Trotti v. Natalbany Lumber Co.

144 So. 627
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 1932
DocketNo. 1061.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 144 So. 627 (Trotti v. Natalbany 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
Trotti v. Natalbany Lumber Co., 144 So. 627 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

Plaintiff obtained judgment against defendant company for $8,000 in compensation under the Employers’ Liability Act (Act No. 20 of 1014 as amended) for injury alleged to have resulted in total disability disqualifying him from doing any physical labor.

Defendant company appeals.

It is alleged by plaintiff that, while engaged in the service of the company, his foot caught in some grass or weeds, causing him to stumble with great violence on a railroad track of defendant company, which brought on “the dislocation of the sciatic nerve in his left hip”; that as a result of the fall he suffered a severe bruise and pain, but, thinking that the bruise was only slight, he continued on the two following days in the performance of his services; that the third day his pain was so acute that he consulted a physician, and learned from hjm that the injury would be permanent; and that it has since so proved.

This alleged fall occurred September 30, 1030. Dr. Thom, the record shows, is the physician who plaintiff consulted about three days after he had stumbled on the track.

Dr. Thom says, after this consultation, he saw plaintiff in his bed, and that he was complaining with acute pain, particularly in his left leg and hip. His primary impression, the doctor says, was that he had suffered a bruise of the hip, and that he had so reported. Further, the doctor testifies that he saw no black or blue marks on plaintiff, and prior to this statement says he did not see any objective symptoms on plaintiff, but that he appeared as suffering with excruciating pains. As plaintiff, according to this physician’s testimony, had no marks, black or blue, and no objective symptoms, there could hot have been any bruise or contusion, which always leave a discoloration of the skin or tissues. It must therefore have been a mere impression of the doctor, as he expresses it in his testimony, that led him to report a contusion-; and this disposes of Dr. Thom’s reference to plaintiff’s injury as being severe, as there is nothing in his evidence to support that statement. The fact is that Dr. Thom further testifies that he gave plaintiff something to relieve his pain, that he could not determine what it was, and referred him to Dr. Williams of Baton Rouge for an X-ray picture. It is therefore apparent that Dr. Thom was at a loss as to what he could ascribe the pains his patient was suffering with, and therefore referred him to a specialist that the cause of the trouble might be ascertained. Hence the symptoms of the trouble with which plaintiff was suffering appeared only from the pains he was experiencing, and were therefore merely subjective, and it may be stated here that there were no bruises on plaintiff’s body, as averred in his petition.

Dr. Thom testifies that the X-ray report indicated that plaintiff was suffering with hyperthropic arthritis of one of the bones in the hip, and that lie could not make any intelligent reading of the X-ray. As plaintiff continued to suffer, Dr. Thom referred him to Dr. Guessener of New Orleans, an expert in such masters, so Dr. Thom testifies. Both of these physicians, the record shows, were in the employ of defendant company.

On the 14th of October, 1930, plaintiff was examined by Dr. Guessener in his office in New Orleans, to whom he had reported as directed by Dr. Thom. There Were then no black or blue marks on plaintiff’s body according to Dr. Guessener, and who says that for an indication of a recent injury a physician would expect to find what is called “technically eccymosis, which means black and blue marks.” He explains that on grown persons the average time for the disappearance of such marks would be in ten or twelve days; in children sooner, and in older people as long as five weeks. At that time plaintiff was over fifty, and, as he fell on the track September 30, 1930, and was examined by Dr. Guessener October 14, 1930, these blue and black marks would have been seen by Dr. Guessener at the time of the examination had they been present. As a matter of fact, plaintiff does not testify that any such marks resulted from his fall, and, as there was no proof that any such existed, the allegation in plaintiff’s petition that he had suffered a bruise has no support, although, according to Dr. Guessener,' a physician would look for these black and blue marks for an indication of a recent injury to the hip.

The other allegation of plaintiff in his petition is that he suffered as a result of his fall a “dislocation of the sciatic nerve in his left hip.” Dr. Guessener, being questioned on this subject, says: “There is no such condition that' I know of as a dislocation of the sciatic nerve.” The only disturbance of this nerve, Dr. Guessener says, is when it is “stretched near the sacro-iliac joint.” As there was no proof that this sciatic nerve had been thus stretched or extended, and as no such disturbance as to its dislocation was known to Dr. Guessener, the allegation of the petition in reference thereto must also be disregarded from consideration.

The testimony having taken a wide range and without objection, we must look to other parts of the evidence to see if the proof *629 shows that there was a causal connection between the disability of which plaintiff complains, and the fall he alleges he suffered on the railroad track of defendant company on September 30, 1930.

Plaintiff testifies that he fell on that occasion, not on the rail of the track, but over the rail. There being no evidence to contradict that statement, we will accept is as true in proceeding to the analysis of the evidence.

It is admitted by plaintiff that he had fallen on his buttock in 1926, but in connection with that statement he says he had entirely recovered from its effects. Dr. Guessener testifies that, when he reported to him October 14, 1930, plaintiff told him he “sat on his left buttock hard on a cypress knee and had trouble ever since.” Although plaintiff was recalled as a witness, he does not deny that he made that statement to Dr. Guessener. It will be noticed this injury he suffered in 1926 was on the left side of his rump, and that in his fall near the rail he complains of an injury to his left hip and leg.

Freiler, witness for defendant, superintendent of the Denkham Lumber Company, says he worked with plaintiff in the same company, and that plaintiff left “their” employ in 1924. In 1921- this witness says that plaintiff complained of suffering from his back and hip; remained home on account of this attack about a week, and about a year later was laid up, incapacitated, and several months afterwards was again incapacitated.

Connely, witness for defendant, says he has known plaintiff since April, 1930; that before September 30, 1930, plaintiff complained of rheumatism, and noticed that he limped at times; that plaintiff said there was something the matter with his hip, did not know what it was, but guessed it was rheumatism.

When recalled as a witness and questioned in reference to that statement of Connely, plaintiff says the boys would see him limping, would ask if he had rheumatism, and that he would reply, “No, I hurt myself”; that he never had rheumatism, and cannot account how Connely so concluded. His explanation admits, however, that he Was limping.

The X-ray report of Dr. Williams, as before stated, was that plaintiff had hyper-.thropic arthritis, which Dr. Thom says laymen frequently call rheumatism. But Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trotti-v-natalbany-lumber-co-lactapp-1932.