Skidmore v. Drumon Fine Foods, Inc.

119 So. 2d 523, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 1416
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 1960
DocketNo. 21460
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 119 So. 2d 523 (Skidmore v. Drumon Fine Foods, 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
Skidmore v. Drumon Fine Foods, Inc., 119 So. 2d 523, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 1416 (La. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

Plaintiff, Percy Skidmore, instituted this suit against the defendants, Drumon Fine Foods, Inc., his former employer, and Hardware Mutual Casualty Company, its compensation insurer, endeavoring to recover workmen’s compensation at the rate of $35 per week for 400 weeks, medical expenses, penalties and attorney’s fees, for an injury suffered during the course and scope of his employment, which necessitated the amputation of part of his left ring finger. Plaintiff asserted that after severance of the digit, a sensitivity developed in the stump, rendering him incapable of working without pain.

Defendants answered admitting the em ■ ployment and accident, but asserted that the painful condition could be alleviated by a minor operation, entailing little pain and no danger to plaintiff, and that plaintiff's, refusal to submit to treatment rendered him ineligible for compensation benefits because he failed to cooperate.

From a judgment awarding compensation to the plaintiff, the defendant appealed,.

[524]*524On the first appeal1 this court set aside the judgment of the lower court and remanded the case for further medical investigation, which, the record indicated, could determine the nature or cause of plaintiff’s complaints, and thus enable us to ascertain whether plaintiff should submit to surgery in order to eliminate the pain, which is the cause of his disability.

The unresolved medical enigma which prompted us to rematid the case posed for. our consideration the question of whether plaintiff was suffering from a neuroma or a causalgia, the former, a minor disorder restricted to the affected area which may be corrected by harmless minor surgery, while the latter requires an operation termed a stellate gangliectomy, considered as major surgery. Plaintiff had steadfastly refused to submit to tests 2 to determine his condition, and the medical testimony on the first trial, hereof indicated that a digital nerve block test could establish the cause of plaintiff’s pain.

In compliance with our order, plaintiff’s counsel tendered the claimant to Dr. Richard Levy, a neurosurgeon, who performed the digital nerve block test. Both Dr. Levy and Dr. James T. Nix, a general surgeon, testified after the test was performed, and the lower court again rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for compensation at the rate of $35 per week for the period of his disability, not to exceed 400 weeks, “subject to a credit for eight weeks compensation3 and subject to an additional credit of $329.30, “plus medical expenses of $165 and expert fees in the amount of $200 for Dr. Nix and $100 for Dr. J. A. Col-clough.

From this second judgment, defendants have prosecuted this appeal. Plaintiff filed an answer thereto and asserted that the judgment should be amended to correct the amount credited to the defendants, to include $2,500 medical fees, to increase the medical experts’ fees and to grant penalties and attorney’s fees to the plaintiff.

The medical facts are still disputed. In any event, Dr. Richard Levy, who performed the digital nerve block on May 25, 1959, described the procedure as follows:

“ * * * I carried out a digital nerve block, injecting three ccs of a local anesthetic, 2% zylocaine. That was on each side of the left ring finger at the metacarpel phalangeal junction. Within three to five minutes from the time of the injection, the patient had an anesthesia of the entire left ring finger. At this time I palpatafed and percussed and stuck with a pin the stump in an effort to learn of any pain. I did this with the patient’s head turned away from his hand. I could not elicit any pain in the stump by these manuevers.”

Dr. Levy positively stated this test pinpointed the cause of pain as a neuroma, [525]*525which may be removed by minor surgery. If the plaintiff had suffered from causalgia, Dr. Levy asserted, the pain would not have been alleviated after injection of a local anesthetic.

Dr. Nix also re-examined the patient after this test was made, but he retained his former opinion that plaintiff was suffering not only from neuroma, but also from minor causalgia. He claimed the digital nerve block is not a well accepted test to positively determine the presence of neuro-ma and negate causalgia; however, he did concede that the test performed by Dr. Levy indicated the presence of a neuroma as well as the causalgia. If the causalgia is present, he insists that surgery to remove the neuroma could aggravate the minor causalgia and convert it into major causalgia.

We are, therefore, still confronted with conflicting medical testimony, and the trial judge resolved the doubt in plaintiff’s favor by awarding compensation. The question now before us on appeal is whether this judgment of the lower court was so erroneous and unsupported by the evidence as to warrant a reversal by us.

Counsel for plaintiff contends that the claimant is entitled to maximum compensation benefits and should not be forced to submit to an operation to remove the neuro-mas, because, if causalgia is present, this condition might be aggravated. He further argues that the digital nerve block is not a conclusive test to rule out the presence of causalgia, and this can only be done by submitting plaintiff to the possibly dangerous test of injecting an anesthetic through the neck into the stellate ganglion, which, to some extent, might endanger the patient.

Defendant conversely asserts that the medical testimony preponderates to the effect that the digital nerve block has negated the existence of causalgia, and that the findings of Dr. Levy warrant the court’s ordering plaintiff to have the neuromas surgically removed.

Plaintiff’s own expert, Dr. John A. Col-clough, a neurosurgeon, recommended that the digital nerve block be performed. Pie testified:

“The other test which I recommended that Dr. Nix perform was an injection of the nerve on each side of the finger to see if that would relieve the pain. It would not relieve the pain of a causalgia, but, would relieve the pain of a neuroma. * * * ”

When asked whether surgery to remove a neuroma would aggravate a causalgia condition, Dr. Colclough said that he did not believe that the causalgic condition would be worsened.

Since we are of ths opinion that the medical testimony preponderates to the effect that a digital nerve block is an effective test to determine the presence of a neuroma, and since this test affirmed the plaintiff’s condition as neuroma, no useful purpose would be served in engaging in any further protracted discussion of the medical testimony adduced in the trial court after the remand hereof. We are convinced from all of the testimony that plaintiff’s condition may be completely cured by a relatively simple operation. The operation is in no sense dangerous or attendant by unusual risks and it is reasonably sure of success; therefore, plaintiff is obligated to submit to this surgery without cost to him by an expert of his choice within sixty days from the date on which this judgment becomes final.4 We believe that it is only fitting and proper that plaintiff undergo this minor surgery so as to correct and relieve his existing disability in order to restore himself to a state of usefulness, which, of course, will inure to the benefit of himself, his family and society.

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 2d 523, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 1416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skidmore-v-drumon-fine-foods-inc-lactapp-1960.