Matthews v. Louisiana Long Leaf Lumber Co.

55 So. 2d 33, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 883
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1951
DocketNo. 7658
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 55 So. 2d 33 (Matthews v. Louisiana Long Leaf Lumber 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
Matthews v. Louisiana Long Leaf Lumber Co., 55 So. 2d 33, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 883 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinions

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

For the alleged loss of vision of the right eye, due to an accident while performing the duties of his employment with Louisiana Long Leaf Lumber Company, plaintiff seeks to recover judgment against his employer and its insurer, United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, for compensation on the basis of total permanent disability to perform the work he was performing when injured, or “work of the reasonably same or similar character”. Specifically, he alleged that as a result of said accident he has “suffered and does now suffer from traumatic iritis and traumatic cataract of his right eye”, with consequent loss of vision thereof.

In the alternative, he prays for judgment for $30 per week for 100 weeks, as provided for the loss of vision in one eye. Act No. 85 of 1926, Section 8, Subdivision 1(d), paragraph 9, LSA-RS 23:1221 (4) (i).

[34]*34The alleged accident oocu-rred on August 5, 1950, while plaintiff was maneuvering his truck and trailer into a position so that they could -be loaded with logs. No other person was present.

The accident is alleged to have happened in this manner, to-wit: “A limb became bowed against the windshield, of plaintiff’s truck and becoming disengaged, struck plaintiff in the right eye with great force”, etc.

In a supplemental petition, plaintiff alleged that the cataract referred to in the original petition was “either caused by or aggravated by the accidental injury referred to” in said original petition.

Defendants resist the suit on the ground, primarily, that plaintiff suffered no accident, as by him alleged; but, alternatively, if any -accident did happen, it was of a minor nature, the effects of which ceased within one week thereafter; that the cataract in his right eye, which does impair the vision of that member, is an old condition, due to disease or other cause and in no manner connected with an -accidental injury arising out of plaintiff’s said employment; that, in any event, he is not disabled to drive' a truck as he was doing when injured and, therefore, the specific disability provision of the statute for loss of an eye is not applicable.

The Court awarded judgment for $30 per week for the period of disability, not exceeding 400 weeks, and defendants appealed.

Plaintiff’s version of how the accident happened is as follows, to-wit: That in maneuvering the truck and trailer, just prior to loading logs, the trailer got hung behind a stump, and to- observe its movements while he was “hunching” the truck forward, he extended his head out of the left truck door; that the limb was against the left end of the windshield and as the truck gradually moved forward pressure against the limb increased until finally released, and in the reaction or spring-back it struck his right eye just as he began to turn his head to the right. He added that if his nose had not caught part of the blow his eye would have been knocked out. He also testified that excruciating pain followed the blow and he got out of the truck and Truly Midkiff, the boy who was doing the loading, backed the vehicle out -and completed the loading. Plaintiff drove the loaded vehicle to the mill. It was a Saturday.

Plaintiff testified that the eye gave him much pain that night, and the next day; that he visited his father Sunday and on returning home that afternoon he went to -a hospital, hoping to find the nurse on duty to render him aid, but she was not there; that notwithstanding the persistence of the pain, he returned to duty Monday morning, and brought one load of logs to the mill, a friend, however, doing the driving. He says it was while making this trip he discovered he couldn’t see anything out of the right eye, and that that condition has not improved to any extent; that he then informed his foreman of the situation and was directed to see the employer’s physician in Many, Louisiana. On reporting to the clinic, Dr. Booker, general practitioner, examined and treated him. He found an opacity of the eye, which means that light was not going through the lens because of a cataract; the redness of the conjunctiva, which is the outer covering of the eyeball proper. He found no ulceration in nor laceration of the eye structure. The redness was the only evidence, he says, that could be construed to be traumatic, and, he adds, it could have been the result of a lick. However, he also said that it could have been caused from infection, a -cold, foreign matter, or from rubbing.

Not being an eye specialist, and plaintiff continuing to complain of serious pain in the eye, Dr. Booker sent him, on August 8th, to Dr. A. P. Crain, an eye specialist of eleven years experience, in the City of Shreveport, Louisiana. Dr. Booker had asked him to examine plaintiff’s eye and determine if an injury to the eye had been sustained, and, if so, how much. Plaintiff gave him a history that the eye had been hit by a limb three day-s previous.

Dr. Crain found the eye somewhat red with fluid under the covering, particularly the lower lid. He found “in the lens of the right eye a posterior subcapsular cata[35]*35ract * * * and also the nucleus of the lens contained a cataract. Vision in that eye was reduced to perception of light. The left eye was found to be normal. The refraction of the right eye vision could not be improved with glasses.” He did not find evidence of inflammation within the “interior-anterior chamber of the eye.” He testified that the impairment of vision was largely due to the opacity in the lens, and that the opacity was attributable to the cataracts. He found no other pathology; and would not give opinion as to the cause of the redness of the eye, there being several things that could produce such condition, but admitted it could have been due to trauma. He was of the opinion that the presence of the cataracts was not due to trauma, but were in existence for some time prior to August Sth. He did not believe the conditions he found were the .result of the lick, but were of long standing; he admitted that cataracts could be created by trauma and formed immediately thereafter.

He also found no iritis; that is, inflammation of the iris. Dr. Crain examined plaintiff again on August 11th. The inflammation of the conjunctiva had cleared considerably, but otherwise no change in pathology had occurred. It was his opinion that relief from the loss of vision could only be attained by removal of the cataract by surgery.

On cross-examination Dr. Crain admitted that it was barely possible that iritis could have been present as found by another doctor, and overlooked by him, and that if present he would have experienced difficulty in reconciling therewith the character of cataracts he found. He did not completely rule out trauma as the possible cause of the cataracts.

It is shown that a traumatic cataract comes into existence when the lens of the eye (capsule) is pricked or bruised. Nature’s process to heal is comparable to that observed in an exterior flesh wound. The wound in the lens is healed but the scab created in doing so, called cataract, remains to affect vision. The nucleus cataract is that which forms in or on the front part of the lens.

Dr. Noel T. Simmonds, eye specialist of over twenty years experience, examined plaintiff’s eyes on September 15, 1950. He found two cataracts of the same character and location as were found by Dr. Crain. The nuclear cataract, he says, clouds the center of the lens. It is not considered to be of traumatic origin.

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Related

Roberie v. Ashy Construction Company
215 So. 2d 857 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
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111 So. 2d 536 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1959)
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64 So. 2d 473 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
55 So. 2d 33, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-louisiana-long-leaf-lumber-co-lactapp-1951.