Mustack v. Union Indemnity Co.

147 So. 749, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1772
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1933
DocketNo. 1105.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 So. 749 (Mustack v. Union Indemnity 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
Mustack v. Union Indemnity Co., 147 So. 749, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1772 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

Jimmie Mustack alleges that the Union Indemnity Company is his obligor in the matter of the compensation insurance furnished by James Stanton Construction Company; that as one of the employees of the said construction company, and while working in the construction of a highway and endeavoring to lift a large piece of machinery known as the separator-grader, he sustained a hernia, thereby producing in himself .a permanent, total disability to do work of any reasonable character. He claims compensation of the Union Indemnity Company, on account of its said *750 obligation, in the sum of 65 per cent, of Ms daily wage of $2 for a period not exceeding four hundred weeks.

Union Indemnity Company, for answer, admits that it carries the compensation insurance of the James Stanton Construction Company as alleged, but denies liability to the plaintiff.

It denies that the plaintiff sustained the hernia, which he has, while in the employment of the said company, but in the alternative, and in case it be found that he did sustain the hernia while working therefoi-, it then, in that event, alleges that said injury does not prevent him from performing labor, that his disability on said account is not total, but only partial, and that even this will soon be gone.

The trial resulted in judgment in favor of plaintiff as prayed for. Defendant has appealed.

The ease is one of fact. Part of the testimony is conflicting, but there is no dispute concerning what we find to be important and governing facts, and on which we will predicate our opinion and decree.

The plaintiff alleges that he was injured on March 27, 1932. Now, if he was injured as he alleges and his injury produced in him a total disability, it cannot be that he continued working the balance of the same day, doing the same work; nor could he have continued working the next, nor the second, nor third day thereafter. If his averment was true, he was incapacitated.

There were some remarks made during his examination, and there is something said in his brief, the purport of which is, that some of the statements he is claimed to have made as to what he was lifting when injured was due to inability on his part to properly explain himself in the English language. We have examined the answers he gave in response to questions asked him. His answers show that he is married, lives in the town of De Ridder, and has lived in that vicinity all his life. The evidence does not show his age, but he has worked for various concerns, doing manual labor, mixing with the people. The oath attached to his petition is signed by him in a fairly good hand, and he did not put forward any claim that he did not understand the language in which he was giving his testimony. It is our impression that the plaintiff understands the English language all right, has no doubt spoken it all his life, and no reason exists for supposing him unable to express himself in English correctly.

It is plain that, if he was injured, it must have been on March 27, 1932. The evidence does not show the hour he claims it took place, but we draw from remarks in the testimony that it was during the evening.

The important question is whether he actually sustained a hernia as he claims to have done while working for the James Stanton Construction Company in the construction of the highway. It is not so important what he was lifting at the time, if the lifting produced the hernia.

Plaintiff admits that he worked all day March 27, 1932, doing, as we understand it, the work he was employed to do until quitting time that evening.

On his examination in chief, in response to questions asked him by his counsel, he stated that he did not work the next day; but subsequently, -on cross-examination, he admitted that he had worked four or five days following his injury; later, however, during his cross-examination, he corrected himself, saying that he did not work after his injury. But as against his testimony that he did not work the next day, nor the next day, we find the testimony of Charlie Waits against him on the subject. This witness Waits was plaintiff’s witness. Waits, in narrating a conversation between him and the plaintiff next morning, which was the 28th, at the place on the road where they were at work at the time of the alleged injury, says: “I can say what he told me that morning. He says: I hurt myself lifting that thing. Of course, he didn’t know the name of it I don’t know the name of it, myself, I know they had it to lift. And I says ‘Where?’ And he says, ‘Right there.’ And he says a little something about that long peeped out last night. And I says: ‘You ought to tell your foreman and see the doctor.’ And he says: T believe I will.’ And him and two or maybe one of those negroes was trying to work together on the forms, and so then the foreman came and I guess he told him.”

This was the morning of the 28th. According to Waits, the plaintiff had returned to work next morning, and was working on forms when Waits came up and the conversation which he narrated ensued. The other witnesses against him on the subject wore called by the defendant.

G. C. Pritchard, the foreman of the construction company, testified that he .kept an account of the days worked by the crew of which plaintiff was a member. Reading from a memorandum, he says that plaintiff- worked March 28th, the 29th, and 31st. Two other witnesses in addition to the foreman testified that plaintiff worked after the time he claims to have been injured. One says he worked with the plaintiff the .next day after the 27th, and another says he worked with him a couple of days after, that time. Each said that plaintiff, while working with them, told them that he had been injured. One claims that he said it was the previous day, and the other claims that he said it was two days before.

Other testimony shows that, after talking with Pitchard, the foreman, during the morn *751 ing of March 28th, about his injury, he consulted the timekeeper. The timekeeper gave him a note to Dr. Reid, and that same morning he called on and was examined by Dr. Reid and found with the hernia, which it is agreed he has. Therefore, if plaintiff did work on the road after the morning of the 28th, it must hare been after he had consulted Dr. Reid. Plaintiff alleges and testifies that he was injured while endeavoring to lift the separator-grader. Pritchard and two other witnesses testified that he told them he injured himself toting forms.

The forms referred to were made of cement and weighed each a hundred pounds or more.

Three other witnesses say he told them that he hurt himself trying to lift the turntable. It is this testimony that inclines us to give close attention to remarks that his understanding of the English language may not have been sufficient to enable him to express himself properly. The turntable was about two hundred yards distant from where he was at work. It was the property of another contractor. It weighed five or six tons, and was ordinarily moved by a truck. It was not lifted. Nobody tried to do that; and we are satisfied that plaintiff did not hurt himself in that way.

Another witness testifies that plaintiff told him he hurt himself lifting the subgrader.

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Related

Boykins v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.
149 So. 889 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)
McDonald v. Union Indemnity Co.
149 So. 143 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 749, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mustack-v-union-indemnity-co-lactapp-1933.