Taylor v. Southern Carbon Co.

153 So. 597, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 633
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 1934
DocketNo. 4732.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 So. 597 (Taylor v. Southern Carbon 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
Taylor v. Southern Carbon Co., 153 So. 597, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 633 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff was accidentally injured on February 1, 1933, while in the employment of defendant. He brings suit to recover compensation as in case of permanent total disability for 65 per cent of his weekly wage for 400 weeks. He was injured while assisting a fellow workman replace a broken wheel in one of defendant’s “hothouses.” He was pulling down on an iron bar used as a lever to elevate a channel so that the wheel could be placed thereunder, when it suddenly slipped, causing his body to lunge forward about halfway to the ground. He alleges that his back was injured as a result of this sudden shift of movement by his body, and that immediately after the accident he felt something give way or tear loose in his back, followed by severe pain therein,' especially on the right side, and swelling over the area of the pain; that he remained at his work the balance of the day in the hope that the pain would subside and his condition improve; that on the following day, the pain and suffering having increased, he reported his condition to defendant and was instructed to report to its physician in the city of Monroe, La., Dr. George W. Wright, which he did. The specific injuries he claims to have received as a consequence of said accident, because of which he alleges permanent total disability entitling him to the compensation sued for, are: That his back was weakened; that he is unable to stoop over, bend forward, or raise his right aim above his head; that numerous muscles, ligaments, tendons, nerves, and other body tissues were severed, tom, ruptured, and bruised, and that, although this condition is generally in his ■back, it is more severe in the upper one-third of the latissimus dorsi muscle; that as a result thereof he suffers intense pain continuously in that part of his body. He avers that the disability resulting from these injuries will continue the balance of his life, preventing him from performing manual labor or any other so.rt of work for profit or gain.

Defendant admits that plaintiff was in its employ on February 1, 1933, and that on that date he complained of a slight accident, but denies that said accident occurred in the manner and was of the serious nature alleged by plaintiff. It is averred that plaintiff’s weekly wage for the year prior to his injnry *598 averaged $10.86, and that if he is entitled to any compensation at all same should be based on this recompense. In all other respects the material allegations of fact of plaintiff’s cause of action are denied.

Before the taking of testimony was begun on the day of trial, defendant, under full reservations, offered to pay plaintiff compensation based on a wage of $10.86 per week from February 1, 1033, until date of filing of suit (May 2, 1933), with interest and cost of suit to time of said offer. No legal tender was made for the reason that plaintiff stated that same, if made, would be refused.

From a judgment for plaintiff for compensation at the rate of $7.06 per week from February 2, 1933, to July 9, 1933, he prosecutes this appeal. Defendant answered the appeal, and prays us to restrict the judgment in plaintiff’s favor, if any is given him, to the amount tendered .before the trial began.

When Dr. Wright examined plaintiff the day after he was hurt, he found contusions of the back, particularly of the lower portion, on right side. No part of the skin was broken. Definite evidence of contusion was manifested by swelling and discoloration of the skin, impaired and painful function; the swelling being more pronounced in the small of the back, right side, lateral to the spine. Plaintiff complained of presence of pain over the entire contused area, especially lower portion. Dr. Wright ministered unto plaintiff for twenty-seven consecutive days, and thereafter every alternate day. The treatment consisted of fixation and immobilization of the lower 'back, and counter irritation, or heat applications. He did not find that the latissimus dorsi had been partially torn loose or stripped at a point below the scapula, as contended by plaintiff and testified to by the physicians sworn in his behalf. On April 1st he told plaintiff that his condition had improved so rapidly that with the aid of the use of a properly fitted belt around the small of the back he could return to work, and that he should wear the belt for about six months. He did not procure the belt for him because plaintiff said he did not think he was able to work, and for the additional reason that when he next returned for treatment he only complained of pain being next to the shoulder blade where a belt could not be effectively used.

No physician, besides Dr. Wright, examined or treated plaintiff until May 18th. On this date he was physically examined by Dm Pierce and Bendel of the city of Monroe. Drs. Coon and Gray, at request of his counsel, examined him on June 7th and again on June 14th, day previous to trial. Plaintiff’s physicians are of the opinion that the latis-simus dorsi muscle was stripped or tom loose from its fastening under the shoulder blade, and that he was unable to do heavy manual labor when the case was tried, while the other physicians, testifying for defendant, are of a different opinion, and are satisfied that before the case was tried plaintiff’s condition was such that he could resume the work he was engaged in before being injured, requiring the handling of sacks of carbon black weighing not over twelve pounds. They were unable to discover any objective symptoms to justify the pain and inability professed by plaintiff. Dr. Gray assigned as objective symptoms of the stripping of the muscle a small area near the right shoulder blade, slightly higher than the corresponding area on left side, and a dimple in the skin near thereto. Defendant’s doctors explain that the raised area was simply the evidence of the muscle being better developed on the right side, as is generally the case, than on the left side, and that the dimple was simply a contour of the surface likely to be found in any one. Dr. Gray also supports his opinion ■by his finding that when plaintiff executed certain movements of the shoulder and arm there was absence of contraction of this muscle, indicating the presence of some abnormality. In this conclusion he is also contradicted by defendant’s physicians.

Dr. Gray referred plaintiff to a roentgen-ologist for an X-ray picture and study. The report of this specialist discloses that all the ribs, both .scapulse and other bones of the thoracic group, were in normal relationship and alignment, with no evidence of fracture, dislocation, or injury, and no indication of pathological changes of any kind. Therefore, any thought that plaintiff’s trouble was possibly traceable to bone' injury had to be dismissed.

Plaintiff, when interrogated thereon, stoutly denied that he had done, or was able to do, any heavy work. It is shown that before this suit was filed he frequently walked from his home to the city of Monroe, a distance of nine miles; that he often hoed in his garden, and on one occasion assisted another man in the removal of gas meter orifices for three hours, requiring the use of both hands and arms, considerable physical effort, and straining; that on one occasion he “hung” on the running board of an automobile for a considerable distance and jump *599 ed off of it wMie in motion; and that on another occasion he went several miles from home and fished from a small boat all day, sleeping on some boards for a bed the night following.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jones v. Hunsicker
177 So. 262 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 So. 597, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-southern-carbon-co-lactapp-1934.