Landry v. Central Excavation Co.

196 So. 2d 571, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5628
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 21, 1967
DocketNo. 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 196 So. 2d 571 (Landry v. Central Excavation 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
Landry v. Central Excavation Co., 196 So. 2d 571, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5628 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

HOOD, Judge.

Plaintiff, Leo Paul Landry, sues for workmen’s compensation benefits, -alleging that he is totally and permanently disabled. The suit was instituted against his employer, Central Excavation Company, Inc., and its insurer, American Fire and Casualty Insurance Company. Judgment on the merits was rendered by the trial court in favor of defendants, and plaintiff has appealed.

The sole question presented on this appeal is whether plaintiff has been disabled since December 9, 1963, that being the date on which defendants discontinued paying compensation benefits to him.

The accident which gave rise to this suit occurred on October 3, 1962. Plaintiff at that time was working for defendant, Central Excavating Company, Inc., as an oiler on a dragline. His duties consisted of keeping the dragline clean, and in performing these duties it was necessary for him to crawl under and on the machine and frequently to jump from some part of it to the ground. While performing these duties on October 3, 1962, plaintiff’s right knee was struck by a marsh mat, causing injuries to his right hip and right knee. He acknowledges that the injury to his hip cleared up within a few weeks, but he contends that the injury to his knee was much more serious, and that because of it he has been disabled continuously since the date of the accident.

Plaintiff testified that he has suffered severe pain in his knee almost continuously since the date of the accident. He concedes that he returned to work a little less than two months after the injury was sustained and that he has continued to work with very little interruption since that time, but he stated that he has worked because he needed the money and he did so in spite of the fact that his leg was stiff and he was in pain. He described his pain as being “pain that I can’t stand,” or pain similar to a real hard “pinch,” or at times the degree of pain which accompanies a sprained ankle.

The evidence shows that immediately after the accident occurred, plaintiff was examined and treated by Dr. Edgar P. Breaux, a general surgeon. He remained under Dr. Breaux’s treatment for about seven weeks. On November 28, 1962, he returned to work for defendant, Central Excavation Company, performing the same duties at the same rate of pay, and he continued to work for that company until' March, 1963, when he was discharged. In April, 1963, he returned to Dr. Breaux with complaints of weakness in his knee,, and Dr. Breaux referred him to Dr. Guy J. Dunning, Jr., an orthopedic surgeon. He was treated by Dr. Dunning for several months thereafter. In May, 1963, while being treated by Dr. Dunning, Landry obtained employment with Grisby Brothers as a plastic welder’s helper, and he remained in that employment until January, 1964. Approximately one week later he began working for Pelican Well Service as a “floor hand” on a drilling rig, and he continued on that job until March 10, 1964, when he was involved in an accident which disabled him for more than two months, until May IS, 1964. He received compensation benefits from Pelican during this period of disability. Defendants in this suit, of course, were not in any way responsible for that accident or injury. On May 15, 1964, plaintiff returned to work for Pelican at the same job, and he continued to work for them for about two months. Since July, 1964, he has worked for Grisby Brothers, working offshore as a painter of rigs at an increase in salary. He was still in that employment at the time of the trial of this suit.

On February 3, 1963, plaintiff voluntarily enlisted as a chief radio operator ini [573]*573the Marine Infantry Reserve Company, in Lafayette, and he remained in that military unit until July, 1964, when he resigned because he had accepted employment on an offshore rig and would not be able to attend the drills. • While in this Marine Reserve unit he regularly attended monthly drills of two days each, performed calisthenics and engaged in hikes, marches and military maneuvers. In the summer of 1963 he attended a two-weeks camp in North Carolina, at which time he participated in maneuvers and in a twenty-mile hike. The captain of this military unit, and the major who served as inspector-instructor of it, testified that plaintiff had passed a physical examination before entering this service, that he performed all of the duties, that he did not complain of his knee, and that while in this reserve unit he voluntarily requested and was granted a change of classification so that thereafter he was rated as ready for combat. The commanding officer of the unit described the calisthenics which were performed as involving much squatting, standing, kicking and use of the legs.

Landry was paid workmen’s compensation benefits at the maximum rate from the date of the accident until November 28, 1962, when he returned to work for the same employer performing the same type of work. His compensation payments were resumed as of April 16, 1963, after he left the employment of defendant, and were continued until December 9, 1963.

Dr. Breaux diagnosed plaintiff’s injuries as “a contusion of the right hip, and a moderately severe contusion and abrasion of the right knee with a hemarthrosis.” He treated plaintiff for several weeks, and then reported that he had recovered from his injuries and that “He was able to return to work on November 22, 1962.” Dr. Breaux stated that Landry returned to him on April 16, 1963, with the complaint that his leg had given out on him and that he had weakness of the right thigh muscles. He did not examine plaintiff on that occasion, but he did refer him to Dr. Dunning, an orthopedic surgeon, and he has not seen or treated plaintiff since that time.

Dr. Dunning first saw plaintiff on April 23, 1963, and on that initial examination he found a slight synovial thickening, and a one and one-half inch atrophy of the right thigh. He concluded that Landry had a “quadriceps weakness of the right thigh secondary to previous trauma,” and he recommended that plaintiff undergo physiotherapy treatments. The treatments so recommended were administered thereafter by a qualified physiotherapist. Dr. Dunning examined and treated Landry periodically thereafter. On September 10, 1963, he found that there was no longer any syno-vial thickening, that there was no pain with motion, and that plaintiff’s quadriceps had improved. He recommended that plaintiff continue the physical therapy treatments for two more weeks. Plaintiff received some physiotherapy treatments after that date, but he did not return to Dr. Dunning for further examination until several months later, on April 7, 1964. As a result of the examination made by Dr. Dunning at that time, the doctor concluded that plaintiff had recovered from his injuries and was able to return to work. In connection with that examination, however, Dr. Dunning reviewed the reports of the physiotherapist and found from those reports that by October 11, 1963, plaintiff actually had reached the point in his recovery which Dr. Dunning found to exist on April 7, 1964. He reasoned, therefore, that plaintiff had recovered and was able to return to work in October, 1963.

X-rays made by Dr. Dunning on April 7, 1964, revealed for the first time that plaintiff had osteochondritis of the right knee. Dr. Dunning stated that this condition is developmental in origin and is not usually caused by single trauma. He was of the opinion, however, that plaintiff could return to work and could perform heavy labor in spite of the osteochondritis. He testified that “although he has some discomfort at times, I feel that he is able to carry out his work.”

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 2d 571, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landry-v-central-excavation-co-lactapp-1967.