Turner v. Neeb Kearney & Co.

139 So. 2d 3, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1717
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1962
DocketNo. 199
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 139 So. 2d 3 (Turner v. Neeb Kearney & 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
Turner v. Neeb Kearney & Co., 139 So. 2d 3, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1717 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

LUTHER E. HALL, Judge pro tern.

Plaintiff, a waterfront laborer, brought this suit for total permanent disability under the Workmen’s Compensation Law against his employer and its compensation insurer.

The District Judge finding the plaintiff “totally temporarily disabled” rendered judgment in his favor for compensation “at the rate of $35.00 per week from November 10, 1959, not to exceed 400 weeks” plus interest on all past due installments, costs of court, and an allowance of $100.00 for an expert witness fee. The defendant employer and its insurer have appealed.

Plaintiff received an injury to his right shoulder and arm while working for his employer on the New Orleans river front when two heavy sacks of grain fell off of a conveyor belt and struck him on the point of his right shoulder. The accident happened on September 22, 1959. He was treated by Dr. Ewin, the company doctor, from September 23, 1959 to November 9, 1959 when he was discharged as able to return to work.

The employer and its insurer paid compensation benefits to plaintiff for a period of seven weeks, totalling $245.00, beginning September 23, 1959 and extending through November 10, 1959.

No questions as to amount of wages, employment status or the happening of an accident are involved. The sole question before the District Court was the extent of any disability. The plaintiff contended that at the time of his discharge by Dr. Ewin, the treating physician, he was disabled and could not return to work. Defendants con[4]*4tended that he had recovered and was able to return to his duties.

The testimony on behalf of plaintiff consisted solely of his own testimony and that of Dr. Byron Unkauf.

Plaintiff is 67 years old. He testified that since his injury that he has suffered a loss of strength in his right arm and a loss of ability to grip and grasp with his right hand; that at the time of his discharge his arm still gave him pain; that he felt he could not return to the strenuous work of a longshoreman or freight handler; that he has not tried to do so but has tested his strength at home moving such objects as a refrigerator and a washing machine and concluded that he was unable to do strenuous lifting for any length of time; that he has not tried to get any other work saying: “My years won’t allow me to get a job.” Following his discharge by the treating physician plaintiff saw and was examined by Dr. Unkauf, a physician of his own choice, on three occasions but was not treated by him.

Dr. Unkauf is an orthopedic specialist. He testified that he has also had wide experience in peripheral nerve lesions or injuries particularly in England during the war although as we understand it nerve injuries in this country come within the spe-ciality field of neurologists.

Dr. Unkauf first saw plaintiff on December 18, 1959. He confirmed the lack of any x-ray evidence of injury, found a full range of motion of the shoulder, elbow, wrist and all the finger joints, but noticed that plaintiff held his right shoulder low and had a inch atrophy of the biceps brachialis group of muscles and two plus wasting and weakening of the right deltoid muscle. His opinion at that time was that “this man suffered a traction lesion of the upper segments of the brachial plexus consisting of the fifth and sixth and partially of the seventh roots and is evident in an axillary and musculocutaneous nerve lesion”. He further testified that “probably he had sustained certainly some damage to the adjacent muscles and fascia which was probably responsible for his pain, and of course, if you had a traction lesion of the plexus you also experience pain”.

On a final examination conducted just a few days before the trial below which was held in May 1960, Dr. Unkauf thought plaintiff had made an excellent recovery; that much of the atrophy had subsided, and that he had only a slight disability. He further testified that “ * * * I feel he will have reached maximum improvement in a further three to four months time and I would allow him to return to his original employment”. He stated that plaintiff would probably experience some pain if he “presently” was obliged to do heavy and continuous lifting because the “time from his injury to the present time is (not) sufficiently long to state that he has completely recovered. I would expect it would take a couple or more months yet to be completely recovered”.

The defendants’ case was presented on the testimony of Dr. Ewin, a general surgeon who was the treating physician, and on the testimony of Dr. Moossy, a specialist in neurology.

Dr. Ewin examined plaintiff on September 23, 1959, the day following the accident. He found no external marks of the injury and x-rays were negative for any bone or joint pathology. His treatment consisted of medicine for pain and daily diathermy for his soft tissue injury. On nothing that plaintiff had very marked fasciculation or twitching in the muscles of the right shoulder and also in the left shoulder and both thighs, Dr. Ewin sent him to Dr. Moossy to determine if he had any degenerative condition of the spinal cord. Dr. Moossy was of the opinion that the treatment being given was proper and adequate and wished to see what it would accomplish. Dr. Ewin saw plaintiff approximately twenty times during September and October 1959, and after a final consultation with Dr. Moossy he discharged plaintiff on November 9, 1959 to return to work as a freight handler. At [5]*5that time he felt plaintiff had good strength and could work. Dr. Ewin saw him again the day before the trial and found a full range of motion but with some atrophy of the muscles of the right shoulder. X-rays taken showed no change and no evidence of any progressive disorder. Dr. Ewin testified that the atrophy was not present at the time he discharged plaintiff but had come on since and that plaintiff needed active use to redevelop the muscles and that he would be able to return to work. Dr. Ewin was of the opinion that plaintiff’s complaints of pain were not referrable to the injury he had received, and could find no objective explanation for it.

Dr. Moossy, the neurologist, examined plaintiff in September 19S9 and again at the time of his discharge in November 1959. On his first examination he found a full range of motion and evidence of a mild stretch injury of the brachial plexus on the right side which was “not severe”. There were muscle twitchings in the right deltoid but no muscle atrophy was noted. On his second examination on November 9, he found him much improved. Dr. Moossy found no definite neurological abnormalities aside from some muscle twitching which had diminished and which he did not consider of any significance with respect to the accident and injury.

Dr. Moossy examined plaintiff again the day before the trial, found that he had gained sixteen pounds and was looking fine, the muscle twitching had almost disappeared, there was a full range of motion in the arm and “a little mild atrophy” which he ascribed solely to disuse, and not to any nerve injury.

When asked if there was physically any reason why plaintiff should not return to work as a freight handler, Dr. Moossy testified :

“A. No, it’s understood, common sense gradual resumption of his work over a period of a few weeks I think he would be completely capable of resuming his previous activity.
“Q. By reference to a gradual resumption, are you referring to the disuse atrophy?
“A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 So. 2d 3, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-neeb-kearney-co-lactapp-1962.