Murphy v. B. Mutti, Inc.

184 So. 216
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1938
DocketNo. 16775.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 184 So. 216 (Murphy v. B. Mutti, 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
Murphy v. B. Mutti, Inc., 184 So. 216 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

On December 28, 1934, Alphonse Murphy, in the course of his hazardous employment by B. Mutti, Inc., sustained accidental injury. Unable to agree with his employer as to the extent or duration of his disability, he filed suit in compensation, alleging that he had been totally and permanently disabled as the result of a “hernia and sacro-iliac injury”. The employer denied that the injury was serious or permanent, averred that it was not known whether “the small left inguinal hernia” from which he at that time was suffering “was caused in the manner stated in plaintiff’s petition”, and averred further that the said hernia could be easily cured by a surgical operation and that, therefore, any continued disability resulted, not’ from the hernia, but from plaintiff’s refusal to submit to the operation.

There was judgment in the District Court in favor of plaintiff, the court being of the opinion that Murphy was at the time totally disabled and that the disability resulted from injury sustained in the line of duty. The district judge, however, further concluded that the disability was solely caused by the hernia; that a surgical operation would relieve it and that such an operation would be attended with so little danger that plaintiff should submit to it at the expense of the employer, or, in the *217 alternative, lose the right to further payments of compensation.

From a judgment rendered in accordance with these views the defendant appealed.

When the matter came before us we found that there was complete disability which would “in all probability” continue “until a successful operation has been performed.” We were relieved of the necessity of determining whether the plaintiff should be compelled to submit to the operation or forfeit further compensation payments because the said plaintiff, in answer to the appeal, agreed to submit to the operation under the terms and conditions set forth in the judgment appealed from.

For a full statement of the matter at that time and for full details of the judgment under review then, see our original opinion. 166 So. 493.

As we have said, we found that, for the results of the injury, defendant was liable in compensation, and, since we found the defendant contending that plaintiff should submit to the operation and plaintiff asserting his willingness to do so, we rendered a decree from which we now quote, as follows [page 496]:

“It is further ordered * * * that within 30 days from the finality of this decree the said plaintiff shall submit to an operation for cure of his hernia, by a surgeon to be selected by him, all hospital and medical costs to be paid by said defendant B. Mutti, Inc., and that in the event he arbitrarily refuses to submit to such operation or delays, without just cause, its performance, then defendant is to be relieved from the payment of compensation for the period between the expiration of 30 days from the finality of this decree and the day on which he submits to such operation and the said period is to be deducted from the period of 400 weeks. * * * ”

At that time plaintiff was entitled, under the judgment, to compensation payments for 73 weeks. These payments were made by defendant. Arrangements were made for the operation to be performed within the thirty-day period fixed in the decree and, on May 18, 1936, Murphy went to. the hospital, where he was examined by his physician and surgeon and found to he in satisfactory physical condition to undergo the operation. He was put to bed in the hospital on that day — -May 18th — so that he might receive the necessary preparatory treatment for the operation, which was scheduled for the morning of May 20th. On May 19th, without the knowledge or consent of the hospital authorities, or of the defendant, or of anyone else, so far as the record shows, Murphy deserted and was not located until two days later. The operation was not performed and defendant heard no more of him until nearly one year later, at which time he claimed to be entitled to further compensation for the remainder of the period of 400 weeks, declaring that he had had good cause for failing to present himself for the operation on the previous May 20th and that he had since developed pulmonary tuberculosis, which would permanently prevent his submitting to the operation. He thereupon appeared by petition in the original proceeding and alleged his present total and permanent disability as the result of the hernia, for which he asserted he could not now be operated on because of the tuberculosis, and also that, in addition to the disability produced by the hernia, he would be permanently disabled by the said tuberculosis. He prayed that our decree requiring that he submit to the operation be amended and that he be awarded compensation for 400 weeks, subject to a credit for the payments already made.

In the District Court there was judgment rejecting his demand, the district judge being of the opinion that he had “arbitrarily and without justification left the hospital of his own free will and accord.”

Plaintiff bases his right to an amendment of the decree on Section 20 of Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended by Act No. 85 of 1926, which provides that a judgment in compensation may be modified on the ground that “the incapacity of the employee has been subsequently diminished or increased, or upon the ground that the judgment was obtained through error, fraud or misrepresentation.”

There is not involved here any question of error, fraud, or misrepresentation, nor even of whether or not there has been an increase or decrease in the extent of the disability, unless the tuberculosis has made the disability complete and permanent regardless of the effect of the hernia, and, so far as the tuberculosis is concerned, there is nothing in the record which creates the slightest impression that it was in any way caused by the accidental injury, and we, therefore, dismiss it from consideration as a direct cause of the present continued disability. We have already *218 found that the disability resulting from the hernia is total and will be permanent unless removed by an operation and, therefore, the 'main question now to be determined is whether the plaintiff was justified in refusing to submit to the operation at that time and, if so, whether he should submit now.

It is necessary that we determine whether Murphy was justified because it may be that, if we agree with the district judge, the necessary result might be the forfeiture of compensation payments for that portion of the period of disability which followed the day on which the operation was to have been performed. Murphy did not state his reason for leaving the hospital, but his physician, Dr. Levy, who saw him two days later, says that at that time Murphy said to him: “I felt sick and I went home.” Dr. Levy' testified that when he saw him two days after the time set for the operation “he had what appeared to be a cold * * * and a temperature of 101 degrees” and, the doctor added, “I knew he couldn’t be subjected to any operation at all * * The doctor further said: “I was suspicious he had a beginning tubercular lesion.” It is shown that,- on the advice of Dr. Levy, Murphy went to the clinic of the Orleans Anti-Tuberculosis League, where he was admitted on August 20, 1936. At that time, though the conclusion was based largely on a history given by plaintiff himself, Dr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sullivan, Long & Haggerty, Inc. v. Washington
128 F.2d 466 (Fifth Circuit, 1942)
Hall v. Mengel Co.
191 So. 759 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 So. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-b-mutti-inc-lactapp-1938.