Seur v. Rumbaugh

6 La. App. 587, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 187
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1927
DocketNo. 2994
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 La. App. 587 (Seur v. Rumbaugh) 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
Seur v. Rumbaugh, 6 La. App. 587, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 187 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

STATEMENT OP THE CASE

REYNOLDS, J.

Plaintiff sued C. ■ E. Rumbaugh and the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company for $20.00 a week for four hundred weeks beginning June 2, 1926, with legal interest on each payment from its maturity until paid, and for $250.00 for medical services, as for permanent total disability to do work of any reasonable character.

He alleges that he was employed by defendant, .C. E. Rumbaugh, at a daily wage of $12.00 as rig builder and that in an accident growing out of and in the course of his employment on May 26, 1926, his chest was mashed and bruised, his collar bone broken, and the hones in his back between the shoulder blades broken and internal hemorrhages in and around the lungs and other vital organs caused, and he thereby permanently disabled to do work of any reasonable character.

He also alleges that he has expended or will have to expend $250.00 for medical services.

He further alleges that the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company has insured defendant Rumbaugh against loss by reason of his injuries and agreed to pay plaintiff such sums as he may be entitled to under the Workmen’s Compensation Law.

The defense is that plaintiff had fully recovered from the effects of his injuries and was again able to do work of any reasonable character and that he had been paid compensation during the time of his disability.

It is further alleged that defendant, O. E. Rumbaugh, had ¡expended $604.75 for medical attention rendered to plaintiff, and he asked that the excess of $354.75 over the $250.00 that he was legally liable for be deducted from any additional compensation that might be awarded him by the court'.

On the issues the case was tried and there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants in solido for $20.00 a week during his disability, not exceeding three hundred weeks, the first payment being decreed June 2, 1926, with legal interest on each payment from its maturity until paid.

It was further decreed that the fees of plaintiff’s attorney under the contract between them be fixed at one-third of the compensation awarded plaintiff.

And it was further decreed that the fee of Dr. M. L. Adair,, a witness sworn as a medical expert, be fixed at $25.00.

Prom this judgment both defendants have appealed.

OPINION

Defendants set up four grounds of alleged error in the judgment appealed from, namely:

1. That the lower court erred in not restricting the award of compensation [589]*589to one year from June 16, 1926; the record showing conclusively that by that time plaintiff will have fully recovered from his injuries and be able to engage in the same occupations as before the injury.
2. That the lower court erred in recognizing and enforcing the contract between plaintiff and his attorney awarding the latter as fees one-third of the compensation allowed plaintiff; the amount of fee contracted for being prohibited by law.
3. The lower court erred in fixing the fee of the witness, M. L. Adair, at $25.00, there having been no rule taken on defendants to fix the fee other than the fee allowed by law, and there being no basis in the record for the allowance of the fee fixed.
4. The lower court erred in not allowing defendants as a credit on the compensation awarded plaintiff the difference of $354.75 paid by defendant, C. E. Rumbaugh, for medical attention to plaintiff in excess of the $250.00 amount of medical attention he was legally obligated to furnish plaintiff.

Considering the alleged errors in the order assigned:

I.

Plaintiff testified (page 16):

“Q. Now, do you suffer any pain at this time?
“A. I have it all the time.
* # * *
“Q. Since the accident. Where do you suffer that pain?
“A. Well, this here collar bone and clavicle bone. It draws my shoulder and head a little bit.. It .is. short and it. gives me some trouble; that is, in the use of my arm, you know. And I have a pain right here.
* * * &
“Q. Going around to your back, extending all the way through?
“A. All the way through. It is a little to one side of where that clavicle is lapped there.
“Q. Did you suffer any pain before receiving this accident?
“A. No, sir. ■
“Q. How about your strength; are you as strong now as before this occurred?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Have you done any work since this accident at all?
“A. Nothing; only just around the house, or something like that.”

Doctor M. L. Adair testified (pages 2-11):

“Q. Doctor, does your examination of the spinal column show part of the bone missing?
“A. It appears that the spinous processes are missing as they do not show as in the other vertebrae.
“Q. What are the spinal processes?
“A. That is the spike that proceeds backward in the vertebrae.
“Q. That is the bone itself?
“A. That is the backbone that you feel when you put your hand on the patient. You feel in the back and feel little spines.
“Q. How many of those are missing, from the x-ray standpoint?
“A. There are three that we do not see in the plate.
“Q. Is that condition permanent, doctor?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Any chance to grow any more processes from the backbone in that place?
“A. There is not.
% jf: $ sj:
“Q. Now this — what do you call the collar bone?
“A. The clavicle.
“Q. How low down is that break?
■ “A. About the junction of the middle and inner third, a little further out than that.
“Q. That is not in position, is it?
“A.. No, sir; that overlaps.
[590]*590“Q. How could you get that hack where it would not overlap; could that be done?
“A. Well that could be done by open reduction; surgical operation.
“Q. He is not totally disabled at the present time for any kind of work, is he?
“A. No; I do not think so.
“Q. In his present condition, you think that he could do ordinary labor?
"A. I should think that he could do any kind of light work; indoor work; office work or labor that does not require too much use of his back for a while.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
6 La. App. 587, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seur-v-rumbaugh-lactapp-1927.