Lejeune v. Gulley

252 So. 2d 717, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5272
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 27, 1971
DocketNo. 3566
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 252 So. 2d 717 (Lejeune v. Gulley) 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
Lejeune v. Gulley, 252 So. 2d 717, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5272 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

DOMENGEAUX, Judge.

This is a workmen’s compensation suit wherein plaintiff-appellant Melvin H. Le-jeune sued his employer and the employer’s insurer, alleging that he is totally and permanently disabled. The trial court concluded that he had recovered from his injuries as of January 5, 1970 and judgment was rendered, awarding him compensation benefits from the date of the accident, November 26, 1968 until his recovery date. Plaintiff has appealed and the only issue before us is whether the trial court erred in awarding plaintiff compensation benefits only through January 5, 1970 rather than on a total and permanent basis not to exceed the statutory time limit.

Mr. Lejeune’s employer is a Mail Contractor for the United States Government Postal Service and plaintiff was employed by him as a route driver in which occupation he would deliver and pick up mail sacks at various Post Office locations.

On November 26, 1968, while lifting such a mail sack at the Post Office in Leesville, Vernon Parish, Louisiana, he sustained a back injury. Compensation benefits were paid to plaintiff by the defendant insurer, Allstate Insurance Company, from the date of the accident through September 1969 when payments were terminated based on medical reports received by it.

The record shows that plaintiff has experienced low back difficulties dating back to 1953 when he was injured while working for V & C Mud Chemical Company. A myelogram taken on December 4, 1953 showed a large defect at the level of the fourth lumbar intervertebral disc on the left side. Again, in 1955, plaintiff was injured while in the employ of Williams Drilling Company and his case was diagnosed at that time as a ruptured inter-vertebral disc at the L-4 and L-5 left low back region. Again, later in 1955 he injured his low back in a commercial accident. In all three instances he participated in workmen’s compensation settle[718]*718ments with his employers. Disc surgery has never been performed on plaintiff.

At the time of the accident upon which this appeal is based, plaintiff had been working in his above-mentioned capacity for some seven weeks. Prior to that time he had worked as a route man with a linen service company for some two and one-half years in which employment he picked up and delivered linens, towels, uniforms, etc., making between 30 and 40 stops per day. The bundles which he handled varied in weight, but when soiled linen was picked up, frequently in a damp state, the bundles weighed between 40 and 70 pounds. Before that time, but since his accident of 1955, he had worked in various occupations including that of a service station attendant, taxi driver, creamery employee, rice farm laborer, and for approximately 10 years, he worked as a care taker which necessitated his attending to a pecan orchard, a flower garden, collecting rents, etc. Since his accident of 1968, and commencing from 10 or 11 months thereafter, he has worked intermittently as a service station manager and the record indicates that he has not performed heavy work to any extent, excepting to remove, repair and re-install tires on trucks and cars on occasion. To complicate his situation, he suffered a heart attack on March 6, 1970, which admittedly is not connected with his claim herein, and from which he was recuperating as of the date of the trial, October 5, 1970.

Mr. Lejeune described his accident of November 26, 1968 and the circumstances attendant thereto as follows: He had left Lake Charles in the mail truck on his regular route, stopped at the DeRidder Post Office, unloaded the mail, and proceeded to Fort Polk to unload more mail. From there he went to Leesville and as he swung a mail bag onto his shoulder, he experienced a sharp pain in the back. He rested a short time, the pain subsided and he dragged the remaining hags on the ground to their depository at the post office. He proceeded in his mail truck toward another post office stop at Many, Louisiana and as he was driving he says that he “ * * * noticed my legs went completely out, I had no control, no use of my legs at the time * * * ” He allowed the mail truck to coast off to the side of the road and was ultimately picked up by two Fort Polk soldiers who brought him to the Broyles Clinic in Leesville, Louisiana. He was seen there by Dr. S. J. Jones, remained at the clinic for two days, returned to his home in Lake Charles, and was admitted to the Lake Charles Memorial Hospital on November 30, 1968, seen by Dr. Charles M. Anderson and Dr. Norman P. Morin and released from the hospital on December 19, 1968. He was subsequently examined by Dr. Robert C. L. Robertson and Dr. Richard W. Levy.

Plaintiff contends that he has continued to suffer pain in his low back and leg and that he is unable to perform manual labor because of such pain and instability.

Dr. Jones, a general practitioner, examined plaintiff on November 27, 1968 and found muscle spasm in the paravertebral muscles. He concluded, from the history given him of a previous injury, that plaintiff was suffering from nerve root irritation of the lumbosacral spine secondary to muscle spasm. The doctor indicated that he found little objective symptoms but actually treated him with sedatives and suggested that he see a back specialist. The doctor did not consider the muscle spasm an objective finding because, he says, the spasm could be generated voluntarily. He did say, however, that spasm occurs frequently when the nerve is irritated or a muscle is sprained. On the question of muscle spasm, Dr. Charles Anderson suggested that muscle spasm was an objective finding and that it is virtually impossible to feign this type of spasm.

Dr. Anderson, also a general practitioner, saw the plaintiff in Lake Charles Memorial Hospital on November 30, 1968, treated him conservatively with med-icaments, physical therapy, and traction, and also ordered a back brace. He con[719]*719tinued to see him during his stay at the hospital through December 19, 1968 and thereafter saw him intermittently after his discharge from the hospital through April 15, 1969. It was Dr. Anderson’s opinion, based on plaintiffs history and his findings, that said findings were compatible with a ruptured intervertebral disc in the L-4, L-5 area. He found muscle spasm initially which subsequently subsided and improved. As of April 15, 1969, it was Dr. Anderson’s opinion that the plaintiff was still disabled from doing heavy work and was still suffering from the ruptured disc. Dr. Anderson examined plaintiff again on September 28, 1970 and his conclusion then was that the claimant’s symptoms were compatible with those of a ruptured disc and that he was disabled from performing heavy work which disability would continue until the disc was surgically corrected. In view of his having reviewed plaintiff’s history and the diagnosis of a ruptured disc dating .back to 1955, he thought that plaintiff’s condition as of September, 1970 was a continuation and aggravation of his pre-existing condition.

While plaintiff was still in the Lake Charles Hospital, Dr. Anderson called in Dr. Norman P. Morin, an orthopaedic surgeon for consultation.

Dr. Morin examined plaintiff on two occasions, first on December 3, 1968 and again on December 30, 1969. At the first examination Dr. Morin found moderate muscle spasm on both sides of the fifth lumbar spinous process and first sacral spinous process.

The right sciatic nerve was painful and tender. He viewed x-rays which had been ordered by Dr. Anderson and he found them essentially normal.

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Bluebook (online)
252 So. 2d 717, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lejeune-v-gulley-lactapp-1971.