Loveless v. Thos. W. Hooley & Sons

144 So. 2d 145, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2216
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 4, 1962
DocketNo. 21432
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 So. 2d 145 (Loveless v. Thos. W. Hooley & Sons) 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
Loveless v. Thos. W. Hooley & Sons, 144 So. 2d 145, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2216 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This plaintiff was an employee of Thomas W. Hooley & Sons on June 24, 1957, when he claims to have had an accident on the job. He sued the defendant to recover maximum workmen’s compensation, alleging permanent, total disability to have resulted from said accident. The Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans rendered judgment after trial dismissing plaintiff’s suit and plaintiff has appealed.

The evidence in this case discloses that plaintiff has had quite an erratic history as to job changes, accident proneness, compensation claims and compromise settlements. There is not much said about him prior to 1940 when he went into the armed service. A little over a year and three surgical operations later, plaintiff was discharged from the service. He said he was told on being discharged that he had too many operations. Since that time he has worked spasmodically from a day to a few months at various places and on many jobs in Mississippi and Louisiana. Reference is made in the testimony to several claims for workmen’s compensation, particularly when he was hurt on a boat working for Jahncke Service Company in 1950, which claim he compromised for $2,000.00, and while working at Kaiser Aluminum Company in 1952, when his ankle was broken which required surgical operations. He drew maximum compensa[146]*146tion following that accident amounting to $2,520.00, after which he made a compromise settlement of $5,000.00 additional, plus $1,596.00 for medical expenses.

It is impossible to recite with any accuracy in chronological order the respective jobs, their duration and the various accidents he has referred to since being discharged from the army. Suffice it to say they are numerous. In his testimony attempting to give the name of an employer or the place or time of employment and names of doctors to whom he went from time to time he very often wound it up with the statement “I am not sure.” It is entirely understandable why he isn’t sure for the reason that there have been so many jobs in so many different places, each of such short duration.

Follorving several accidents prior to June 24, 1957, the plaintiff made the same complaints that he now makes. Fie said that he was nervous in the army but does not know when it started. Referring to the accident on the boat in 1950 he said his nervousness was aggravated. He recited various jobs and accidents when he suffered the same nervousness, loss of sleep, loss of appetite, loss of weight, all prior to June, 1957. Following the boat accident he filed a civil action in the United States District Court in which he alleged that:

“As a result of the said accident, complainant sustained severe injuries to the brain, central nervous system, sensory nerves, and the bones, blood-vessels, ligaments, tendons, muscles, and other parts of the head, neck, extremities and body, including concussion, postconcussion, syndrome, cortical and other diffuse cerebral damage, epilepsy, herniae, and other physical, mental and nervous injuries, and residuals.”

On June 24, 1957, plaintiff was working for defendant, Thomas W. Hooley & Sons, cleaning with a wire brush welding scales from metal cradles being constructed in defendant’s shop. Plaintiff claims that some fellow-worker turned one of the cradles, weighing some five or six hundred pounds, causing the leg of the cradle to strike plaintiff, thereby severely injuring him. Plaintiff’s petition alleges practically the same things the matter with him resulting from this accident as he alleged in his suit as having resulted from the accident in 1950. Plaintiff testified that the accident has caused him to be nervous, on edge, to break out in cold sweat, and to have pains all through the stomach and all up the spine, nausea all of the time and can’t work continuously. After being sent to the company doctors, he stated that in the course of time since the accident he has been to a number of other doctors, none of whom he called as witnesses on the trial of the case. The only fellow-worker he called to substantiate his claim that he was struck by the heavy iron was Mr. Moreau, defendant’s foreman.

Moreau testified that he did not see the accident and when plaintiff reported that he was hurt Moreau sent him to the doctor. Moreau did say that plaintiff had worked about three weeks on the job and so far as he remembered was doing the work satisfactorily. He also said that he could take any young boy and teach him how to do the work within a few minutes. Plaintiff commenced work on May 30 and worked all of the first week to June 7th. The second week he missed one day, the third week he missed four days and from then to the 22nd he missed one day. Moreau said his record disclosed that the doctor discharged the plaintiff to report to work on July 3rd; that plaintiff came to work and worked one day and Moreaou has not seen the plaintiff since. Moreau does not recall any complaints by plaintiff on that one day he worked.

The only medical witness called by counsel for plaintiff was Dr. Morton L. Enelow, who specializes in psychiatry. This witness saw the plaintiff the first time on September 27, 1958, a second time on October 8, 1958, and the third and only other time on April 27, 1959. The doctor diagnosed plaintiff’s [147]*147trouble as being “accident neurosis.” The doctor said he arrived at that conclusion on his first interview with plaintiff and the other two interviews were merely corroborative. He defined accident neurosis thusly:

“This is a neurosis that results from an individual who is predisposed to develop such a neurosis, when a situation that is so — such a neurosis occurs when a stress that is sufficient occurs. It’s an emotional disturbance that affects the individual’s personality. It occurs as a result of what occurs to the individual’s personality, something severe enough to provoke the symptoms of this disorder.”
And further he said:
“I felt he had an accident neurosis which fits into the group of post-accident neurotic disorders.”

The doctor gave him tranquilizers as a temporary palliative.

The doctor was asked what procedure he followed in arriving at his diagnosis and he answered:

“Basically we follow the technique, I follow the technique of free association in obtaining what we call a mental status, evaluation of his past and present mental status, the state of his total emotional and mental situation to the use of psychoanalytical techniques, interviews.”

Dr. Enelow made his original diagnosis after his first interview of plaintiff without having seen reports of doctors and hospital records of data prior to his own examination and some of them prior to the accident of June, 1957. After being shown these reports and records the witness acknowledged that these psychiatrists had observed that plaintiff was neurotic prior to the accident of 1957. The doctor said he utilized some of these reports in evaluating plaintiff’s neurosis and said there was nothing inconsistent in any of the data with what he himself found.

On being questioned about how he determined that plaintiff was not a malingerer, the doctor said by depth interviewing, and he said further that:

“Psychonalytic interviewing gaining access to thought and feeling outside of his conscious awareness through the understanding of his words, dreams, et cetera, thoughts and feelings outside of his control.”

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 2d 145, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loveless-v-thos-w-hooley-sons-lactapp-1962.