Romero v. South Louisiana Contractors, Inc.

219 So. 2d 577
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 14, 1969
DocketNo. 2591
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 219 So. 2d 577 (Romero v. South Louisiana Contractors, Inc.) 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
Romero v. South Louisiana Contractors, Inc., 219 So. 2d 577 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinions

HOOD, Judge.

This is a workmen’s compensation suit instituted by Nelson Romero against South Louisiana Contractors, Inc. Plaintiff claims compensation benefits based on total and permanent disability, with penalties and attorney’s fees. Judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiff, awarding him maximum compensation benefits for a period not to exceed 400 weeks, subject to a credit for the payments which have been made, but' rejecting his demands for penalties and attorney’s fees. Both parties have appealed. •

The issues presented are: (1) Has plaintiff been totally disabled since December 12, 1967, as the result of a work-connected accident? and (2) Is plaintiff entitled to recover penalties and attorney’s fees?

On October 6, 1966, while plaintiff was working for defendant, the right side of his face was struck by the limb of a tree, as the tree was being pulled by a dragline. The injuries which he sustained in that accident included, a laceration of his right eyelid and lacerations and contusions on the right side of his face.

The defendant company at that time was engaged in the business of drilling oil wells, and plaintiff was employed by it as a general laborer or roustabout. He had been working for defendant for about three weeks when this accident occurred, and he had been assigned to a crew which was engaged in preparing drilling sites. His principal duties were to carry heavy boards to the proposed drilling sites and to nail the boards in place.

Defendant has paid all medical bills which have been incurred by plaintiff for the treatment of his injuries, and it also has paid compensation benefits to Romero at the rate of $35.00 per week from the date of ‘the accident"'until December 12, 1967. The payment of compensation benefits was discontinued on the last mentioned date, and this suit was instituted on February 9, 1968.

Plaintiff was taken to a hospital and was treated by Dr. Victor Feske, a general practitioner, immediately after the accident occurred. The treatment administered by that doctor included the suturing of the laceration on plaintiff’s eyelid. Romero remained in the hospital overnight, but he was released the next morning and referred to Dr. Philip Pupera, his family physician, for further treatment.

Dr. Pupera, a general practitioner, treated plaintiff from October 8, 1966, to March 14, 1967. Upon his recommendation, plaintiff also was treated by Dr. Larry Eugene Baker, an ophthalmologist, from October 8, 1966, until February 14, 1967, and by Dr. Charles Edward LeBlanc, an eye, ear, nose and throat specialist, from March 14 to August 8, 1967. Dr. Baker removed the sutures within a few days after he began caring for plaintiff. The treatment administered by Dr. LeBlanc included a surgical procedure known as a “recession,” which was performed on May 26, 1967. It involved changing the position of the medial rectus muscle of the right eye in an attempt to correct plaintiff’s double vision.

Plaintiff also was examined by Dr. Robert F. Azar, an ophthalmologist, and by Dr. Blaise Salatich, an orthopedic surgeon. X-rays taken of plaintiff’s head and neck were examined by Dr. Harry James Moresi, Jr., a radiologist. All of the above named treating and examining physicians testified at the trial or by deposition.

[579]*579Plaintiff is 45 years of age. For about ten years immediately prior to the time this accident occurred he had worked as a common laborer, and as a labor foreman, for the City of Lafayette, “shovelling and cutting grass.” For about three and one-half years prior to that employment he worked as a roustabout for another employer, performing the same type of duties as those which were being performed by him when he sustained the above described injury. The record shows, therefore, that he customarily performed common labor.

Romero had been very nearsighted most of his life, and he had worn glasses with heavy corrective lenses since he was 13 years of age. He, however, had never experienced double vision prior to the date of the accident.

Plaintiff returned to work for defendant at his regular employment about eight days after the accident occurred, and he continued to work at that employment, putting in 60 to 70 hours per week, until February 11, 1967. He testified that he returned to work because he needed the money, but that he experienced considerable difficulty in performing his duties. After he discontinued working for defendant, he was employed as a timekeeper in a college dormitory in Lafayette, where he is still employed.

Plaintiff stated that he has had pain in his neck and has suffered from headaches since the date of the accident, and that he began to experience double vision two or three days after he returned to work following that accident. He testified that his condition continued to get worse as he worked, and that eventually he had to discontinue his employment because Dr. Le-Blanc advised him to do so and because he couldn’t see well enough to perform his duties. He said that when he now turns his head “in a hurry” he loses sight in his right eye momentarily, and that he then has double vision when looking in any direction for another moment. He also stated that a sudden turn of his head causes his right eye to hurt and the left one to start “jumping,” so that he is unable to recognize objects which are relatively close to him. He also complains that he cannot judge distances now as well as he could prior to the accident, that his eyes are now very sensitive to sunlight, and that he loses his sight completely when he gets hot while straining or working in the sun. He contends that during the last three or four months his headaches have become worse and that he is unable to do any heavy manual labor.

The trial court concluded that plaintiff is still totally disabled, and he awarded him compensation benefits based on total and permanent disability. In reaching that conclusion, the trial judge stated:

“The Court bases its finding of disability particularly upon testimony of the ophthalmologists. Dr. Baker stated that the rectus muscle’s deficit which existed when he examined the patient could have resulted from the injury. Dr. LeBlanc was of the opinion that the double vision could have resulted from a trauma and damage to the rectus muscle. Dr. Robert Azar found that Nelson Romero experienced double vision when looking to the right and estimated a 10% impairment of vision, although he did not say this was caused by the accident.”

We think the testimony of the three above named ophthalmologists establishes that as a result of the accident plaintiff sustained an injury to the right lateral rectus muscle of the eye, resulting in a paralysis or weakening of that muscle. The weakened condition of that muscle made it difficult for plaintiff to turn his right eye outward, or to his right, and it allowed the uninjured antagonist medial rectus muscle to pull that eye inward, thus causing plaintiff to have double vision. This condition was substantially corrected by the surgical “recession” which was performed by Dr. LeBlanc on May 26. 1%7. By that procedure the medial rectus muscle was taken from its original position and was reattached to the eyeball at a point further to [580]*580the rear, thus weakening or reducing the pull of the muscle on the eye. The operation was successful to the extent that it gave plaintiff good binocular vision in all directions, except that he had double vision when he rolled his eyes to his extreme right.

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Related

Romero v. South Louisiana Contractors, Inc.
222 So. 2d 882 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
219 So. 2d 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/romero-v-south-louisiana-contractors-inc-lactapp-1969.