Tate v. George A. Fuller Co.

143 So. 550
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1932
DocketNo. 1025.
StatusPublished

This text of 143 So. 550 (Tate v. George A. Fuller 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
Tate v. George A. Fuller Co., 143 So. 550 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinions

LE BLANC, J.

Plaintiff, John M. Tate, worked for a few days for George Fuller Company, one of the defendants herein, while that company was engaged in constructing the new capitol building at Baton Rouge, La. On February 20, 1931, he was working on a night crew, spotting piles. His position was under the pile driver, and while there, at his work, he was struck. As a result of the blow, he alleges that he suffered a fracture of the skull, also of two vertebrae of the spine, and also a rib.

He instituted this suit for compensation against his employer, and, alleging that the Union Indemnity Company carried the employer’s liability insurance covering the risk, he made that company party defendant and prays for judgment against both, in solido. His claim is for total, permanent, disability. He alleges that he was being paid at the rate of $3 per day and working seven days a week, and prays that his compensation be fixed at $13.65 per week for a period of 400 weeks. 1-Ie also asks that the fees of the expert and medical witnesses used by him in the preparation and trial of the suit be fixed and taxed as costs.

Both defendants admit that plaintiff was employed as he alleged and that he was injured while so employed, but aver that his injury was restricted to a fracture of the skull which has entirely healed and that he has fully recovered. In the alternative, they plead that his disability is only temporary and partial and that he is able to do work of some reasonable character. They both dispute the rate of pay which he alleges he was receiving, averring instead that he was only being paid $18 per week.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants, in solido, decreeing him to be a total disability and entitled to compensation at the rate of $11.70 per week during his period of disability, not beyond 400 weeks, however. The judgment allows a credit of $152.10, being compensation received by plaintiff during the time defendants recognized their liability. The defendants appealed, and plaintiff has answered asking for an increase in the rate of compensation to the amount demanded in his petition.

In considering this case, we find, in the first place, that in the plaintiff who prosecutes this claim we have a rather eccentric character whose testimony has to be read in the light of the- facts revealed by his cross-examination, most of which are admitted by him. We learn that on a certain occasion, not so long before his injury, in order to pretend to his wife that he had been held up, he cut himself with a razor blade, hit himself on the head with a brick, and tied his hands behind his back. He was found unconscious in this condition at about 9 o’clock at night. He had no other explanation to offer for such actions save that it was a bit of foolishness and that he was drunk. His own testimony, however, shows that it was after these things had happened that he started drinking. Of course it is a fact, in this case, that he was actually hurt by the falling roller and it cannot be said that he is altogether pretending; but we do believe that his actions just referred to open the door to some slight suspicion about the whole of his testimony, and lead us to consider him as a person likely to exaggerate his trouble.

It was, as already stated, on February 20, 1931, that he was struck on the head by the falling roller. He was attended to by Dr. T. B. Bird, who testified that he sustained a fracture of the vault of the skull for which *551 he treated him, in a hospital, ior approximately one month. After that period, he permitted him to go home, confined him to resting in bed for two weeks, after which time he was to report to him again. Dr. Bird states positively that plaintiff at this time made no reference whatsoever to any injury to his spine, and he cannot conceive of so severe an injury as a fracture of 'two vertebrae being overlooked. He says further that the pain from such an injury would have been greatest right after the injury and would have gradually decreased. ■ This appears to us, as laymen, as most plausible. Nevertheless, it is not until two months after that we have positive proof that the plaintiff did complain about his back in a letter written to Dr. Bird in which he informs the doctor that he cannot report to him as he should at that time because his back hurts him too badly. Plaintiff’s mother testifies that she spoke to Dr. Bird' about her son’s back injury the day after the accident. She says that Dr. Bird showed her an X-ray of the skull and explained it to her, and that she “asked him to please do something for his back,” and the doctor answered that he could not say what the trouble was, but supposed that it was a shock and that he would get all right. It is difficult to understand, if the injury to the back was called to Dr. Bird’s attention, why he would have wanted to overlook it. He certainly realized the severity of the skull injury, and it would have made no difference whatever at the time in the rate of compensation plaintiff was to receive, as the skull injury of itself rendered him totally disabled.

Plaintiff undoubtedly has some trouble with two of the vertebrae of the spine, the eighth and ninth thoracic veretebrae of the back, as some of the experts refer to them, but the important question is to ascertain whether the condition results from a fracture caused by the fall of this heavy roller on his head, as alleged in his petition. The decision of that question depends on an interpretation of the expert medical testimony in the case.

Plaintiff placed three experts on the stand, Drs. M. D. Ratcliff, J. A. Carruthers, and T. M. Berry. A like number appeared for the defendants. They were Drs. Ernest C. Samuel, L. J. Williams, and J. C. Menendez. Drs. Ratcliff, Samuel, and Williams are expert radiologists; Dr. Carruthers is an eye, ear, and nose specialist; Dr. Berry is a general practitioner; and Dr. Menendez also does a general practice but also knows how to read X-ray plates.

Dr. Ratcliff, who lives at McComb, Miss., testifying from the X-ray picture of plaintiff’s spine which was made by himself, says that it showed a decrease in length of the eighth and ninth thoracic vertebrae of about a half inch, and that the two vertebrae had been lately fractured. He is firmly of the opinion that the fracture exists and is shown by the X-ray. In fact, he states that there is no question in his mind about the two vertebrae having been lately fractured. On cross-examination he says that it is possible to have a fracture of the vertebrae without a shortening, but there could not be a shortening without a fracture. This, however, is not the reason why he concluded there was a fracture in this case. Here, he says, it is indicated by a line of rare-fication passing through the vertebrae. We observe, however, that shortly after having made this rather positive statement about there always being a fracture where there was a shortening, on being asked whether there were other causes than fractures that could make one vertebrae appear shorter than the others, he answers: “Xes,.

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143 So. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-george-a-fuller-co-lactapp-1932.