Simmonds v. Austin Oil Co.

2 La. App. 535, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 189
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 1925
DocketNo. 2329
StatusPublished

This text of 2 La. App. 535 (Simmonds v. Austin Oil 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
Simmonds v. Austin Oil Co., 2 La. App. 535, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 189 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CARVER, J.

Plaintiff, an electrical worker, 44 years old, sues for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act and its amendments (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended by Act No. 43 of 1922) for 300 weeks for injuries alleged to have been received in an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by the defendant.

The answer is general denial.

The District Judge allowed $18 a week during disability, not to exceed 300 weeks.

Defendant appeals, and plaintiff asks damages for frivolous appeal.

Plaintiff describes the accident as follows :

“I attempted to open a switch on a 550-volt circuit and did so and my foot slipped off the board in the building for a floor, only one board there, and I fell about fourteen inches down and fumbled the switch, and there was a flash immediately and burned my hand along in here, burned this nail and it came off.”

He further states that his wages were $200 per month, besides water, gas, light and the use of a house, and occasional use of an automobile. Also that he had not been able to hold a job since the accident. That his occupation requires careful work with the injured hand, the right; that it is now useless; that in doing armature work the wires have to be placed very carefully, demanding the use of the ends of the fingers; that he can do some electrical work with the left hand but not much; that since the accident, June 19, 1924, to the time of the trial, December 12, 1924, he “had worked about 30 days; 15 days picked up odd jobs”; had not had regular position but only little repair jobs; had earned about $100 during that time; that his hand and arm tingled up to the elbow; that he is right-handed; that he was treated by Dr. Collins from June 19 to August 1; that he worked for defendant for thirty days after the accident; that he could have gotten work in Shreveport but was not able to do it; that he drew salary from Austin Oil Company from the time of his employment — four or five months before the accident — until he left there, about the first day of August; that there was nothing wrong with his arm or right hand before the accident; that he could do all kinds of electrical work before that and had done so for twenty years; that now he cannot handle a small screwdriver with any accuracy, and cannot do the w'ork in relaying.

As to his discharge, he says that Mr. Austin, one Sunday before the first day of August, “called me to the office and told me after the first he would not. need my services any more; I suppose I disagreed with the way he handled things, or wished for me to handle things there, not particularly my view of it, no particular {rouble.”

“Q. A' disagreement about the handling of the business between you and Mr. Austin?
“A. Well, I discussed with him what I wanted to do regarding changes around in the plant and over the refinery tanks, told him that I would like to go ahead with the work, and he just give me two or three men to go ahead and do the work, and he treated me with absolute arrogance, ignored me.”

He says this was a few days before the first of August.

Dr. J. D. Young was appointed by the court on the day before the trial to examine the plaintiff and made his report, which is as follows:

“A man of good physical health, with no mental disturbance of any type, normal in every way with the exception of the ex-tensor tendons of right hand. Over an area extending from just below the level of the wrist to the ends of all four fingers of this hand there is some atrophy of the small interosseous muscles with wasting of [537]*537the extensor tendons over this area, both superficial and deep. The tendons also show some adhesions which prevent their normal contraction and extension, producing to a marked degree disability in the use of these four fingers and hand. Over the distal area of these fingers there is absolutely no response to electrical stimulae, a loss of feeling. The tendons show the first, degree of nerve degeneration supplying this area, little or no response to ferradic with only slight response to galvanic current. The normal hand shows contractions at 15 volts and 5 milliamperes. The injured hand responds only at 40 volts and 15 milliamperes. From the above X would conclude that this hand can be said to be negligible regarding the performance of any work requiring perfect co-ordination of muscles and that, as a result of the loss of sensation in the distal areas, the patient could easily unintentionally greatly suffer some damage of a serious nature when attempting to do electrical repair work. Condition permanent.”

Doctor Young also testified ás a witness:

“Regarding’ complete recovery, I think the chances are against it. This man I do not think will ever be much improved from the present condition, if any. The nerve, the peripheral nerve once destroyed by electricity, does not regenerate. I think that this man’s condition will be permanent With him, that he will be unable to do a fine type of work, with this hand, that requires ability to grasp and hold small objects, with any proficiency.”

He further testified that plaintiff lacked co-ordination of muscles; that co-ordination would likely not come back; that he also had a loss of sensation from the tips of the fingers; this he ascertained by testing him, “testing with different little things, then tapping him with the electric current, with his head turned, and there was no resistance or jerk when I applied a rather strong stimulant to the tips of the fingers.”

He states that he did not make his diagnosis from what the plaintiff told him but from his own examination; that plaintiff could do no fine work requiring the use of small instruments and at the same time requiring muscular strength and power; that one with plaintiff’s type of partial paralysis could not use a small screwdriver; that plaintiff had contraction of the tendons of all four fingers; that the contraction of the first finger is noticeable on examination but more easily determined by the electrical apparatus; that exercising the hand would not necessarily make it improve; that if the adhesion could be broken down by exercise the contraction would improve, but it is not possible to bring back the degenerated nerves; that he could <not tell that the burn was from the electricity except from what plaintiff told him; that the loss of sensation was confined to the tips of the fingers and from the dorsal surface only.

Asked:

“Is it always possible, Doctor, to determine accurately and definitely the extent of an injury to a man’s nervous system?”

He answered:

“Fairly accurately. We are able to locate lesions, and what nerves are involved, and what nerves are injured, whether motor or sensatory nerves.”

He further states that nothing was wrong with the nerves or muscles of plaintiff’s arm above the wrist.

* * * *
“Q. I will ask you, Doctor, if that condition Would have anything to do with his inability to perform electrical work?
“A. That would not, but the condition of the loss of sensation in the tips of the fingers, an4 we «have certain types and conditions of nervous condition where the patient has lost the sensation as to heat or cold, and you can place those parts in boiling water and they do not feel it, and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 La. App. 535, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmonds-v-austin-oil-co-lactapp-1925.