Mouton v. Gulf States Utilities Co.

69 So. 2d 147, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 902
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1953
Docket3762
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 69 So. 2d 147 (Mouton v. Gulf States Utilities 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
Mouton v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 69 So. 2d 147, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 902 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

69 So.2d 147 (1953)

MOUTON
v.
GULF STATES UTILITIES CO.

No. 3762.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

December 18, 1953.

J. Minos Simon, Lafayette, for appellant.

Porter & Stewart, Lake Charles, Bailey & Mouton, Lafayette, for appellee.

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is a suit under the Employers' Liability Act of Louisiana, LSA-R.S. 23:1 et seq., for maximum compensation, plus interest, penalty and attorney fees. The claim for penalty and attorney fees has been abandoned since this action was instituted. After trial on the issues below, the lower court rendered judgment for defendant and dismissed petitioner's action. The petitioner has taken an appeal.

Petitioner claims that as a result of certain alleged accidents occurring during the course and scope of his employment with defendant, he is suffering from traumatic neurosis, which, he says, permanently and totally disables him from performing the work for which he was employed. Petitioner does not claim to have sustained any *148 physical injury whatsoever in this case. He does not allege that the accidents in question caused any injury to the physical structure of his body. His claim is that, as a result of certain alleged occurrences, he has become nervous and unstable, and is unable to continue in his job with the defendant.

The facts show that petitioner was employed as a helper by defendant on July 19, 1948, and served in that capacity until July 10, 1949, when he was promoted to apprentice lineman. He served as apprentice lineman until July 9, 1950, when he was promoted to 4th class lineman. On July 9, 1951, he was promoted to 3rd class lineman, which position he held until his discharge on April 24, 1952. According to petitioner's testimony, he did not work with electric wires at all as a helper, and during the first six months as an apprentice lineman, he worked only with dead wires. During his last six months as an apprentice and during his services as a 4th class and 3rd class lineman, petitioner climbed poles and worked with live wires.

The accidents on which petitioner relies for a cause of action are (1) an explosion of a fuse near him during the early days of 1951, and of an electric shock from a 110-volt wire on August 21, 1951. The exact date of the fuse explosion is not set out in the record, but it happened during the severe freeze during the week beginning on January 28 and ending February 3, 1951.

The incident of the fuse explosion occurred while the crew, with which petitioner worked, was on a job to repair difficulties in the electric lines at Grand Coteau, Louisiana. They checked the line and, finding nothing wrong, petitioner climbed a pole and placed a fuse in the fuse socket. Petitioner claims that after a few seconds the fuse exploded when his face was approximately 12 to 18 inches from it, and that the explosion caused him to become temporarily paralyzed with fear. Petitioner and his crew continued working to find the difficulty, and completed their work day.

Later, on August 21, 1951, petitioner claims that, while discharging his duties with defendant company, he came into contact with a live wire carrying an electrical current of 110 volts, as a result of which he was severely shocked to such an extent as to disable him from performing any further services during that particular day. He contends, that as a result of these two instances, his nervous system has been completely upset, and he has become high-strung, and, furthermore, he has developed an uncontrollable fear of climbing poles, and a feeling of uncertainty and insecurity while working around electrical wires or at the top of electrical poles.

Defendant filed an exception of prescription in the matter, which was referred to the merits. It then filed answer which amounts to a general denial.

After trial, the lower court, for written reasons, rendered judgment for defendant, and dismissed petitioner's suit. Petitioner took this appeal.

As to the fuse incident, the record shows that petitioner was not "scared stiff", as he contends, when the fuse exploded. He testified that "after I realized what had happened, I knew there wasn't any harm". The petitioner further admitted in his testimony that after the fuse had exploded, he and the other members of his crew searched the line for a distance of some five or six city blocks in an attempt to locate the trouble. There was no physical injury to petitioner whatsoever as a result of the alleged explosion. He continued working for several days, until March 12, 1951, when he took sick leave from his company. Witness LeRoy Boutin, who was working with petitioner at the time of the alleged explosion, testified that he did not notice anything unusual about petitioner's conduct when he came down from the pole after the fuse blew. He did not remember of petitioner having complained, and testified that petitioner continued to do his normal work. Several witnesses testified that a fuse explosion is a rather ordinary event in the work of a lineman. They established that the further the distance of the short circuit from the fuse, the less noise is made by the explosion; *149 and the greater distance the trouble, the longer will be the delay before the fuse explodes. In the case before us the trouble was some five or six city blocks from the fuse. The fuse in question was of only ten amperes, which is a small one. Witness Airhart, who is a first-class lineman, testified that a ten-amp fuse makes a little noise, a little louder than a cap pistol.

It was further shown, that at the time of the alleged explosion, petitioner was using a hot stick. Such is an instrument used in placing the fuse into the socket. A hot stick varies in length depending on the numbers of sections used. Each section is from three to four feet in length. Petitioner, according to the evidence was using at least one section and possibly two. It therefore, becomes evident that the petitioner must have been some six or seven feet from the fuse when it exploded, and could not have been only 12 to 18 inches as he claims. Supposing that he was only using one section, which would be about four feet in length. To that we would expect to add about three feet, which would be an approximate arm's length.

It appears that the explosion of a fuse would be a minor incident in the life of a lineman. If a person were tempermentally and physically fit to become a lineman, we doubt that such a minor incident could cause him such shock as to render him totally and mentally unable to perform his duties, or any duties of a reasonable nature. It appears that, if the opposite were so, the petitioner would have been in such a nervous and shocked condition as to render him unable to complete his day's work. Here, he not only completed his day's work, but worked several weeks before he took sick leave. As a matter of fact, so minor did petitioner consider the fuse explosion at the time, that he did not make an accident report thereon; and it was a firm rule of the defendant company that all accidents were to be reported. Petitioner did not even report the incident, nor complain, to his foreman Mr. Sudduth or to Mr. Boutin, his fellow worker.

As to the electrical shock, the petitioner testified that he was on a pole doing some work in moving a metal rack. He was holding the metal rack with his left hand, when another part of his left hand, or arm, touched a neutral wire. As the metal rack was energized with electricity, the touching of the neutral caused the electricity to go from the metal rack through his hand to the neutral. The voltage in this instance was of 110 volts.

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69 So. 2d 147, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mouton-v-gulf-states-utilities-co-lactapp-1953.