Odom v. International Harvester Co.

76 So. 2d 747, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 975
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1954
DocketNo. 20430
StatusPublished

This text of 76 So. 2d 747 (Odom v. International Harvester 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
Odom v. International Harvester Co., 76 So. 2d 747, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 975 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

Plaintiff, Robert L. Odom, a' machine operator, instituted this suit, in the form of an original and two supplemental petitions, against the defendant, International Harvester Company, endeavoring ■ to recover [748]*748workmen’s compensation at the rate of $30 per week for a period of four hundred weeks, subject to a credit of forty-three weeks, $1,000 for medical expenses, attorney’s fees, and penalties, for total permanent disability as a result of an injury, to his right shoulder, which he incurred on February 4, 1953, when he was drawing a pile of fiber, with a hook, weighing approximately one hundred and seventy pounds, from a machine to a scale, a distance of about twenty feet.

Defendant answered the original petition admitting the occurrence of the accident and that plaintiff had been paid compensation for forty-three weeks; it then asserted that compensation payments had been justifiably discontinued after December 10, 1953, since plaintiff arbitrarily refused to be hospitalized to undergo certain medical examinations to determine whether he was still suffering as a result of the accident and, if so, what further treatment should be administered.

Pending trial in the lower court, plaintiff filed a supplemental petition, which, in substance, related that he had been hospitalized by Dr. Jose J. Garcia-OUer who, after consulting with Dr. James T. Nix, advised plaintiff that an operation should be performed; subsequently, on January 25, 1954, a stellate ganglionectomy was performed by Dr. Nix and, as an effect thereof, plaintiff has developed a drop of the right eyelid and a small right pupil.

Defendant answered the supplemental petition generally denying the allegations thereof and further averred that if the plaintiff is totally and permanently disabled the disability did not result from the accident.

Plaintiff then filed a second supplemental petition in which he prayed for penalties.

Defendant, in response thereto, pleaded the exceptions of no right or cause of action; which were apparently overruled, and then answered generally denying the allegations thereof. >

From a judgment in favor of plaintiff awarding him compensation at the rate of $30 per week for a period not exceeding four hundred weeks, subject to a credit of forty-three weeks, and twenty percent attorney’s fees not exceeding the sum of $1,000, and an expert’s fee of $75 to Dr. Garcia, defendant has appealed.

The record reflects that on February 4, 1953, at about 11:45 p. m. or fifteen minutes before plaintiff was to have terminated his labor for the night, while engaged in pulling a pile of fiber, with a hook, weighing approximately one hundred and seventy pounds, from a machine upon which it was stacked, to a. scale about twenty feet removed, he experienced a very sharp pain in his right shoulder; however, he continued to work until midnight, using his left arm, and then informed one of the foremen that he had injured his shoulder; before leaving the plant his arm and hand began to swell and upon his arrival at home he was enduring considerable pain; the following day he consulted Dr. F. I. Nicolle, the defendant’s physician, who diagnosed and treated plaintiff’s injury as an “acute strain of the trapezius muscle right”; on February 17, 1953, Dr. Nicolle apparently became uncertain of the foregoing diagnosis and, therefore, referred plaintiff to Dr. Howard Karr for an examination and he subsequently confirmed Dr. Nicolle’s diagnosis. Plaintiff obtained no relief from Dr. Nicolle’s treatment and, on February 25, 1953, he consulted Dr. Blaise Salatich, who cared for him for a period of about two months or to April 22, 1953, when plaintiff, in desperation, again consulted Dr. Nicolle; on April 28, 1953, Dr. Nicolle hospitalized plaintiff in Touro Infirmary for examination; he remained there until May 2, 1953, at which time he was referred to Dr. Solomon Winokur for physiotherapy; plaintiff obtained some relief for a period of about eight days and then once again was afflicted with severe pain and swelling. On August 25, 1953, defendant, for the second time, hospitalized plaintiff in Touro Infirmary, and Dr. J. A. Colclough was engaged to perform a myelogram for the purpose of discovering if plaintiff was suffering from a fúptured' disc. The di[749]*749agnosis was negative and he was released from Touro on August 28, 1953, but shortly thereafter was hospitalized by the defendant, for the third time, in the Mercy Hospital where Dr. Colclough gave plaintiff several injections which provided only temporary relief. Upon plaintiff’s release from the hospital, he had, according to Dr. Nicolle, a “recurrence of all symptoms.” Dr. Colclough continued to treat plaintiff without success until September 28, 1953, when defendant requested him to enter Mercy Hospital for further examination and exploration. When Dr. Nicolle could not or would not advise plaintiff as to what the treatments would consist of, he refused, obviously because of fear, to enter the hospital. On October 9, 1953, plaintiff, on his own volition, consulted Dr. Jose J. Garcia Oiler, who diagnosed plaintiff’s ailment as “causalgia, * * * a condition in which the nerves supplying the blood vessels and the sweat glands to the affected extremities are abnormally active” and he related that in this instance “the stellate ganglia was the one acting abnormally.” On January 16, 1954, Dr. Garcia placed plaintiff in Mercy Hospital and gave him an injection of a chemical in the stellate ganglia, which afforded immediate relief. On January 19, 1954, when another injection thereof had the same effect, Dr. Garcia consulted with Dr. James T. Nix as to the advisability of an operation to remove the right stellate ganglia; the doctors being in accord the surgery was performed by Dr. Nix on January 25, 1954. Following the operation the excruciating pain which plaintiff had endured was terminated and he regained 90% of the function of his right arm, but the inevitable residual effects thereof was Horner’s Syndrome, which is a drooping of the right upper eyelid and decreased perspiration of the right side of the face. However, plaintiff’s left eyelid also drooped, which was unanticipated as an effect of the operation.

A careful analysis of the pleadings and the evidence, in our opinion, poses only a question of fact for our consideration and that is whether the plaintiff is totally and permanently disabled as a result of the accident which occurred on February 4, 1953?

The record, as is usual in cases of this sort, is embellished with much medical testimony. On behalf of the plaintiff only two physicians testified — Dr. Jose J. Garcia-Oller, who specializes in neurological surgery, and Dr. James T. Nix, a general surgeon. Defendant introduced into the record the testimony of five physicians— Dr. Hyman R. Soboloff, an orthopedic surgeon; Dr. Howard Karr, a neurological surgeon; Dr. Francis I. Nicolle, plant physician for the defendant; Dr. Shirley Rice Gaines and Dr. Julius Finkelstein, eye specialists.

In our opinion the record leaves no room for doubt that the plaintiff was injured on February 4, 1953, and, as a result of this injury, he was continuously under the care of a physician until January 25, 1954, when he was compelled to undergo major surgery by Dr. Nix, who elucidated thereupon as follows:

“My operation consisted of the removing of a nerve. It is called the stellate ganglia, which entwines about the blood vessel going to that arm. And dissecting that nerve from the blood vessel which is about the size of the thumb nail and removing it.

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76 So. 2d 747, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odom-v-international-harvester-co-lactapp-1954.