Reeves v. Dietz

1 La. App. 501, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 49
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 19, 1925
DocketNo. 9822
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 La. App. 501 (Reeves v. Dietz) 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
Reeves v. Dietz, 1 La. App. 501, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 49 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

WESTERFIELD, J.

This is a suit by an . injured employee for compensation at the rate of $10.80 per week for 300 weeks. The defendants admit the plaintiff was injured under circumstances entitling him to compensation and defend upon the following grounds:

“First: That the plaintiff’s disability is of such a character that it could either be removed or greatly reduced by an operation, painless, without danger and with reasonable hope of success; that such an operation defendants have tendered plaintiff and plaintiff has refused; and that all compensation should be suspended until the plaintiff submits to such operation.
“Second: That the plaintiff’s injuries are confined to a partial disability of the left hand; that the Act, Section 8, Sub-division D, paragraph 5, among the specific disabilities, fixes the compensation for the entire loss of a hand at 60% of wages during 150 weeks; that, it being conceded, even by plaintiff’s counsel and physician, that the plaintiff retains a substantial part of the use of his hand, under no circumstances can this plaintiff recover beyond 150 weeks. Otherwise, he would recover for the partial loss of use of his hand a greater amount than he could recover for the total loss of use of his hand.” •

There was judgment below awarding compensation at the rate of $8.50 per week during disability and not exceeding 300 weeks and denying defendant’s right to force the plaintiff to undergo an operation as a condition of the payment of compensation. The defendants have appealed and plaintiff has answered the appeal asking an increase in the weekly indemnity' awarded plaintiff to $18.00 per week.

The learned judge of the court a quo based his refusal to require plaintiff to submit to an operation or in the alternative to a diminution of compensation upon the case of Bronson vs. Harris Ice Cream Co., 150 La. 455, 90 South. 759. Counsel for plaintiff in his brief and oral argument contends (and the District Court seems to have been of the same opinion) that this case held that no operation, however slight or however small the danger to life, and whether the refusal of an injured employee to submit thereto was reasonable or unreasonable, could be required upon condition of affecting such employee’s compensation. Counsel quotes the following from McNally vs. Hudson & M. R. Co. (N. J.), 95 Atl. 122:

“The idea is appalling to one’s conscience that a human being should be compelled to take a risk of death, however slight that may be, in order that the pecuniary obligation created by the law in his favor against his employer may be minimized.”

Of course, no one can be compelled to submit to an operation. The person of individuals is inviolate. The law can no more compel an operation than it can compel a marriage. Everyone has a natural right to do as he pleases with his person and property. It is only when his actions affect others that the law intervenes. However, it is a mistake to assume that the Compensation Law is philanthropic or eleemosynary in its purpose. In fact, the word compensation is a misnomer. It is not compensatory.- The stipendiary allowances of the law are inadequate compensation for the injuries sustained and are less than allowed by the courts for similar injuries in cases not falling within its provisions. As its Germanic origin would suggest, it is socialistic and economic. The welfare of society, of the State, is its object and purpose. It can be justified upon no less exalted ground. In Hosh vs. La. Box Co., 9245 Orl. App., we said:

“When it is remembered that this act controverts long established principles of law in that it imposes upon the employer responsibility without fault or negligence on his part, may even be said to amount to a taking of property without .due process, and can only be justified under the police [503]*503power, the most potent attribute of all governmental authority, the conclusion is irresistible that economic reasons of the most compelling sort and public policy of the mo'st vital import supports its enactment. This is the more evident since every civilized country in the world, as we believe, has enacted this legislation. Among the most important economic purposes to be subserved we conceive to be that of preventing injured workmen becoming public charges and to that end it imposes upon industry the burden of maintenance of injured employees.”

The law places the burden upon industry to repair as near as may be the damage it does to man as a member of society, a cog in the economic machine. It contemplates that the injured employee is the normal individual, desiring nothing so much as restoration to normal strength and usefulness, the God given right to work and that he will do nothing to create, continue or increase his disability by wilful or unreasonable conduct and thereby increase the burden upon society by reason of an unnecessarily prolonged disability due not to injuries received in the service of industry but to his laggard sense of his obligation to society.

Our appreciation of the Bronson case is in' harmony with the foregoing general observations. In that case at page 457-8 the Court said:

“To the legal action which the injured employee might have to recover full indemnification, the act substitutes a right to partial indemnification, but seeks to facilitate and insure as far as possible the recovery of this indemnity. To that end it takes away defenses, simplifies procedure, and creates presumptions. That purpose would in a large measure be defeated if the door were opened for discussion as to whether the injured employee should or not have recourse to an operation. This would be adding uncertainty where the law clearly desires that there should be none.
“At the same time we must. recognize that such a thing might be as an injury curable by an operation so simple and unattended by risk that plainly the real cause of the disability would be not so much the injury as the not making use of the easy remedy at hand.”

and after quoting a number df decisions from other states, the Court remarks;.

“Most of these cases are inapplicable under our statute, except in so far as establishing the proposition that the injured employee must not be entirely unreasonable in refraining from an operation.”

Though the Court held that the employee’s compensation in that ease could not be affected by his refusal to undergo an operation, its decision was based upon the fact that it would be unreasonable to have required him to do so, saying:

“In .view of the age of the plaintiff and the seriousness of the operation requiring the administration of an anaesthetic and in view of the natural (though unreasoning and we may add groundless) prejudice against resorting to the Charity Hospital, we do not think plaintiff’s unwillingness to submit to an operation was entirely unreasonable.”

In the well-reasoned case of Strong vs. Sonken-Galamba Iron & Metal Co. (Kan.), 198 Pac. 182, the authorities, English and American, are reviewed and the conclusion reached that the plaintiff’s refusal to submit to an operation was unreasonable, the Court saying at page 186 of the- opinion:

“The State goes to great expense to fit its- people for work, to protect them in their work, and to secure to them- the result of their labor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pharr V. Insurance Co. of North America
200 So. 2d 365 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)
French v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co. of Wis.
70 So. 2d 179 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1954)
Johnson v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
58 So. 2d 261 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1952)
Crawford v. Tampa Inter-Ocean S. S. Co.
155 So. 409 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1934)
Bell v. Employers' Liability Assur. Corporation
152 So. 766 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1934)
French v. Weaver Bros.
137 So. 758 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1931)
Wolf v. Louisiana Milk Products Co.
8 La. App. 657 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1928)
Black v. Louisiana Cent. Lumber Co.
109 So. 538 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1926)
Martin v. Wyatt Lumber Co.
4 La. App. 157 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1926)
Scott v. E. J. Deas Co.
3 La. App. 374 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 La. App. 501, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-v-dietz-lactapp-1925.