Moore v. List & Weatherly Const. Co.

144 So. 147
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 1932
DocketNo. 4396.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 144 So. 147 (Moore v. List & Weatherly Const. 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
Moore v. List & Weatherly Const. Co., 144 So. 147 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PALMER, J.

This is an action to recover compensation under the Employers’ Liability Act (Act No. 20 of 1914 and amendments thereto). The defendant List & Weatherly Construction Company is engaged in constructing a traffic bridge over Red river at Shreveport and, in connection with that undertaking, employs various kinds of labor.

The defendant Union Indemnity Company carried liability insurance for the said construction company and is sued in solido with the said construction company on the cause of action set forth by plaintiff.

In the construction of this bridge, it was necessary to sink piers to support the bridge in the bed of the river. In sinking these piers, barrel-like tubes fifty or more feet in diameter are set up in the water and the water is pumped out so the men can go in to work. The sand is then pumped out to the proper depth in order to clear the foundation for the pier. The laborers who carry on this work are called “sand hogs.” In order to do this work, it is necessary for them to scrape out the sand and dirt with their hands and feed it to the pump.

About December 7, 1931, plaintiff, while engaged in this work, brought his left hand in contact with a hard substance which cut him in the palm of his hand, about one inch back from the middle finger, severing the flexor tendon. Plaintiff alleges that on account of this injury he has a useless middle finger on his left hand, and that his left hand has become weakened and impaired, and that he is continually worried with pain extending all up and down his left arm. He alleges that he has lost the use of his left hand as a result of these injuries.

Plaintiff further alleges that he was earning at the time of his injuries $4 per day, for seven days per week, or $28 per week, and that he is entitled to compensation for 150 weeks, making a total of $2,730, payable at the rate of $18.20 per week, beginning on or about the 7th of December, 1931. He avers that he has already received $91 as a credit on this amount.

The defendants admit plaintiff’s ■ alleged employment, but they deny that he received his injuries as alleged. That is, they deny that plaintiff received his injuries while at work for defendant in the course of his employment.

The district judge awarded plaintiff judgment in the sum of $18.20 per week during the period of disability, “not, however, to exceed 150 weeks, beginning December 2, 1931, and continuing from week to week until the whole thereof is paid or the disability removed, with five per cent per annum interest on each payment after due, less a credit of $91.00 paid for five weeks’ disability.”

The lower court further ordered that the fee of the attorney for plaintiff be fixed at 20 per cent, of the amount of compensation to be paid and that the attorney have a lien on the judgment for his fee. The fees of the two medical experts were further fixed at $25 each.

The district judge further ordered that in the event defendants should offer to have plaintiff’s hand operated on at their- expense at a cost not to exceed $250, and if the offer should be refused by plaintiff, thereupon the payment of compensation shall cease at the end of sixteen weeks after the offer 'is made.

From this judgment, defendants prosecute this appeal and plaintiff has answered the appeal praying that the judgment of the lower court be sustained, in so far as the same allows him compensation at $18.20 per week for the period of 150 weeks, but that the judgment be reversed in so far as it attempts to require him to submit to an operation, etc.

Opinion.

On the trial defendants offered some evidence tending to disprove plaintiff’s claim that his injury was received as alleged, but in oral argument, as well as in brief, they have abandoned that contention. On this point, we quote from their brief as follows:

“Defendant resisted plaintiff’s demand first on the ground that plaintiff did not receive the injury complained of while he was at work for List & Weatherly Construction Company, one of the defendants. On this point, the evidence is conflicting, but the trial Judge has found for the plaintiff on this point and defendants are not urging this point before this Court. The only question is, what compensation plaintiff is entitled to receive.”

The necessity, therefore, of discussing and analyzing the testimony bearing upon this point is obviated, for, as counsel for defendants say, “the only question is what compensation plaintiff is entitled to receive.”

Plaintiff contends that the injury complained of is a hand injury and that the injury constitutes a permanent total loss of the use of function of the hand, and that, accordingly, he is entitled, at the wages he was drawing, to $18.20 per week for a total of 150 weeks; while, on the other hand, defendants contend that plaintiff’s injury consisted at most in the loss of the use of function of the middle finger on the left hand, for which plaintiff is entitled to recover, at the greatest, the sum of $18.20 for a period of 20 weeks. It is therefore necessary for the court to determine which of these two positions the evidence in the case sustains.

*149 Plaintiff testified that at the time of trial his injury still pained him; in fact, he testified that the pain extended not only through the hand, but at times to the shoulder also. He further testified that at different times his hand has but little feeling in it.

There were two physicians called as witnesses in the ease: One, Dr. G. H. Oassity, by the plaintiff; and the other, Dr. T. J. Smith, by the defendant. We find no particular difference in the character of their testimony. Dr. Cassity testified that from his examination he found a sear on plaintiff’s left hand about one inch below the base of the left middle finger; that the scar is across the tendon, controlling the middle finger; and that from all appearances the tendon was cut. He says that plaintiff could not close his middle finger nor straighten it. He further testified that plaintiff’s grip in the injured hand is diminished and that the extent of the loss of function is probably permanent, without surgical repairs. Dr. Cas-sity further testified that the injured tendon in its present condition causes a marked loss of function of the left hand.

Further testifying, Dr. Cassity says that the finger, with the severed tendon, gives plaintiff a weaker grip and less function of the hand than he would have if the finger was amputated:

“Q. Now, with the finger there, what percentage of strength would the individual have, or do you think he would have in his left hand? A. Well, if he had the middle finger entirely removed, the function in the hand would be about eighty per cent, that-is to say, the loss of one finger, the middle finger probably would not be over seventy per cent if he had the middle finger entirely removed, but with the finger in its present condition, it really interferes with proper closing of the other fingers, his function is possibly not over fifty per cent.
“Q. Do you think he could do manual labor with that hand? A. He could do some, however, it would be painful, any manual labor that would cause him to grip, like grip a hoe handle or spade, will cause him pain, any time one finger will not come down properly in the hand causes pain—

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144 So. 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-list-weatherly-const-co-lactapp-1932.