Sanders v. Swift Co.

3 So. 2d 193, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 440
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1941
DocketNo. 2255.
StatusPublished

This text of 3 So. 2d 193 (Sanders v. Swift 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
Sanders v. Swift Co., 3 So. 2d 193, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 440 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

This is a compensation suit in which the plaintiff, Thomas Carroll Sanders, seeks to recover judgment against his former employer, Swift Company, and its compensation insurance carrier, the Security Mutual Casualty Company, in solido, for weekly compensation at the rate of $12.48 for a period not to exceed 400 weeks, less the sum of $79.04 already paid him.

The employer, Swift Company, is engaged in the meat packing business, operating a plant about 4 miles east of the City of Lake Charles where plaintiff was employed and worked at the time of his alleged injury. He avers in his petition that he was working in the butcher department and while pushing the carcass of a beef along an overhead rail by means of overhanging rollers, he slipped and fell to the floor, catching himself on his left arm, breaking both bones just above the wrist joint, seriously and permanently impairing the usefulness of that arm, injuring the blood vessels, the nerves and tissues at that point, causing varicose veins and so injuring the arm until its usefulness has been permanently destroyed. He avers that by reason of his injury he is unable to do any work of a reasonable character and that is the basis on which he seeks to recover compensation as for total, permanent disability.

He sets out in his petition that while he was at high school he had suffered an injury to his left wrist which weakened the condition of the tissues and other parts involved in the joint, and which may have weakened its resistance and made it easier than under normal conditions for the injury which he sustained on the day of the accident complained of in this case to cause its impairment and the varicose veins from which he is suffering, the whole causing him more disability than he would otherwise have suffered.

For answer to the plaintiff's demand the defendants admit that he was employed by Swift Company on the date he claims to have been injured but they deny that he sustained any such injury as alleged by him. They admit that he suffered an injury to his wrist while participating in athletic sports when he was at high school and urge that if he sustained any injury whatever during his employment by Swift Company it was a slight sprain for which he has been paid compensation in full. They allege that any such injury as he might have sustained was treated at the expense of his employer and that by September 11, 1938, he had entirely recovered from the effect thereof and that if any disability exists at all it is due entirely to the injury received by him when he was in high school.

The case was tried in the district court on the issues as thus presented and the trial judge having reached the conclusion that plaintiff had failed to establish his demand to that degree of certainty which the law requires, rendered judgment in favor of the defendant, dismissing his suit and he has appealed.

Plaintiff sustained the alleged injury on which he predicates his demand on July 28, 1938. From the allegations in his petition it would appear that he had sustained a most serious injury; that not only were the two bones above the wrist joint broken but that he had also suffered other serious injuries to the nerves, tissues and blood vessels of the arm, to support which, he has submitted no proof whatsoever. *Page 194

His testimony is to the effect that during the afternoon at about 3 o'clock, he was shoving the carcass of a beef on an overhead trolley and while doing so he slipped and fell on the cement floor, most of the weight of his body falling on his left arm and causing his wrist to be broken. He says that he heard a noise which sounded like something had snapped in his wrist and he felt a severe pain. He also states that he told "a fellow there on the platform" (evidently meaning a fellow-worker) that he had broken his arm. He did not remember this fellow-worker's name and naturally he was not called as a witness to testify and corroborate his testimony. He claims that he continued working some forty or fifty minutes until he had completed the work on hand and then went home. He relates how he suffered that night and how he helped himself to try to relieve his pain. The following morning he telephoned the office and was told to report to the nurse in charge of first aid. He went to see her and after having bandaged his wrist she sent him to Dr. T.H. Watkins, who attended to accident cases for Swift Company. Dr. Watkins placed his arm in a metal splint and sent him to Dr. G.C. McKinney to have an X-ray made. Dr. Watkins treated him for about two weeks and a half, after which he advised him to go back to light work. He went back, worked one day and one hour and was unable to continue.

Plaintiff then relates that in October, 1932, he sprained his arm while playing football at high school. He minimizes this accident by stating that after having had it attended to, more or less casually, he participated in a football game on the following Saturday. He enumerates in detail the different kinds of employment he engaged in and in which he performed hard manual labor after he left high school, all with the purpose of showing that there were no resulting disabilities from the injury he had sustained at that time.

Plaintiff's testimony and that of his father, with that of three witnesses called to corroborate his own testimony regarding his employment with different people after his first accident, comprises all the lay testimony offered by him. A.C. Bradford, his foreman at the time he worked for Swift Company, also testified, but his testimony is merely to the effect that plaintiff complained to him the day after the alleged injury and he had had no other report from him. The testimony in the case otherwise consists of that of several doctors, some of it of expert character, in which we find a unanimity of opinion with the exception of Dr. Robert Frazar, who attended the plaintiff at the time of his injury at high school.

Dr. Watkins states that he examined plaintiff on July 29, 1938, which would be the date after his alleged injury. He looked at plaintiff's wrist and except for a slight deviation of the ulna on the exterior it appeared to be normal. The movements were perfectly free although he complained of some pain. In reply to a question which he asked, plaintiff told him that he had sprained his wrist. He found no swelling, no cuts or bruises of any kind. He placed the wrist in a splint because the patient complained and in such cases, the usual treatment is rest, which apparently can best be obtained by having the injured member immobilized. He then sent him to be X-rayed, and states that the X-ray picture showed an old healed fracture of the radius and an old fracture of the styloid process of the ulna. It bore no evidence which would lead anyone to believe that there had been a new injury. He kept the plaintiff under observation, saw him nine times up to September 13, 1938, when he told him he ought to go back to work. He is definitely of the opinion that he has no disability to do hard manual work.

Dr. McKinney, who made the X-ray pictures, testifies that they show a fracture of long duration and that complete repair had taken place in the radius. A fragment still remained disunited in the ulna and never will become united because the surface has become glazed. He is of the opinion that the fracture shown could not have been less than two years old. On October 9, 1939, he made another X-ray of the plaintiff's wrist and saw no difference in the condition which existed at the time he made the other X-ray in July, 1938. He states that he cannot say what effect the fall plaintiff claims to have had on July 28, 1938 had, but he knows that it did not cause a fracture as he contends. It did not change the condition of the bone at all and there is no evidence of recent injury.

Dr. R.P.

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3 So. 2d 193, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-swift-co-lactapp-1941.