Rabitaille v. Steel Tank Construction Company

42 So. 2d 300, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 616
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 1949
DocketNo. 3131.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 300 (Rabitaille v. Steel Tank Construction Company) 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
Rabitaille v. Steel Tank Construction Company, 42 So. 2d 300, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 616 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Plaintiff was employed as a welder by the defendant, Steel Construction Company, which is engaged in building and constructing steel tanks. On July 3, 1947, he sustained an injury to his left ankle for which he was paid compensation at the rate he was entitled to from that date through December 2, 1947. He went back to work for the same employer and on August 25, 1948, he claims to have met with an accident in which he injured the same ankle and had to undergo an operation. The result was that he was left with a total disability for which he now seeks to recover compensation to the full extent allowed under the workmen's compensation statute, Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended in part by Act No. 175 of 1948, that is, the sum of $30 per week for the period of 400 weeks. He sues both his former employer and its workmen's compensation insurer.

The contention made on his behalf is that his disability results from both accidents and, conceding that he had recovered from the first accident of July 3, 1947, for which he received the compensation due him, his injury was nevertheless aggravated by the subsequent accident of August 25, 1948.

The defense is that plaintiff had entirely recovered from the accident of July 3, 1947, and he had in fact been paid all the compensation that was due him when he returned to work on his job. It is denied that he sustained any accident such as alleged by him on August 25, 1948 and, in the alternative, that if he did sustain an accident on that day which injured him in any way that he had entirely recovered from the effects of that accident if it was a disabling accident at all.

After trial of the case in the court below there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff granting him compensation for a period of 26 1/4 weeks at the rate of $30 per week, commencing August 25, 1948. The trial judge seems to have held that under the testimony, plaintiff had only 15 per cent partial permanent disability to his left leg and that is why he limited compensation to the period decreed in the judgment. The defendant took an appeal from the judgment as rendered to which appeal the plaintiff answered and asked that the judgment be amended by increasing the period of compensation to 400 weeks as for total and permanent disability.

It is not necessary to discuss at any length the original accident of July 3, 1947 as there is no dispute that plaintiff did then suffer a rather serious injury to his ankle for which he was paid compensation until he was discharged as being able to return to work. The injury consisted of a fracture of the tibia of the left leg which fracture extended into the ankle joint. Plaintiff testified that even after he went back to work his ankle bothered him; that he did not have full control over it. He claims that in the latter part of August, 1948, he met with another accident while walking across a 12 or 10 inch board. The board was muddy and wet and as he walked across it his foot slipped and hit the side of the board and he fell in a ditch of water. It was the inside part of the ankle of his left foot which hit the board. This is the accident which is denied by the defendants but plaintiff's testimony that he did have such an accident is not contradicted and it is corroborated by one of the men working on the job with him, by the name of Floyd S. Swartzbaugh. His ankle began to swell after this second accident and as it continued to get worse he was finally, about three weeks later, sent to a doctor by his employer. Under that testimony the trial judge came to the conclusion that plaintiff had sustained this second accident and we conclude that the proof is sufficient to so hold.

On October 5, 1948, plaintiff was operated on by Dr. Wilson Morris, who, according to the medical testimony, removed *Page 302 a ganglion from the injured ankle. We are not sure what exactly is meant by a ganglion but as we understand, it is a sort of growth or tumor in or near a tendon and in this case it was probably binding the ankle. That is what caused the plaintiff to have pain. We think that probably this ganglion was produced as a result of the second accident when plaintiff struck his ankle in falling from that board but it is not unreasonable to assume also, under the testimony, that both that accident and the remaining results of the first accident produced it.

The operation performed by Dr. Morris was successful, as far as he could see, but left the plaintiff with a limitation to bend his ankle of more than 15 degrees. This doctor seems to be somewhat of the opinion that there may be an arthritic reaction, secondary to trauma, and that may be the cause of plaintiff's trouble.

Dr. Harry Snatic testified as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff. He was produced as an expert. In his opinion plaintiff's condition is one of traumatic arthritis resulting from the fracture of the tibia and that has left him with a limitation of extension of the left ankle, or the left foot, as he puts it, of 15 to 20 per cent.

The testimony reveals that plaintiff was employed in the capacity of foreman and his duties consisted in instructing other employees how to do their work and giving orders generally. His duties in this connection required him to do a lot of climbing, at times to heights as far as 40 feet from the ground. He testified that since his operation he hasn't done anything because of the pain he suffers in his ankle. As we understand the testimony of Dr. Snatic and Dr. Morris, who limit his disability from 15 to 20 per cent, they refer to a disability due to limitation of extension of the ankle principally but they are both of the opinion that with such a condition, which in their opinion, will remain with the plaintiff, he should not engage in any duties or employment which require climbing. Dr. Morris says that he could do bench work but as far as climbing, he would not recommend that type of work. That, in our opinion, is easy to understand because certainly with the limited motion in his ankle, it would be apt to give away on him at any time and if that would happen whilst he is in the act of climbing, he may have very serious results.

Several doctors testified on behalf of the defendant, among them being Dr. Ben Goldsmith, who attended plaintiff after the first accident, and really we don't find his testimony, nor that of the others, for that matter, to be at any great conflict with the testimony of the doctors who testified for the plaintiff. Dr. Goldsmith finds it entirely possible for even the original injury of July 3, 1947, to have possibly caused a limitation of motion. He thinks it would be impossible to draw the line between the original accident and any aggravation of the condition resulting from the second accident in determining which produced the disability that exists.

Dr. Stakely Hatchette had also examined the plaintiff prior to the second accident. In addition to the fracture of the tibia, he found that plaintiff had also suffered a chip fracture. His testimony is to the effect that any fracture extending to a joint, such as the ankle, would be much more likely to cause disability in a foot than one that did not. Dr. W. G. Fischer expressed the same opinion on that point.

The last doctor who testified for the defendants is Dr. C. V. Hatchette and it seems to be on his testimony that the defendants principally rely. He seems to be definitely of the opinion that there is no indication of arthritis in plaintiff's ankle joint, at this time and from appearances alone, the ankle should be as strong as it was before the injury was sustained. From those same appearances, there should be no limitation of motion in the ankle. He stated that in his opinion there is nothing to account for the plaintiff's pain and inability to use his ankle.

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Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 300, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rabitaille-v-steel-tank-construction-company-lactapp-1949.