Reeves v. Union Sulphur Co.

193 So. 399
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1940
DocketNo. 2091.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 So. 399 (Reeves v. Union Sulphur 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
Reeves v. Union Sulphur Co., 193 So. 399 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

Plaintiff sues for compensation at the maximum rate of $20 per week for 400 *400 weeks, less $400 paid as compensation for twenty weeks, and he appeals from a judgment which rejected his demands for additional compensation.

It is undisputed that plaintiff suffered a fracture of thé scaphoid bone of his right wrist on September 28, 1938, as he was assisting in lowering pipe in an oil well when the latch of a pair of tongs which he was holding flew out and hit his right arm; that plaintiff was paid compensation at $20 per week for twenty weeks; that he was given, light work in painting pipes and driving a car from February 17th to April 1, 1939, and was paid wages at 92 cents per hour, the wages he was receiving before the injury. On April 1, 1939, plaintiff quit work, because, as he claims, the work which he was then doing (cutting grass with a double-edge hand scythe) caused pain in his wrist and was the kind of work he could not do. The employer claims, however, that plaintiff voluntarily quit this work because he did not want to do this kind of work, and not because he could not do it.

The defense is that plaintiff suffers no further disability other than that for which he. has been paid in compensation and wages, but if he does suffer further disability, it is the result of his own failure to co-operate with his physician and follow his instructions for treatment.

As plaintiff received either maximum compensation or practically full wages from the date of the injury to April 1, 1939, his ability to work must be determined as of the latter date. Ulmer v. E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co., La.App., 190 So. '175. Therefore, the two questions presented in the case are: (1) Has plaintiff proved by a preponderance of the evidence that his disability to perform hard manual labor continued after he quit cutting grass on April 1, 1939; and (2) if he was not able.on that date to perform hard manual labor, was his disability caused by reason of his failure to co-operate with his physician and his own misconduct and indiscretion?

On the first question, the trial judge, after reviewing the evidence, concluded that the fracture of the wrist had sufficiently healed to permit the performance by plaintiff of hard manual labor. However, he expressed some doubt on that point as he further fortified his conclusions with the statement that, if plaintiff was not able to perform manual labor, it was because of his failure to co-operate' with his physician and his own misconduct. We find ourselves in the same state of mind as the learned trial judge on these points, and find no manifest error in the conclusions that he reached.

No doubt the kind of work plaintiff was doing when injured is rather hard manual labor. He had to lift and handle oil well pipes and equipment, and the nature of the work is indicated by the name commonly applied to it, that of “rough-necking.” That the use of both hands was required in this kind of work is apparent.

Dr. W. G. Fisher treated plaintiff’s wrist fracture. He put the arm in a plaster cast and applied periodic heat treatments. The cast remained on plaintiff’s arm for ten weeks, after which the arm was put in a light aluminum splint which was kept on for six weeks or more. X-ray. pictures were made' of the arm at intervals to determine the progress in healing, and plaintiff visited the doctor two or three times a .week for some four or five months.

Dr. Fisher testified that the fourth X-ray made in February, 1939, showed that the fracture had almost completely healed by a bony union. About the middle of February, the doctor recommended that plaintiff be given light work so as to give exercise to the arm and restore its use. It was as a result of this recommendation of the doctor that plaintiff was given work of painting pipes and driving a car. He began this work on February 17, 1939, and worked until the latter part of March without any complaint of pain or inconvenience, so far as the record shows. Moreover, plaintiff requested during this time that he be put back at his old job of rough-necking, but Dr. Fisher did not think it advisable for him to take the chance of re-injuring his-arm until the healing was complete and normal function was restored.

Dr. Kushner examined plaintiff some six weeks before the trial and found a swelling in his right wrist. He examined an X-ray made of the arm a few days before the trial and found a fragment of bone displaced and a kind of cracking sound on movement of the wrist. He also found a limitation in the backward flexion of the right wrist and a weakness in the grip of the hand. This doctor expressed the opinion that plaintiff was not at the date of the trial in the first- part of June, 1939, able to do oil field work. He did think plaintiff should do light work to exercise his arm.

*401 Dr. Lamansky examined plaintiff some three weeks before the trial, as well as some X-ray pictures previously made of his arm, and this doctor expressed the opinion that plaintiff could not do hard manual labor; that he had a limitation of movement of forty or fifty per cent. The doctor admitted, however, that his opinion was based partly on the history of the case as given him by the plaintiff and his subjective complaints of pain on movements of the wrist; that if later X-ray pictures showed a bony union of the fracture, plaintiff should begin to exercise his wrist by some kind of work.

Dr. White examined plaintiff and the X-ray picture a few days before the trial and expressed the opinion that plaintiff was not able to do hard manual labor, but, like the other two doctors, his conclusion was partly based on subjective symptoms of pain and the history of the case as given by plaintiff.

Doctors McKinney, Watkins and Fisher were called by defendant. Dr. McKinney made X-rays of plaintiff’s arm in September, November and December 1938, and February and May, 1939, in connection with the treatment of plaintiff by Dr. Fish-ei. According to Dr. McKinney, these pictures show a gradual healing of the fracture from the first picture to the last one taken in May, a few days before the trial. Dr. McKinney concludes his statement of the condition shown in the last picture as follows: “From a purely X-ray standpoint, having made no clinical examination, whatever, I would say that the disability in the wrist at the present time is nothing.”

Dr. Watkins examined plaintiff the latter part of December 1938 or the first part of January 1939, and also a few days before the trial. He also examined all of the X-rays made by Dr. McKinney. This doctor expressed the opinion that plaintiff is not only able to do manual labor, such as oil field work, but that such work would be good for him.

We have given due consideration to the opinions of all these doctors, but we think that Dr. Fisher who treated plaintiff for four or five months was in a much better position to know his condition than any one else. In fact, all of the other doctors admit this and we are very much impressed with Dr. Fisher’s fairness and apparent desire to give a true statement of plaintiff’s condition.

We have already referred to Dr. Fisher’s treatment of the arm, and we might give his opinion of plaintiff’s ability to work at the time of the trial in the doctor’s own words, as follows:

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193 So. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-v-union-sulphur-co-lactapp-1940.