Melerine v. Ford Motor Corp.

239 So. 2d 406, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5160
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 6, 1970
DocketNo. 4087
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 239 So. 2d 406 (Melerine v. Ford Motor Corp.) 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
Melerine v. Ford Motor Corp., 239 So. 2d 406, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5160 (La. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

DOMENGEAUX, Judge.

This is an action for Workmen’s Compensation benefits along with penalties and attorney’s fees, brought by plaintiff as a result of an accident which occurred on February 22, 1968. At that time plaintiff was employed by defendant as a “picker-packer,” whose function is to fill orders for parts by picking the required parts from their storage bins and packing them for shipment.

On the date in question plaintiff was engaged in unloading some automobile fenders from a fork-lift machine when he struck the right temporal area of his head on a piece of metal that was projecting from one of the parts bins. Plaintiff says he felt a sensation of warmth on the affected area as though he were bleeding and he called to a fellow employee, one Mr. Klein, for assistance. Mr. Klein came to his aid, taking him to the men’s room and applying paper towels soaked in cold water to plaintiff’s head. Following this treatment both Mr. Klein and plaintiff returned to their labor and finished out the working day. Plaintiff stated that he advised his foreman “in a joking manner” that he had struck his head.

The following morning plaintiff reported to his supervisor that he had experienced headaches during the night and he requested medical attention. He was sent to Dr. Ernest Celli, the company physician. Dr. Celli performed a thorough examination of plaintiff and found only a contusion and abrasion of the right temporal area. Other than that his physical examination was completely negative. Plaintiff told the doctor about the blow to his head and also that there had been no loss of consciousness, disturbance of vision, or nausea following the accident. Dr. Celli gave plaintiff a prescription for darvon, a common headache remedy and let him go. The week end passed and on Monday, February 26, plaintiff returned to see Dr. Celli complaining of headaches, drowsiness, and fever. Again the doctor performed an examination which proved negative and he advised plaintiff to take the darvon only at night since it could be the cause of the drowsiness.

Plaintiff next sought medical attention the following day, Mardi Gras, when he felt faint while watching a parade. He was taken by his family to Mercy Hospital in New Orleans and was there treated by Dr. Raeburn Llewellyn, a neurosurgeon, until he left the hospital on March 2, 1968. Dr. Llewellyn stated that the plaintiff gave him no history of trauma to the head but [408]*408that the only history he obtained at that time was of headaches preceded by a flu-like episode. A thorough physical examination, including a spinal tap, was performed on plaintiff and proved negative in its results. The doctor testified that he would have performed the same examination had he been given a history of trauma. He specifically stated that he examined plaintiff’s head, scalp and skull but found no abnormalities, only five days after the accident. It occurred to Dr. Llewellyn that there could be emotional factors precipitating plaintiff’s problem but he concluded that the most likely diagnosis was one of viral inflammation of the brain as a result of the flu-like condition, and released plaintiff to the care of his own physician on that suspected diagnosis.

Plaintiff next sought medical help on August 5, 1968, when he went to see Dr. Frederick Pou. He had seen Dr. Pou once before, in 1966, at which time he had related a history of migraine headaches in his childhood. On his 1968 visit, Dr. Pou hospitalized plaintiff and on the following day performed some tests. The tests showed no abnormality and following treatment with sedatives plaintiff was discharged from the hospital on August 13, 1968. Dr. Pou did not think that plaintiff’s complaints were compatible with the type of blow that he had sustained. He diagnosed plaintiff’s ailment as migraine headaches but recommended that he see a neurosurgeon for further evaluation.

The neurosurgeon turned out to be Dr. Llewellyn who again saw plaintiff on September 18, 1968. On this occasion Dr. Llewellyn was informed of the traumatic accident that plaintiff had experienced but he again concluded that there was no organic disorder to account for the headaches. He advised Dr. Pou that plaintiff’s headaches were most likely of an emotional origin and recommended that he be referred to a neuro-psychiatrist.

The next physician consulted by plaintiff was Dr. Emile J. Bertucci, Jr., whom he visited on October 15, 1968. Dr. Bertucci also hospitalized plaintiff for extensive and thorough medical tests. The only cause that he could find for plaintiff’s headaches was tension and he administered tranquilizers. Of the blow to plaintiff’s head eight months earlier, Dr. Berticci could only say that it “possibly could have been one of the precipitating factors’’ producing the tension that caused the headaches.

Plaintiff next consulted Dr. Harry Phili-bert, whose field of expertise, the killing of pain by means of trigger point injections of anesthetic into certain supraspi-nous ligaments, was so novel as to preclude his acceptance by the trial court as an expert witness in that field. Dr. Philibert first saw plaintiff on November 1, 1968, at which time he conducted a physical examination that revealed pain in the right temporal area. The doctor stated that he then re-examined plaintiff, “trying deliberately to trip him up” to determine whether he was a malingerer, and concluded that he was not. This physician was of the opinion that plaintiff’s headaches were due to the blow that he had received nine months earlier. Dr. Philibert treated plaintiff with his method of injection and with various drugs for slightly more than six months, but failed to clear up his ailments. The doctor diagnosed plaintiff’s affliction as being cervical plexus nerve root pressure involving neuralgia of the cervical nerves and also trigeminal neuralgia specifically of the right temporal nerve. He did concede however that plaintiff had, “a lot of emotional overlay.”

On the 9th of December 1968, plaintiff consulted another neurosurgeon, Dr. Juan Carlos Pisarello, on a referral from Dr. Celli. Dr. Pisarello took a history from plaintiff in which he specifically stated that he had not received a direct blow from the piece of metal at the Ford Plant but rather that he had merely felt some pressure from it upon his right temple. Plaintiff also told this physician that he had begun having headaches only three [409]*409days after his accident and that he had felt very well for the intervening three days. Dr. Pisarello conducted a complete neurological examination which was entirely within normal limits. The only peculiarity he noticed was the fact that “palpation of plaintiff’s right carotid artery” produced some local pain and compression of this artery resulted in elimination of plaintiff’s headache. This, said Dr. Pisarello was indicative of tension headaches. This physician was of the opinion that plaintiff’s headaches were caused by tension and were unrelated to the accident that he had sustained.

Plaintiff’s attorney referred him to Dr. Carl Culicchia, a neurosurgeon, whom he saw on March 28, 1969. Dr. Culichhia performed a neurologic examination on plaintiff and found that he had not sustained any injury to the central nervous system and that there was no neurologic explanation for plaintiff’s complaints. This physician found no signs of trigeminal neuralgia or cervical plexus nerve root pressure, which in essence, had been Dr. Philibert’s diagnosis and he stated that he saw no need for the treatment that Dr. Philibert was administering to plaintiff or for any other treatment.

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Bluebook (online)
239 So. 2d 406, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melerine-v-ford-motor-corp-lactapp-1970.