Lum v. Tri-State Insurance Company
This text of 252 So. 2d 157 (Lum v. Tri-State Insurance Company) 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.
Opinion
Johnnie D. LUM, Plaintiff,
v.
TRI-STATE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant and Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellee,
TRADERS & GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Third-Party Defendant and Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Bodenheimer, Jones, Klotz & Simmons, by J. W. Jones, Shreveport, for Traders & General Ins. Co., third-party defendant and defendant-appellant.
John P. Godfrey, Many, for Johnnie D. Lum, plaintiff.
Simon, Carroll, Fitzgerald & Fraser, by Richard A. Fraser, Jr., Shreveport, for Tri-State Ins. Co., defendant and third-party plaintiff, and appellee.
Before BOLIN, PRICE and HEARD, JJ.
PRICE, Judge.
The issue for review on this appeal is limited to the correctness of the trial court's determination that a workmen's compensation claimant, while working for a subsequent employer, suffered an additional accident which contributed to the disability originating from the prior employment. This matter reaches us by way of an appeal from the judgment in a third party demand involving the obligation of contribution between the insurers of the two employers as no appeal has been taken from the judgment in the principal demand awarding the claimant benefits for a total and permanent disability.
Johnnie D. Lum suffered an accident on May 20, 1968, while employed by the De *158 Soto Police Jury. In April, 1969, he filed suit against Tri-State Insurance Company, the compensation insurance carrier for the Police Jury, claiming benefits for total and permanent disability. The suit was tried on the merits in May, 1969, and left open for the taking of additional medical testimony. Prior to rendition of judgment by the court, a third party demand was filed by Tri-State, naming as defendants Traders & General Insurance Company, the compensation insurer of Nabors Drilling Company. In this demand Tri-State alleges Lum, while working for Nabors on November 5, 1968, suffered an additional accident which was an intervening or aggravating cause of Lum's disability, and for which Traders & General should be held solidarily liable should plaintiff be entitled to judgment, or in the alternative, liable for contribution of one-half of any amounts for which Tri-State is cast in this action.
Objections to the court's allowance of the filing of a third party demand at this stage of the proceeding were overruled and the trial judge ordered separate trials of the principal and incidental demands under the authority granted by LSA-C.C.P. art. 1038. The court rendered judgment on the principal demand, awarding Lum benefits for total and permanent disability and the maximum medical expenses allowed by the compensation statute.
Judgment was rendered on the third party demand, granting Tri-State judgment against Traders & General for one-half of all sums previously paid to Lum, and for one-half of all sums thereafter paid under the judgment rendered against it in the principal demand.
The only appeal taken from these judgments was by Traders & General which contends the trial judge erred in finding claimant suffered an accident while working for Nabors on November 5, 1968, which renders it liable for contribution to the third party plaintiff, Tri-State. By stipulation of the parties, the evidence previously taken on the principal demand of Lum against Tri-State was submitted to the court, along with additional medical testimony for resolution of the third party demand.
We believe the following to be a reasonable resume of the facts established by the evidence in the record of this case.
On May 5, 1968, Lum was working as foreman of a road crew for the De Soto Parish Police Jury. While driving a piece of mechanical equipment used for loading gravel, the front end bucket accidentally dropped and caught in a trench, causing the machine to come to an abrupt, unanticipated stop. Lum was first thrown against the steering wheel and then back against the rear of the seat. The breath was temporarily knocked from his body and he suffered pain in his stomach and low back region. He continued to have pain on the day of the occurrence which became more severe on the succeeding day, causing him to report the accident to the Secretary of the Police Jury. He was referred to Dr. Jack Grindle of Mansfield for examination and treatment. He was under treatment by Dr. Grindle primarily for low back pain until the latter part of July. Two or three days after the accident Lum reported back to work but testified he could not do any of the strenuous phase of the work he had previously performed. At about this same time a change occurred in the elected members of the Police Jury from the ward in which Lum worked and he was terminated solely because of political reasons.
He remained unemployed from May 31st until some time during the month of September when he began working for Nabors Drilling Company as a roustabout. On November 5th, shortly after reporting for work with Nabors, and while reaching into the bed of his pickup truck for a ball peen hammer, Lum had an onset of extreme pain in his back, requiring him to leave the job to go home and rest for the remainder of the day. The following day he reported for work, and during the course of the day *159 his left leg collapsed at a time when he was performing no labor whatsoever. Lum at this point had complete paralysis of his left leg and extreme weakness in his right leg, rendering him unable to stand.
After preliminary treatment by Dr. Grindle and Dr. James L. Zum Brunnen, an orthopedist of Shreveport, Lum was referred to Dr. Heinz Faludi, a neurosurgeon, for evaluation. Dr. Faludi immediately operated on Lum and found his paralysis to have resulted from a bone fragment compressed against nerve structures in the L-3 region of his spine. From the findings in connection with the surgery performed and the history given him of the accident occurring on May 20, 1968, and the subsequent complaints and restricted activities of Lum from that date until the onset of paralysis, Dr. Faludi concluded that Lum suffered a fracture of the L-3 lamina and facet in the May 20th accident. He further concluded that a fragment of bone resulting from this fracture remained loose and did not heal completely. Although this fragment responded somewhat to treatment received by Lum following the May 5th accident and more or less became benign in nature, in its loosened condition it remained a continuous threat to the nerve structure. Dr. Faludi was further of the opinion that sometime during the date of November 5th or 6th the fragment became dislodged and moved against the nerve structures of the cauda-equina, compressing them and causing the resulting paralysis and disability.
Tri-State seeks to have Traders & General declared solidarily liable under the theory that although the May 20th accident (while employed by the Police Jury) may have eventually resulted in complete disability to Lum, it had not as a fact caused disability until some further exertion or movement caused the fragment to be dislodged; that the exertion which caused this displacement was the twisting movement of Lum in reaching for the hammer in the pickup truck while employed by Nabors.
Traders & General urges the evidence does not sufficiently establish the hammer incident had any causal connection with the onset of paralysis and disability.
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252 So. 2d 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lum-v-tri-state-insurance-company-lactapp-1971.