Ross v. General Const. Co.

49 So. 2d 56, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 755
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 1950
DocketNo. 7538
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 So. 2d 56 (Ross v. General 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
Ross v. General Const. Co., 49 So. 2d 56, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 755 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff sued his employer, General Construction Company, to recover workmen’s compensation on the theory that from the effects of an accident while performing his' duties under a contract of hiring with defendant, he is now and had been since the date thereof, totally and permanently disabled to do work of a reasonable character. The accident is alleged to have occurred on September 2, 1948. The nature of the injury sustained is “severe strain of the lumibodorsal” while pulling steel forms from •around set concrete. It is alleged also that as a direct consequence of said injury he has “developed arthritis in the lower dorsal vertebrae and in all five lumbar vertebrae joints”; that because of said injury he suffers pain in his back and soreness and stiffness in the lower segment thereof, from about the ninth dorsal vertebra down.

Defendant denies that plaintiff had the accident as by him alleged, and denies that he has been or now is disabled from the effects of an accident occurring to him while in its employment. Defendant admits that to give plaintiff the benefit of all possible doubt that he was temporarily injured, as claimed by him, it paid to him $197.60, as compensation for 8 weeks, at $24.70 per week.

Judgment Was awarded plaintiff on the basis of permanent total disability or for 400 weeks, at the rate of $24.70 per week, less admitted payments. Defendant appealed, after unsuccessful effort for rehearing or new trial. The appeal has not been answered by the appellee, but in his counsel’s brief affirmance of the judgment is asked.

Appellant earnestly argues that if plaintiff experienced any accident at all, it was so slight that he not only suffered no permanent disability therefrom, but no disability at all.

The nature and facts of the alleged accident are expressed by plaintiff in the following language, to wit: “Me (sic) and Richmond Nash were working together .and pulling the forms and so I got to the form and it was down in the ditch, and it had. [57]*57a pin at one end of it, and the pin — I didn’t know the pin was in there — and the concrete was over the pin, and it got hard and I went down and jerked up on it, and I just hurt my back, and I couldn’t get no further than my knees.”

He testified that his “boss man” was not present when the accident occurred, but soon afterward appeared and was informed of it; that the “boss” directed him to go to the office and get a “slip” to the doctor. As it was then about quitting time (in the afternoon), he says he did not go to the office until the following morning, After getting the “slip” he reported to Dr. S. W. Boyce, the defendant’s employed physician. He was then complaining of severe pain in the lower portion of his back, and is positive that from that time to the date of trial, February 2, 1950, he has not performed and is now unable to perform manual labor.

Dr. Boyce is uncertain whether plaintiff came to his office on September 2nd or September 13th, but he knows that he did come to see him in September, 1948, for examination and treatment. A close physical examination was made but no X-rays were taken as the asserted injury and the symptoms were deemed by Dr. Boyce so trivial as not to warrant this being done. He could find no evidence of trauma to account for the pain plaintiff stated he was experiencing. Dr. Boyce testified that there was scarcely a time when he did not have one or more cases of this character under treatment and where no complications were present, as was true of plaintiff’s case, ability to resume work in two weeks was expected and was the rule. He found plaintiff’s teeth and tonsils to be infected and stated that these conditions could produce back aches, but not disability to work. Plaintiff reported to Dr. Boyce four or five times over a, period of about two weeks, and was treated. He was not discharged, but, of his own accord, ceased going to the doctor.

Dr. A. P. Addison, Jr., on October 25, 1948, closely examined the plaintiff. He found the teeth and gums badly diseased, and tonsils infected. The prostate glands were enlarged, boggy, and tender to touch, not attributable to trauma. Wassermann test was positive. X-ray pictures disclosed no injury or abnormality of the sacro-iliac joints, nor of the region about, particularly the vertebrae, but did reveal some hyper-trophic arthritic changes. This clinical condition, Dr. Addison was certain, had existed for some years. It slowly develops and is not always due to trauma. It was not sufficiently serious in nature and development to prevent the perf ormance of manual labor. In view of the negative findings of Dr. Addison, based upon X-ray and manipulation, it was his opinion that had plaintiff had an accident, the character of which he gave the doctor, all ill effects therefrom should have disappeared within a few weeks, — two or three months at the longest.

Drs. Paul D. Abramson and J. E. Heard, connected with the North Louisiana Clinic in Shreveport, Louisiana, together examined plaintiff physically and had X-ray pictures of his lower back and sacro-iliac joints made in April, 1949, at which time plaintiff was complaining of pain in those regions, said by him to be so serious and incessant as to render him wholly incapable of doing hard work. They were unable to find any evidence of injury of the X-rayed portions of the body. They did find evidence of mild arthritis or rheumatism, which, of itself, was not disabling. They also observed some bilateral muscular rigidity or spasms in the lower portion of the back, but believed these to be voluntary on the patient’s part, and were of the opinion that, on the whole, plaintiff was exaggerating whatever pain he had. It was their opinion, based upon their fundings, and long experience, that plaintiff, being only 53 years old, could discharge labor of the sort he was performing when the alleged accident occurred, if it did occur, within two or three months thereafter.

Dr. G. H. Cassity testified on behalf of the plaintiff. Pie examined him first on November 18, 1948. We quote from the case history given by him to Dr. Cassity, to wit: “He stated that on September 1st, 1948, while lifting on a concrete form, he suddenly felt a severe pain in the small of his back, and that it was 'so severe that he couldn’t straighten up for a few minutes ■and couldn’t do any more lifting that dáy. [58]*58He went back on the job the next morning ■but his 'back was so sore and painful that he. could not do any work, nor hardly walk, and so his foreman sent him to the doctor. He then went home for the day but went • on the job again the next day and tried to work, but made 'a very poor out of it, and the next day he could not do any work at all and has not been able to work since. His chief complaint now and since his injury is a sore and stiff back, particularly at the lumibo-dorsal region.”

Dr. Oassity made no X-ray pictures of any part of the man’s body, and formed conclusions, as to his physical condition, from his own statements and from manipulations, etc. His conclusion was that plaintiff had suffered a “severe strain at the lumibo-dorsal joint”. He thought it possible that one of the articular facets, between the twelfth dorsal and first lumbar vertebra had been fractured. He was of the opinion that an accident of the sort alleged upon could 'have produced the pathology he found, and that total disability followed. The following is a resumé of Dr. Cas-sity’s ultimate conclusions, viz.: “Well, I wouldn’t say that he is permanently disabled. I would say there is a possibility that he is partially permanently disabled.

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Bluebook (online)
49 So. 2d 56, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-general-const-co-lactapp-1950.