Ourso v. Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co.

189 So. 2d 16, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5152
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1966
DocketNo. 6629
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 189 So. 2d 16 (Ourso v. Lumbermens Mutual Casualty 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
Ourso v. Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co., 189 So. 2d 16, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5152 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

REID, Judge.

Plaintiffs, husband and wife bring this suit for damages as a result of an automobile collision which happened on May 29, 1963 at about 5:30 P.M., on Highway 20, in the Parish of Terrebonne, about three and a half miles west of Louisiana Highway 309. Mrs. Rosalie Leglue Ourso was a guest passenger in the right front seat of a 1957 Ford sedan owned by her husband Clarence H. Ourso and operated by Agnes R. Leglue, her sister-in-law.

The car was struck from the rear by a 1960 Chevrolet owned and operated by one Eulen J. Bergeron. Plaintiffs brought this suit against Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, the insurer of the Chevrolet station wagon in a direct action suit. The suit asked for $20,000.00 damages to Mrs. Ourso for pain, suffering and mental anguish, physical injury and disability. Clarence H. Ourso asked for the sum of $1500.00 medical expenses, auto damage $98.00 and future medical expenses $500.00, for a total of $2098.00 with interest and costs

The defendant filed an answer, admitted the insurance coverage but denies that the accident was caused by the negligence of Bergeron and claims that it was caused by the negligence of Mrs. Leglue in bringing the vehicle to a sudden and abrupt stop without previous warning. In the alterná-tive the contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Ourso was plead for acquiescing in the actions of the driver of her car and failing to warn her of impending danger.

The case was tried in the Lower Court and the Trial Judge rendered judgment with written reasons in favor of the plaintiff Clarence PI. Ourso in the amount of $2410.69 and in favor of Mrs. Ourso in the amount of $4500.00 for pain and suffering. Judgment was rendered and signed on June 10, 1965 and on June 15, 1965 plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial after having changed attorneys. The motion for a new trial is on the grounds that there was newly discovered evidence which should tend to increase the award and that the newly discovered evidence could not be ascertained prior to the date of the trial on the merits. An affidavit was annexed to this motion signed by Mrs. Ourso in which she alleged that since the trial she did not take any more of the shots she had been taking with muscle relaxant shots and that beginning in the month of February 1965 she had fallen to the floor on at least 30 different occasions and that as a result of these falls she had to resort to using a wheel chair. She further alleged that she had taken pain pills and in spite of taking the said pills she is constantly subjected to excruciating pain, and as a result of this pain she had not been able to have sexual intercourse since the cessation of the said shots.

The Trial Judge on the same date that this motion was filed denied the application for a rehearing.

From this judgment both sides prosecute this appeal.

The facts show that on the day of the accident Mrs. Ourso accompanied by her sister-in-law Mrs. Agnes R. Leglue had driven her husband to work at Bayou Boeuf and Mrs. Leglue and Mrs. Ourso were returning from this trip. It was raining and Mrs. Leglue had turned on the lights and windshield wipers. When they reached the point between Donner and Chacahoula an accident had occurred just before their ar[18]*18rival and traffic ahead of Mrs. Leglue had come to a stop. Mrs. Leglue had applied the brakes on the Ourso car and she testified that she had come to a stop when suddenly she was struck in the rear by the Bergeron car, cattsing about $98.00 worth of damage to the Ourso car and some $250.00 to $300.-00 damages to the Bergeron car. Plaintiff in his brief sets out two errors on which he asks for reversal of judgment of the Lower Court. One was the refusal of the Trial Judge to grant a new trial and second, on the inadequacy of the award.

Defendant in his appeal sets out as an error that the award was excessive and should be reduced. The issue of liability is admitted and the only question before the Court is the correctness of these assignments of error.

The trial Judge in his written reasons analyzed the testimony of the doctors and the plaintiff in regard to her injuries, and we are going to quote with approval from his said written reasons:

“Mrs. Ourso testified that the impact caused her to be thrown around inside the car and ‘her low back started hurting her right away and later pain developed in her neck.’
Mrs. Ourso testified she visited her family physican, Dr. R. T. Ribando. The doctor testified that physical examination revealed whiplash type of injury of the neck and also lower back of injury. He prescribed the usual treatment for such injuries and when she failed to improve he prescribed a lumbo-sacral corset which she began to wear in June of 1963. When the first lumbo-sacral corset became too loose for comfort he prescribed a second one. The doctor further testified that two or three months later he tried to get Mrs. Ourso to quit wearing the corset but she contended that because of pain she was unable to do so. Dr. Ribando treated Mrs. Ourso for neck complaints and for the menopause for eight months following the accident. She received a number of shots for the menopause and given prescriptions for muscle relaxants and a prescription for ‘nerves’. Dr. Ribando did not supervise or question Mrs. Ourso concerning her use of the drugs. He had no idea at what rate or to what degree the drugs were being taken by her. She visited the Doctor on many occasions complaining that the drugs were not relieving the pain and Dr. Ribando testified that he would then prescribe another drug. She wore a lumbo-sacral corset prescribed by Dr. Ribando throughout the eight month period. She was examined by the doctor who states that muscle spasm was still present eight months following the accident and sent her to an Orthopedic Specialist, Dr. L. L. Pollingue.
Dr. Pollingue examined Mrs. Ourso and found no muscle spasm present. In his opinion, Mrs. Ourso had completely recovered from any low back or cervical injury resulting from the accident. At the time of his examination, her sole difficulty was postural, brought about by excessive use of the lumbo-sacral corset which she wore for eight months. He testified that he does not permit his patients to wear lumbo-sacral corsets any longer than twelve weeks since this is the period during which maximum benefit can be derived. In the case of Mrs. Our-so, Dr. Pollingue stated that he would not have had her wear the corset as long as she did and its excessive use complicated her condition.
She was placed on a regimen designed to wean her from the corset and discharged by Dr. Pollingue as able to ‘resume her normal activities’. The doctor described her improvement as marked during the first two weeks of the treatment with further progress to the date of her discharge.
Mrs. Ourso was seen by Dr. H. R. Soboloff, another Orthopedic Specialist, on February 7, 1964. His testimony concurs with the testimony of Dr. Pollingue in that he could find no evidence of any injury to the neck and low back related [19]*19to the accident. In addition, Dr. Soboloff stated that use of a lumbo-sacral corset for more than 8 to 12 weeks would produce low postural difficulties since prolonged use created shortening of the back muscles. Dr. Soloboff also noted that all of the voluntary and involuntary motions of Mrs. Ourso were normal.”

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189 So. 2d 16, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ourso-v-lumbermens-mutual-casualty-co-lactapp-1966.