Mayon v. Jahncke Service, Inc.

177 So. 399
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1937
DocketNo. 1782.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 177 So. 399 (Mayon v. Jahncke Service, Inc.) 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
Mayon v. Jahncke Service, Inc., 177 So. 399 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

PELTIER, Judge ad hoc.

Plaintiff filed suit against the Jahncke Service, Inc., and its insurance carrier, Glen Falls Indemnity. Company, alleging *400 his permanent and total disability as a result of an injury suffered in the course and scope of his employment, and seeks workmen’s compensation at the rate of $14.60 per week from January 10, 1935, the date of his injury, not, however, beyond 400 weeks.

The defendants answered, admitting the injury to the plaintiff in the course and scope of his employment. They denied the rate of wages and terms of employment were as alleged by plaintiff, averring that the latter was an employee of defendants in a project operated under the provisions of the National Industrial Recovery Act, 48 Stat. 195. That the maximum hours permitted, and which controlled plaintiffs employment, were 30 per week at 40 cents per hour. That by consent of the federal government, under whose supervision the project had been undertaken, plaintiff and other laborers were working 7 consecutive days every two weeks beginning on Wednesday morning and ending Tuesday evening, and then “laying off” 7 days, making a weekly wage of $11.20, or $3.20 per day, 8 hours at 40 cents per hour, which resulted in employment of 3% days per week, or $11.20 per week.

Defendants denied that plaintiff was totally or permanently disabled, and further averred that whatever it be, it was the result of his unreasonable refusal to submit to proper medical treatment; that had he so submitted to the offered treatment, the disability, if any, would have entirely ceased as of June 15, 1935; and that any subsequent disability was due to this unreasonable refusal. In the alternative, defendants averred that plaintiff’s disability was only 25 per cent, of the loss of the normal use of his leg, and in any event his injury was restricted to the leg, and compensation should not be in' excess of 175 weeks.

Plaintiff was injured on January 10, 1935, while working as a “swamper” for the Jahncke Service, Inc., in the parish of St. Martin. Plaintiff was cutting a- log so as to remove it from the path of a skidder being operated in clearing the right of way for a spillway, when the log broke and struck the plaintiff’s left ieg causing a comminuted fracture of the left tibia just below the knee joint.

Plaintiff was taken to the Billeaudeaux Sanitarium under direction of the agents of the employer, and was there treated by Dr. Billeaudeaux, who put plaintiff's leg in a plaster cast on January 16th, at which time plaintiff was permitted to go home. However, he returned to the hospital for treatment on January 28th, when the cast was removed, and the knee baked and massaged. From the latter date up to August 22, 1935,- Dr. Billeaudeaux gave the baking and massaging treatment to the knee, with active and passive motion, at periodic intervals; the chart showing some 35 of these treatments during this period. During all these treatments, plaintiff’s leg did not improve, but got stiffer in the knee joint arising from ankylosis. Plaintiff could not bear his weight on the leg without pain; nor could he fully flex and extend the leg.

On March 13, 1935, during the time that plaintiff was under the. treatment of Dr. Billeaudeaux, the insurance company, carrying the insurance for defendant, sent plaintiff to Dr. J. T. Scott, Sr., of New Orleans for examination and treatment, apparently without the knowledge or advice of Dr. Billeaudeaux who at that time was employed by the insurance company to treat the injured employees of the Jahncke Service,' Inc. Dr. Sco,tt had an X-ray made of plaintiff’s knee and sent him to Mercy Hospital in New Orleans. Dr. Scott found the knee and left leg considerably swollen, and he recommended rest for the limb and hot applications followed by physiotherapy treatment. The plaintiff left the hospital before any treatment was given by Dr. Scott and returned home and continued his visits to Dr. Bil-leaudeaux for treatment. Plaintiff went to the Mercy Hospital on the afternoon of March 13th and left on the morning of March 15th. One of the defenses to the suit is the alleged refusal of plaintiff to remain in the hospital for treatment. This defense will be discussed later.

On two or three subsequent occasions in March, 1935, defendant’s agents requested the plaintiff to return to Néw Orleans. for treatment, which he refused to to do, assigning as a reason for his refusal that he was being treated by Dr. Billeau-deaux and this doctor told him not to return to the hospital without the doctor’s instructions. It does not appear that the defendant made any further -effort to induce plaintiff to accept further or additional medical treatment after March, 1935.

Plaintiff left for Morgan City after-Dr. Billeaudeaux ceased treating him in August, 1935, and, under the instructions of *401 Dr. Billeaudeaux, plaintiff was treated by another doctor at Morgan City until December, when he went to New Orleans and was examined by Dr. Theodore Simon, an orthopedic surgeon, who found that plaintiff had a moderate hypertrophic arthritis of the left knee with some derangement of the knee joint, indicating an injury or displacement of the semilunar cartilage of the left knee. The doctor found plaintiff at that time to be totally disabled from doing manual labor.

In January, 1936, at the suggestion of Dr. Simon, plaintiff was operated on in the Charity Hospital by two of Dr. Simon’s assistants, and this internal semilunar carriage was removed. From the testimony of one of the doctors who performed this operation, it was successful in so far as the operation was concerned. Dr. Simon and the doctor who performed the operation saw plaintiff again in May, 1936, at which time they found that plaintiff could not actively fully flex and extend his knee, and that there was a marked atrophy of the muscles of his left thigh. Both doctors were of the opinion that on that date plaintiff was totally disabled from performing manual labor.

Plaintiff was examined in December, 1935, just prior to the operation above mentioned, by Drs. E. S. Hatch and J. T. Scott, Jr. They found the left knee seven-eighths of an inch larger in circumference thán the right knee; that plaintiff could not fully flex and extend his knee; nor could he put his weight on it without pain. They fixed his disability at that time at 25 per cent, of the loss of the use of the left leg. These two doctors were called by the defendants. Dr. Scott did not recommend any treatment at that time, and the only treatment recommended by Dr. Hatch was physiotherapy treatment; neither recommended the removal o.f the internal semilunar cartilage of the knee.

The plaintiff says that he has not been able to do manual labor since the injury. From the evidence of plaintiff as well as that of the doctors, there is no question but that he was unable to perform manual labor up to the time of the trial of the case.

The principal defense is that plaintiff refused reasonable medical treatment, and that, whatever may be his present disability, it is due to his own unreasonable refusal to avail himself of the medical treatment tendered him by defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayon-v-jahncke-service-inc-lactapp-1937.