Sparks v. Long Bell Lumber Co.

175 So. 134, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 281
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 1937
DocketNo. 1717.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 So. 134 (Sparks v. Long Bell Lumber 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
Sparks v. Long Bell Lumber Co., 175 So. 134, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 281 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this suit to recover compensation under the Employers’ Liability Law of this state, from the Long Bell Lumber Company and the Alexander & Bolton Insurance Agency, Inc., for total, permanent disability arising out of an injury alleged to have been sustained by him while performing the duties for which he was employed by the said Long Bell Lumber Company. He sued the Alexander & Bolton Insurance Agency, Inc., as the insurance carrier of his employer.

He alleges that he was employed as an edgerman in the saw mill of the Long Bell Lumber Company at DeRidder, La., and that on the ISth day of October, 1935, while discharging the duties of his employment, at about 3 :30 o’clock in the afternoon, particles of sawdust flew and lodged in his left eye. He complained of the injury to the company’s doctor who gave him certain medicine to be used as drops in his eye, and avers that although he used the medicine as directed and continued to be .treated, he nevertheless eventually lost the sight out of that eye. He alleges further that his right eye is partially affected and that as a result of this great impairment of vision he is unable to perform any work of a reasonable character by which he might earn his livelihood and therefore his case is one of total permanent disability for which he is entitled to recover 65 per cent, of the amount of the wages he earned, that is $10.92, for the full period of 400 weeks. He also alleges that he subsequently sustained another injury to his head immediately over his left eye, but there seems to be no intention on his part to connect that injury with the disability he claims.

The defendant Long Bell Lumber Company denies that plaintiff had sustained such an injury as he complains of and which caused him the loss of his eye. It avers, to the contrary, that the condition of his eye is due entirely to natural and. other causes *135 for which it can in no manner be held responsible for compensation or otherwise.

The defendant Alexander & Bolton Insurance Agency, Inc., deny any liability whatsoever on the ground that it is in no manner engaged in the general and liability insurance business in Louisiana or elsewhere and that its business is confined solely to soliciting insurance as agent or broker for various insurance companies throughout the country and that its only connection with the insured is to collect a premium on the business which it secures for its principal.

Upon trial of the case on the issues as thus made, the lower court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against both defendants, in solido, as for the loss of the left eye and in accordance with the provisions of the compensation statute, awarded him compensation for the period of 100 weeks at the rate as prayed for by him. Both defendants have appealed.

It may be proper to state here that the judgment against the Alexander & Bolton Insurance Agency, Inc., appears to have been rendered through error or misconception as there was no proof offered in support of the demand as made .against that defendant. Plaintiff now concedes that he has no recourse against that insurance agency on the claim he presents and that the judgment in so far as it condemns that defendant is erroneous.

Plaintiff answered the appeal taken by the Long Bell Lumber Company, asking that the judgment be amended so as to award him compensation as for total, permanent disability instead of for the loss of an eye only.

The only issues which now confront the court are whether the loss of use of the plaintiff’s left eye resulted from accidental means while he was engaged in performing services for his employer, as he alleges, and if it did, whether his compensation should be limited to the loss of one eye as held by the district judge, or is he entitled, on the other hand, to compensation as for total and permanent disability because of a partial affection of his right eye.

It is admitted by the defendant that plaintiff is totally blind in the left eye and consequently has no use of that member whatever. It is well established by the evidence, however, that his right eye is in nowise affected and that his vision, so far as that eye is concerned, is perfectly normal. This latter fact is established by the testimony of Dr. D. C. lies, eye specialist, who examined the plaintiff’s eyes and made the necessary tests, and that testimony is not contradicted. We find no difficulty in agreeing with the learned trial judge, assuming that plaintiff is'entitled to judgment, in his holding that the award has to be restricted to the loss of the use of an eye, for which he was properly allowed 100 weeks’ compensation.

Plaintiff’s counsel in pressing his demand for compensation as for total, permanent disability relies strongly upon the decision of the Supreme-Court in the case of Knispel v. Gulf States Utilities Co., Inc., 174 La. 401, 141 So. 9. But the result of the accident to the employee in that case was not at all of the same nature as the one with which we are here concerned. In the Knispel Case, plaintiff sustained an injury which produced a condition known as diplopia or double vision.. As a matter of fact, he did not suffer the loss of the use of any one particular eye, but they were both so affected that when looking at an object, he saw double. In other words, he saw two objects instead of the only one he was looking at. Under the peculiar facts of the case, his disability was classed as one of a total and permanent nature and he was awarded compensation for the full period of 400 weeks. Here, however, we are dealing with an accident in which the employee has lost the use. of an eye for which our statute makes a specific allowance of compensation for a period of 100 weeks. See Act No. 20 of 1914, § 8, subsec. 1, par. (d), as amended by Act No. 242 of 1928.

The other issue in the case presents a question of fact on which we find ourselves again in agreement with the finding of the district judge. The question is, Pías the plaintiff shown that the loss of his left eye resulted from an accident which occurred while he was engaged in the course and scope of his employment?

The testimony is positive and not disputed th.at plaintiff is totally blind as far as vision in the left eye is concerned and that the blindness is caused by scar tissue from an ulcer of the cornea. If the ulcer which brought about this condition came as a result of sawdust which flew in his eye, as he claims, on October 15, 1935, there can be no doubt that he is entitled to compensation as it is shown that sawdust did blow in his eye on that day while he was running the edger in defendant’s sawmill. On the other hand, if, as defendant contends, the ulcer came about as a result of some natural cause, such *136 as a disease of some kind, and had no causal connection whatever with the sawdust accident, then he should not recover.

There is not any testimony in the record which may be said to contradict the plaintiff’s, that on the afternoon mentioned, sawdust did blow in his eye and that before he left the mill he went to the company’s physician and complained about the injury he had suffered. The physician, Dr. T. R. Sartor, corroborates his testimony to the extent that plaintiff did call at his office that afternoon and complained to him and while he is not positive about it, he thinks that he did remove sawdust from his eye.

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 134, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparks-v-long-bell-lumber-co-lactapp-1937.