McCary v. Pugh

70 So. 2d 708, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 610
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 1954
DocketNo. 3778
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 70 So. 2d 708 (McCary v. Pugh) 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
McCary v. Pugh, 70 So. 2d 708, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 610 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

CAVANAUGH, Judge.

The plaintiff sues the defendants for compensation under the .Workmen’s Compensation Law of the State of Louisiana, LSA-.R.S. 23:1021 et seq., for total disability on account of injuries suffered ,by him on January IS, .1948, while engaged in dislodging a limb which had been previously cut from a tree on a right of way being cut by J. B. Pugh, an independent contractor, for the other defendant, Valley Electric Membership Corporation. Plaintiff alleges that at the time of the accident and injury defendants were engaged in the business of constructing electric power lines,- cutting and felling of timbers and the clearing of rights of way for electric power lines, and in the -building and operation of such power lines in various parishes of this state; that the defendant, J. B. -Pugh, contracted the cutting and removing of timbers off portions of the right of way, and that at the time of the accident and injury on January 16, 1948, plaintiff was employed as a laborer by J. B. Pugh. . Plaintiff alleges that in his effort to dislodge the limb from the tree, it fell and struck his left shoulder and upper portion of his back, fracturing the shoulder blade, left collar bone, ribs, and injured his spine. He also alleges that he was unconscious for several hours and was taken to a physician. By amended petition, he claims that instead of the left shoulder and left collar bone being broken, it was the right.

■ The defense to the suit was a general denial.

The suit was originally filed-in the Eleventh Judicial District Court, Parish of Vernon, on January 7, 1949, and was heard and tried by one of the judges of that court. Vernon Parish was placed in the Thirtieth Judicial District created under the Constitutional Amendment of .1952, article 7, ,§ 31, Act No. 31 of 1952. It was provided under that amendment that all cases pending in the Eleventh Judicial District Court, Parish of Vernpn, would, be'transferred and dispensed of in the newly created district designated as the Thirtieth Judicial .District comprising the Parishes of Vernon and Beauregard. ■

The case was argued before the judge of the new district on April 6, 1953, was briefed-by plaintiff and defendant, and submitted to- the Court for decision. Judgment was rendered by the Court on May 8, 1953, rejecting plaintiff’s demands. From this judgment he has appealed.

- The lower court- rendered a written opinion and judgment in the Cáse, and has fully discussed and analyzed the testimony contained in -the record in support of its reasons for rejecting plaintiff’s demand. • It was satisfied that the plaintiff was suffering from, an arthritic condition, or neuritis, as testified by all of the -medical experts in the case, but found that the plaintiff had failed to prove a causal Connection between the alleged accident sustained by him on January 16, -1948, and the arthritic condition, or neuritis, with which he suffered at the time the case was tried.

[710]*710We- quote -approvingly from the opinion of the lower court showing the insufficiency of- the -proof offered by plaintiff to show a causal connection between the injuries suffered in the accident and the arthritis, or neuritis, which has caused his disability:

“1. In the original petition filed January 7, 1949 (the accident occurred January 16, ,1948) to which petition plaintiff made oath, in Article 6, he alleged that the limb that fell on him ‘broke (emphasis added) petitioner’s shoulder -blade, or bone, fractured his left collar bone, and ribs and injured his spine.’ In the same article he alleged that the injury was to his left shoulder and upper portion qf his back.
“After Dr. E. E. Jordan, plaintiff’s family physician, had testified on March 3, 1950, to the effect that plaintiff’s complaint was to his right shoulder, etc., plaintiff, on March 28, 1950, filed his first supplemental petition, wherein hé’ changed Article 6 of the original petition, so as to change the shoulder injured from left to right, but reiteráted his allegation that the limb ‘broke’ his shoulder blade, or bone ‘fractured’ his collar' bone, ribs knd injured his spine.' The allegations of the amended petition were made more than 14 months after the date -of the accident.
“Not only is there no word of evidence in the record to support the allegation of the ‘breaking’ of the bones, but all the X-rays taken, by his own and defendant’s physicians, failed to disclose any evidence of broken bones.
“2. Also in Article 6 of'the original petition, it is alleged that plaintiff ‘was unconscious for several hours, was carried to a physician’ (emphasis added). These alle-gationswere reiterated in his amended petition. As a matter of fact, the evidence (his testimony) shows that he was ‘blacked out’ only a short time, the accident happened about 8:30 in the morning, he worked the remainder of the day, left the job when the remainder of the crew did, from 3 to 4 o’clock that afternoon, went home, bor- . rowed a truck, which .his son drove and went to Robeline, where he saw Dr. Jordan on the side-walk and according to plaintiff, told the doctor he had been hurt, but according to the doctor, no mention was made of any accident, and the doctor advised rubbing the sore places with linament.
“3. It is evident that plaintiff continued to work on the same job after the accident and worked every day-that the crew worked until the job in Vernon Parish was finished and then went with the -crew and worked on another similar job, near Shreveport, until around the middle of March, and during that period lost no time by reason of any alleged injury.
“A number of plaintiff’s co-workers, on the same job, testified that when plaintiff quit the job, he told them it was for the purpose of going home and making a crop.
“4. Dr. E. E. Jordan, plaintiff’s family physician, testified in March, 1950, by deposition,. he had been plaintiff’s only family physician until recently; that on September 23, 1948 (more than 8 months after the date of the accident) he was called to plaintiff’s bedside, where plaintiff was complaining of pain in his back and right shoulder, which the doctor diagnosed as neuritis; that prior to September 23, 1948, he had met plaintiff on the street and heard plaintiff complain about his back and shoulder hurting him, but nothing was said about any injury; that he was not-told by plaintiff of any injury until August 13, 1949, or approximately 19 months after the accident (but the doctor’s subsequent testimony leaves it uncertain 'whether it was August 13, 1949 or March 2, 1949, that plaintiff first mentioned the accident), although he had treated plaintiff on September 23 and 27, 1948, February 26 and April 9, 1949.
“It should be borne in mind that Dr. Jordan was plaintiff’s physician and was called by plaintiff as a witness and plaintiff is bound by his testimony. Plaintiff, himself, admits that he saw no doctor, other than Dr. Jordan,-at least until after Dr. Jordan sent him to Dr. R. E. Corken, subsequent to March 2, 1949, and Dr. Jordan was certain that plaintiff had not told him of any injury prior to March 2, 1949.
[711]*711"5. Plaintiff did go to and was treated by Drs. Roy and Corken of Natchitoches, not earlier than the last part of 1948, according to plaintiff's testimony, but more likely subsequent to March 2, 1949, according to Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
70 So. 2d 708, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccary-v-pugh-lactapp-1954.