Thomas v. Bethlehem Steel Co.

200 So. 655, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 71
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1941
DocketNo. 2201.
StatusPublished

This text of 200 So. 655 (Thomas v. Bethlehem Steel 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
Thomas v. Bethlehem Steel Co., 200 So. 655, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 71 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

The purpose of the suit is to recover -compensation in the sum of $8,000 for total -and permanent disability on the basis of 400 weeks at the maximum rate of $20 per week, plus $250 medical expenses, on account of a hernia alleged to have been produced by an injury received on September 15, 1939, while plaintiff was working for the defendant company on the Mississippi River Bridge above Baton Rouge.

The defense raises two principal questions of fact; viz, whether or not plaintiff suffered an injury on September- 15, 1939, which produced the hernia; or whether plaintiff sustained this hernia in October, 1937, while working for the Baton Rouge Sash & Door Works. It seems to be conceded that plaintiff now has a right inguinal hernia. The plaintiff claims that this hernia was produced by the injury which he received on September 15, 1939, while working for defendant, but the defendant denies that plaintiff had an accident or sustained an injury on the above date and while in its employ, and alleges and contends that plaintiff’s present hernia and consequent disability therefrom resulted from an injury which he received in October, 1937, while working for another employer.- No other .issues..are raised in the case, and it is practically conceded that if plaintiff did suffer this hernia while working for the defendant as ✓aforesaid, he is entitled to compensation on the basis set out in his petition.

The trial judge, in a long and carefully considered opinion, reached the conclusion that plaintiff had failed to prove with sufficient certainty that he received an injury on September 15, 1939, which produced the hernia, and he further found that plaintiff’s hernia resulted from an injury which he received in October, 1937, while working for the Baton Rouge Sash & Door Works. From a judgment which rejected his demands, plaintiff has appealed, and in a very earnest and forceful argument, orally and in brief, his counsel strenuously insist that the trial judge committed manifest error in his finding of fact, and they urge us to reverse this finding and grant their client compensation.

The record is voluminous, and it would serve no useful purpose for us to attempt to analyze and discuss all of the lay and medical testimony in detail. We believe it will be more conducive to clarity and brevity for us to discuss first the strongest and most convincing ■ facts and circumstances which seem to support plaintiff’s claim, and then consider the most important and persuasive facts, and circum *656 stances which appear to justify the conclusions of the trial judge.

In the first place, about ten days before plaintiff claims to have been injured he was examined by defendant’s physician, Dr. Lorio, and was found to be in good physical condition. Dr. Lorio testified that he examined plaintiff for a hernia at that time and inserted his finger in the inguinal rings and had the patient put pressure on these parts which is the usual method of examination for hernia. While Dr. Lorio could not remember his examination of this particular individual, he signed a certificate to the effect that he had examined him and found him physically fit for employment. The doctor testified that he examined quite a number of men for employment and he cannot remember the details of each case, but he is quite sure that he examined this plaintiff for hernia as he examined all prospective employees for hernia.

Plaintiff was also examined twice by Dr. Nelkin, who was assisting Dr. Lorio in examinations for the defendant company and other employers. One of -these examinations was made on February 3, 1938, for the Kansas City Bridge Company, and Dr. Nelkin’s report of that examination shows no hernia. Plaintiff was again examined by Dr. Nelkin for this same company on January 24, 1939, and was passed as physically fit for employment, however, on the report card of this examination there is the notation, “rings slightly enlarged”.

Both Dr. Lorio and Dr. Nelkin testified that enlarged rings did not mean that the person had a hernia, but they both state that some doctors will not pass an employee for hard work who has enlarged rings. Therefore, according to the examinations of these two doctors, plaintiff did not have a hernia in February, 1938 (shortly after he was injured in October, 1937, while working at the Baton Rouge Sash & Door Works), nor in January and the early part of September, 1939. All that it ’could be said that these examinations revealed were enlarged inguinal rings.

The trial judge reached the conclusion that, owing to the large number of cases examined by Drs. Lorio and Nelkin and the necessarily more or less routine examinations which they were required to make, a small hernia could have been present and could have escaped their notice. We may add to this the further observation that these two doctors seem to have a somewhat different idea as to just what is a hernia from the opinion of some other doctors. In fact, we gather from the testimony of all the doctors that there is room for a difference of opinion as to what is and what is not a hernia where the inguinal rings are enlarged and dilated, or the hernia is small and not fully developed. Furthermore, as the trial judge stated, not all hernias will incapacitate from work, doctors having different opinions as to the incapacity produced by the various types of hernia.

Another fact which appears to support plaintiff’s claim is that he worked more or less regularly from the time he quit the Baton Rouge Sash & Door Works in the early part of 1938 until he claimed to have been injured in September, 1939, and during all this time, so far as the record shows, he was not disabled on account of a hernia nor did he make any complaint of any pain or discomfort caused from his work. The answer of defendant to this contention is that the small hernia which plaintiff had all during this time did not cause him sufficient trouble or discomfort to prevent him from carrying on his work in a normal way. In explanation of this fact, it may be plausibly urged that the plaintiff could have performed his regular work with this small inguinal hernia without serious pain and discomfort, and this explanation is not inconsistent with the medical testimony.

Then we have the testimony of the plaintiff himself that he received the accident on September 15, 1939, which produced the, hernia. His account of the accident in substance is as follows: He and three other men were working on a machine called a “hell dog” used to drive out pins and rivets. This machine operates like an air gun, the compressed air moves a piston or plunger back and forth in a barrel so as to strike a heavy blow at one end of the instrument. The instrument is three or four feet long and three or four inches in diameter. Plaintiff was holding the barrel of this hell dog, and the jar or vibration resulting from the operation of the instrument caused a pain in his lower right side between 12 :30 and 1:30 o’clock on September 15th, just after the noon hour. He says that when the pain struck him he gritted his teeth and threw his hand to his side. This was the last pin driven with the hell dog and the sub-foreman told him to catch the rest of the pins that were driv *657 en out with a chisel. He did not tell the foreman nor any of the men working with him about the pain because he did not think it was serious.

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200 So. 655, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-bethlehem-steel-co-lactapp-1941.