Urbina v. Alois J. Binder Bakery, Inc.
This text of 423 So. 2d 765 (Urbina v. Alois J. Binder Bakery, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
Irma URBINA
v.
ALOIS J. BINDER BAKERY, INC. and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*766 Carlos E. Zeledon, Antonio L. Carbonell, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
Borello & Huber, Marsha B. Healy, Metairie, for defendants-appellees.
Before GARRISON, AUGUSTINE and CIACCIO, JJ.
CIACCIO, Judge.
Plaintiff appeals from the dismissal of her suit for workmen's compensation following an on the job accident which occurred while she was employed by defendant, Alois J. Binder Bakery, Inc. We reverse the dismissal and render judgment.
Mrs. Urbina is a forty-four year old Spanish-speaking woman, with a sixth grade education that she received in her native Honduras. She has been in this country for twenty years. Plaintiff is an unskilled worker who has performed various jobs for a variety of employers over the last ten years prior to the accident involved in this case.
On July 14, 1976, Mrs. Urbina slipped and fell while working in defendant's bakery. Plaintiff's left arm hit a piece of machinery and she landed in a seated position on a carpeted portion of a concrete floor.
During the week following the fall Mrs. Urbina's arm was bruised and she complained to a co-worker that her arm hurt. She also complained of lower back pain. She continued her regular work schedule until August 21, 1976, however, she did not return to work thereafter.
On August 23, 1976, Mrs. Urbina saw Dr. Barnes a gynecologist, who was her regular physician. She had last seen him on June 30th, fourteen days before her fall. Normally she visited Dr. Barnes at six-month intervals for a regular check up and received treatment from him for hypothyroidism, uterine retroversion, hormonal imbalance, obesity and peripheral neuritis. On this visit she complained of pain in her left arm and right leg. Dr. Barnes began treating the plaintiff for acute myositis, which treatment consisted of therapy, medications and heat. He examined her again on September 1st and observed no progress. He, therefore, referred her to Dr. Joseph Licciardi, an orthopedic surgeon.
*767 Dr. Licciardi saw Mrs. Urbina on September 7, 1976 at which time she complained of low back pain. X-rays showed some physical evidence of nerve root irritation on the right side, which the doctor called sciatica. Dr. Licciardi saw Mrs. Urbina again on November 12, 1976, at which time his examination revealed some pressure on the nerve in the right leg for which he recommended she wear a corset. The doctor's impression at this time was that Mrs. Urbina may have a degenerative disc disease.
Dr. Licciardi saw Mrs. Urbina again on December 1st, at which time she had not yet gotten the corset. He observed involuntary muscle spasm in her back and he again recommended a corset. He saw her again on December 15, 1976. She had been wearing a corset and she was better. The doctor recommended that she continue wearing the corset and return in two weeks. She did not do so, and the next occasion that Dr. Licciardi had to see her was on April 2, 1978, in the hospital, while she was under the care of Dr. McCurley. On this occasion Dr. Licciardi's examination revealed no muscle spasm; the plaintiff's left shoulder and hips were normal; and there were negative results on the neurological test, x-rays and myelogram. With no objective findings, it was the doctor's impression that plaintiff had chronic low back pain of the right sciatica and painful left shoulder. He suggested a corset, bed rest, and heat. He did not see Mrs. Urbina again.
Mrs. Urbina first saw Dr. McCurley, an internist, on December 22, 1976, at which time she gave a history of the fall and related an experience of sudden pain in the lower back, and pain radiating down the posterior aspect of the right leg to her right foot and toes. On this first examination Dr. McCurley found localized tenderness of the left shoulder and localized tenderness of the 4th and 5th lumbar interspaces. He found a reduction of range of motion in the left shoulder and the left lumbar spine. The neurological examination revealed no impairment of tendon reflexes and no loss of sensation. Dr. McCurley concluded that Mrs. Urbina had a herniated disc in the lower back and tendonitis in the left shoulder.
Mrs. Urbina continued to complain of back pain so Dr. McCurley hospitalized her from July 31, 1977 to August 20, 1977. She underwent an extensive workup, all tests being essentially normal, except that x-rays of the lumbar and cervical spine showed osteoarthritis. Dr. McCurley's professional opinion was that Mrs. Urbina had an osteoarthritic condition on July 14, 1976, at the time of her fall, and that the fall converted the asymptomatic osteoarthritis condition into a symptomatic one.
While hospitalized, Mrs. Urbina was seen also by Dr. Kline, a neurosurgeon. Dr. Kline found tenderness in the back of the neck and in the lumbrosacral region. He decided that Mrs. Urbina may have a herniated disc at L4, L5, and also cervical arthritis. He recommended conservative treatment.
Mrs. Urbina was discharged from the hospital on August 20, 1977, to be treated as an out patient by Drs. Kline and McCurley. The next time Dr. Kline saw her, however, was on March 26, 1978, when she was again hospitalized by Dr. McCurley. She was hospitalized from March 24, 1978, to April 4, 1978. During this stay she was seen by Dr. McCurley and Dr. Kline, and also by Dr. Russo, an orthopedist, Dr. Hull, a rheumatologist, and Dr. Cary, a neurosurgeon whom Dr. Kline had recommended to be called in on consultation. Dr. Russo and Dr. Hull both felt that Mrs. Urbina had osteoarthritis. A myleogram failed to show a herniated disc in the lumbar area.
Following discharge from the hospital, plaintiff continued to see Dr. McCurley on an out-patient basis. She saw him in June, July, August, October, November and December, 1978, and in January and March of 1979. During these times she continued to complain of pain in the lumbar spine. As a result Dr. McCurley considered her to be 50% partially disabled and 50% permanently disabled.
Mrs. Urbina was also examined by Dr. Stokes on March 2, 1977. To him she complained *768 of upper left extremity pain and lower back pain. Dr. Stokes' examination revealed no objective clinical findings and no mechanical basis for the continued pain. His opinion was that on March 2, 1977, Mrs. Urbina was able to work in an unrestricted manner. His notes indicated that x-rays revealed no evidence of arthritic condition, either of the spine or the left upper extremity; there were no degenerative changes shown by the x-rays; there were no objective or neurological problems evident suggestive of difficulty with a disc; EMG and nerve conduction studies performed at the hospital were found to be within normal limits.
Dr. Stokes was of the opinion that if Mrs. Urbina had a pre-existing osteoarthritic condition which had been aggravated by a fall in July of 1976, and if she was still symptomatic from that condition, then she would have had a restricted range of motion and would not have been able to touch her toes or execute the various maneuvers he put her through on March 2, 1977. He was convinced that there was no arthritis when he examined Mrs. Urbina on March 2, 1977.
This case was tried before a commissioner. In his report to the trial judge the commissioner set out his findings, conclusions and recommended judgment. The commissioner found that plaintiff did have a work related accident.
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