Lewis v. A. Moresi Co.

196 So. 70, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 58
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1940
DocketNo. 2124.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 So. 70 (Lewis v. A. Moresi 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
Lewis v. A. Moresi Co., 196 So. 70, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 58 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

The plaintiff in this suit is a negro farm laborer, sixty-two years old, who was employed by the defendant company as a field hand on its sugar cane farm or plantation in St. Mary Parish. On the morning of February 4, 1938, he sustained personal injuries when he fell from a wagon attached to a motor tractor as a trailer, in which he, with a number of other hands, was to be transported from one location in the field where they had been cutting frozen and abandoned cane, to another, where they were to continue the same kind of work.

He claims that he was injured by reason of the careless, reckless and negligent manner in which the driver of the tractor who, at the time, was acting within the course and scope of his employment, started the same with a sudden and severe jerk, causing him to lose his balance and be thrown clear from the trailer or wagon on to the ground and then being rolled over by the wheels of a second wagon or trailer attached to the one from which he had fallen.

In his petition he alleges that the defendant corporation is engaged in agricultural pursuits which is a non-hazardous business or occupation and he therefore predicates his main demand on the general tort law of this State as embodied in Articles 2315 et seq. of the Revised Civil Code. He sets out in detail the nature and the extent of his injuries for which he presents his demand in the sum- of $12,000 as damages.

In the event it should be held that his cause of action is governed by the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Statute, Act No. 20 of 1914, he makes four alternative demands: (1) That he recover compensation at the rate of 65% of his weekly wage of $5.40 for a period not exceeding four hundred weeks as for perr manent, total disability; (2) that he recover compensation at the same rate for a period not exceeding three hundred weeks *72 as for temporary, total disability; (3) that he recover compensation at the same rate for a period of one hundred weeks for impairment of a physical function or permanent disfigurement of the head and face; and (4) that he recover compensation at the same rate from the date of the accident and injury to the latter part of August, 1938, during which time he was confined to the hospital and to his home and unable to do any work whatever.

The defendant for answer to the demand in tort admits that plaintiff was being transported from one location in the field to another in the manner alleged by him but denies that the driver of the tractor was careless or negligent in operating the same. In the alternative, defendant pleads both contributory negligence and the fellow-servant rule as a bar to plaintiff’s recovery. It alleges that plaintiff himself was negligent in the manner of holding himself in the wagon, knowing as he did, that the tractor which was to pull the wagon would soon be put in motion. Defendant seems to rely principally however on its defense that if plaintiff has any claim against it whatsoever, the same should be determined and the award fixed under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Statute.

The trial judge, after hearing, concluded that plaintiff’s denvand was governed by the Compensation Law of this State and rendered judgment in his favor awarding him compensation at the rate of $3 per week for a period of one hundred weeks for temporary disability and for serious and permanent disfigurement of the face and head as well, under the provisions of subsection 1(d) 16 of Section 8 of Act 20 of 1914, as amended Act No. 242 of 1928, p. 358. From that judgment plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The facts, as revealed by the record, are that plaintiff, with a group of laborers like himself, had been cutting frozen cane in defendant’s field on the morning he was injured and after finishing their work at the place where they were working were to be moved to another location to continue that same kind of work. This frozen cane was cane that had been abandoned in the field and it was being cut to clear the land for further planting operations. It is shown that there is no mill or factory on the plantation or in connection therewith and that the defendant’s business is strictly cane farming.

Instead of having these laborers walk to the location where they were to continue their work, defendant had provided two cane wagons coupled the one behind the other, and both pulled by a farm tractor, as a means of conveyance. The tractor was driven by one of its employees, Alfred Prevost. The group of men was divided almost equally in the two wagons, •plaintiff getting aboard the first or in the one immediately next to the tractor.

These wagons which are used to haul cane in are about 12 ft. long, 4½ ft. wide and 2 ft. deep. The sides flare out and upwards so as to give them a sort of cradle shape. The sides are 4 ft. high but the backs have no protection except for a tail gate 2 ft. high. They were not equipped with seats or benches on the morning plaintiff was hurt and all the men who boarded them had to stand. It is shown that only one of them, Nat Simmons, who was in the same wagon as plaintiff, sat on the tail gate.

On receiving a signal xrom the overseer in charge of the group of men, given by the blast of an automobile horn, Prevost, the driver of the tractor, put it in motion to start. Whether the movement was sudden and severe or not, the wagon in which plaintiff was standing was jerked sufficiently to cause him to lose his balance and fall out from the rear. He landed on the ground between the two wagons and was rolled over by the wheels of the wagon in the rear. He sustained a fracture of three ribs on the left side of his chest, rather severe lacerations about the head and especially around the forehead and the left eye and some brush burns and abrasions on the face and neck.

Under the facts stated with regard to transporting or conveying the employee, we find a case therefore which is almost similar to that of Tregre v. Kratzer, 148 So. 271, in which this Court held that the claim of the injured employee was not governed by the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Statute. The difference in the facts presented is that in the cited case the employee who sustained an accidental injury was one of some seventy-five extra laborers the employer found it necessary to hire during the rice harvesting season and sent his truck out daily to transport from their places of residence, in some instances a good distance from the plantation, whereas in this case the plaintiff was to be transported from one location *73 in the field where he had already been at work to another where he was to continue the same kind of work. Besides, instead of it being a daily practice as we might infer from the facts alleged in the cited case, in the present case it was the first and-only time plaintiff had boarded a tractor-hauled wagon to be transported anywhere by the employer.

In deciding whether or not the injured employee in the Tregre case had presented a claim under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Statute, this Court applied the doctrine to the effect that it is the nature of the employer’s business, trade or occupation which governs and the character of the employee’s services is therefore immaterial. If the employer’s business, trade or occupation is hazardous, the employee is protected; if it is not, even though the employee may be engaged in hazardous services, he is not protected.

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 70, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-a-moresi-co-lactapp-1940.