applications. The doctor thought improvement satisfactory, although he admits plaintiff continued to complain of pain. He advised the insurance company at that time that he believed plaintiff would be able to resume work in about two weeks. He denies that he told plaintiff to quit coming to his office for treatment. Dr. Bendel did not see plaintiff again until a few days before trial in February, 1941.

On June 8th, five days after plaintiff was injured, Dr. Bendel made or had made, five X-ray pictures of plaintiff's back from the lower dorsal section to and including the sacrum and coccyx. No pictures at that time were made of the neck or cervical vertebrae because, he says, plaintiff made no complaint of pain in that locality.

On September 19th Dr. Bendel made a general physical examination of plaintiff. At the suggestion of defendant's counsel, he was sent to Drs. Scott Hamilton and A.G. McHenry for additional examinations. Dr. Bendel also had X-ray pictures made on September 10th. These were of the sacro-iliac joint, the sacrum, coccyx, lumbar vertebrae and lower dorsal vertebrae.

On February 3d, X-ray pictures were made of plaintiff's cervical vertebrae because, it is said, at that time he was complaining of pain in that region.

When the case was tried Dr. Bendel testified positively that none of these X-ray pictures, 17 in all, disclosed evidence of any injury whatever to the bones of plaintiff's back, from the skull to the coccyx. It was his opinion that plaintiff's ailment should not prevent him from working. Present disability he accredits to lack of exercise and a continued "position of stiffness". However, Dr. Bendel gave the following testimony which materially modified what he previously said on the subject, to-wit: "It would probably take two or three or maybe four weeks for him to go back to work. What he has there now is not the result of injury but is the result of how he has handled himself. If it wasn't for that he should be able to go back to work * * *."

Dr. Hamilton specializes in orthopedic surgery. He made a clinical examination *Page 565 of plaintiff on February 19th at which time he had the benefit of the X-ray pictures taken June 8th and September 10th. He says that plaintiff then complained of pain only in his head and lower back. While testifying, Dr. Hamilton viewed the X-ray pictures of plaintiff's neck, made on February 3d. He was unable to find in any of these pictures clinical evidence to support the complaint of pain and disability. It was his opinion that plaintiff was not disabled to do manual labor.

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Related

Morrison v. Travelers Insurance Co.
79 So. 2d 177 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1955)
Lawrence v. Southern Advance Bag Paper Co.
22 So. 2d 301 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1945)
Kirby v. Terminal Paper Bag Co.
16 So. 2d 597 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)

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6 So. 2d 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-v-terminal-paper-bag-co-inc-lactapp-1942.