Posey v. List & Weatherly Const. Co.

155 So. 472, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 789
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1934
DocketNo. 4833.
StatusPublished

This text of 155 So. 472 (Posey v. List & Weatherly Const. 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
Posey v. List & Weatherly Const. Co., 155 So. 472, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 789 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff sues his employer, -List & Weatherly Construction Company, and its insurer, for compensation alleged to he due him on account of injuries received by him in two accidents, viz. one on or about November 25th, and the other on December 4, 1932, while in the discharge of the duties of his employment. The employer was engaged in constructing the steel and concrete bridge over Red river at city of Shreveport for the Louisiana highway commission. It is alleged that, while carrying one end of a heavy piece of lumber on November 2oth, plaintiff stumbled and sprained or strained the lower part of his back, and that on Decembqr 4th, while he was being lowered by cable into a large bridge pier, some 60 feet deep, with another workman by the name of Sparks riding across his legs, he was severely injured by the unusual and sudden stopping of the cable before the bottom of the pier was reached; that the descent into the pier was so suddenly stopped that he and his companion were (quoting the petition) “thrown off or onto the bottom, where they caught on their feet, a distance of several feet, .causing petitioner to receive a terrible jolt in his back and backbone and spine, aggravating and renewing the sprain or strain” of November 25th. He alleges injury to the tissues, ligaments, and bones of the sacroiliac region' and to the vertebrae of the lumbar part of the spine; that the disability resulting therefrom is total and of a permanent character and forbids him doing work of any reasonable character; that 'his employer, its agents and servants, had immediate knowledge of said accidents following their happening. He further alleges, and it is admitted by defendants, that shortly after the last-alleged accident defendants began to pay him compensation and thereafter ceased doing so; that he then instituted suit against them in Bossier parish, where the accidents occurred, to recover compensation; and that, when the case was called for trial, defendants in open court requested that they be allowed to pay all accrued compensation and the costs of court to that time, and, plaintiff acceding thereto, a nonsuit was entered in. the case; and that at that time and place defendants agreed to furnish plaintiff, and he agreed to accept, medical treatment from a physician of defendant’s selection.

Defendant denies the allegations of fact and law of each and every article of plaintiff’s petition. No special defenses are urged.

From a judgment rejecting his demands, plaintiff appealed.

The defense propounds two issues in the case:

(1) Did the plaintiff meet with an accident?

(2) Is he suffering with a disability to do work of any reasonable character?

If the first defense is sustained, the second needs no consideration from us. There are no written reasons for judgment in the record. In their brief, counsel of defendants state that the lower court found against plaintiff on both issues.

So far as the alleged accident of November 25th is concerned, plaintiff himself has eliminated it from the case, and his counsel virtually concedes that the case revolves around the alleged accident of December 4th.

It is not disputed that plaintiff and his co-laborer were being lowered into the pier by steel cable controlled by electric power the evening of December 4th. Plaintiff was astride the cable with his weight resting on a shackle attached to its lower end, while Sparks’ legs were somewhat around plaintiff’s waist about- the hips with part of the weight of his body resting on plaintiff’s -back. Both were holding the cable as they went down. The descent was rapid. As was the rule, before reaching the bottom, plaintiff signaled to the watchman at top of the pier to slow the speed of the cable, and this signal was relayed to the engineer operating a steel crane and engine which controlled the movements of the cable. Plaintiff contends that, instead of bringing the cable to a stop gradually, it was done suddenly, and that he and Sparks were both “stripped” therefrom and .hurled violently to the ground, a distance of 12 or 15 feet. Sparks corroborates plaintiff as to the rapid descent of the cable and it being suddenly stopped, but is not certain that they were “stripped” from it when the sudden stop was made. He says he could touch the ground with his feet when the cable stopped. He also says that when the cable stopped that plaintiff asked him to get off as he was hurt; *474 thought he was ruptured about the hips; that he sat down in the corner of the pier for a while and did not do any heavy work thereafter; .that as his weight largely rested on plaintiff he did not feel the effect of the jerk following stoppage of the cable as did plaintiff. Plaintiff was doubtless jarred very much when the cable stopped, but we do not think he was knocked unconscious as he testifies. Sparks says he was not He did not allege in his petition that he was knocked unconscious.

Plaintiff testified that when he came out of the pier he informed his foreman of his experience down in the pier. He is corroborated in this respect by a fellow workman. The foreman testified that he did not learn of the accident for “a good while” after it was supposed to have happened. He was not positive that plaintiff did not tell him of it, but rather inclined to think he did not. It seems to us that, had plaintiff told this foreman that he had been hurt, that he would have been, promptly referred to a doctor as was done on 9th of December. The workman at top of pier who gave the signals to the engineer testified that he heard nothing of the accident from plaintiff that day and that he was looking down in the pier when plaintiff and Sparks were let down and nothing unusual occurred. Plaintiff says that when he came out of the pier he talked strong language to this signaler because he allowed the cable to go down so fast and be stopped so suddenly. No one corroborates him on this point. The man says that plaintiff volunteered to relieve him from duty as he had been working overtime. Plaintiff worked at the bridge December 5th, 7th, and 8th, also on December 27th and 28th, making ten hours per day. On the 9th he reported to the company’s bookkeeper that he had been injured while carrying a timber. He was referred to Dr. Boyce, of the city of Shreveport, for attention. Thereafter he was examined and X-rayed by several other physicians.

When giving the history of his case to Drs. Thomas, Oassity, Huckaby, and Potts, at different times, plaintiff stated that he fell from the cable to the ground on his buttock, estimating the distances at from 8 to 15 feet, but did not say he was knocked unconscious.

To Dr. Caldwell he stated that he fell 8-feet from the end of the cable, landing on his feet, and was knocked unconscious; that his injury, thought to have been a rupture, was caused by the jerk of the cable rather than the fall.

To Dr. Boyce, on December 9th, the first physician he consulted, he stated he was injured while lifting a heavy piece of timber, that he strained his back while doing the lifting. He made no mention of an injury of December 4th. This is corroborative of the bookkeeper’s record of plaintiff’s complaint to him.

In connection with these varying versions of the facts of the alleged accident, we advert to the allegations of the petition, sworn to by plaintiff, that he and Sparks landed on their feet after being stripped from the cable.

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Bluebook (online)
155 So. 472, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/posey-v-list-weatherly-const-co-lactapp-1934.