Vautrot v. Maryland Casualty Co.

32 So. 2d 500, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 540
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1947
DocketNo. 2944.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 32 So. 2d 500 (Vautrot v. Maryland Casualty 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
Vautrot v. Maryland Casualty Co., 32 So. 2d 500, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 540 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinions

This is a suit for compensation for total and permanent disability growing out of an alleged accidental injury received by the plaintiff on June 28, 1944, while in the course and scope of his employment by the Aluminum Ore Company. Plaintiff made the Maryland Casualty Company, the insurer of his employer, defendant in the suit. From a judgment dismissing his suit, plaintiff has appealed.

The evidence shows that plaintiff's employment with the Ore Company began some time in April, 1943, as labor foreman supervising a large number of men; in order to perform his duties, it was necessary for him to get about the plant, which was extensive, climb up and down ladders or stairs, get in, drive and get out of automobiles, jump ditches and show or instruct the men how to perform the work. His duties also required him to perform arduous or hard manual labor at times.

Prior to June 28, 1944, plaintiff had under his supervision some three hundred men. On that date, the plant had closed down, and the personnel under plaintiff's supervision had been reduced to about forty men. On the date mentioned, plaintiff, while descending a flight of stairs some 25 or 30 feet long, slipped on grease or oil on the second step from the top and slid all the way down the steps holding on to the railing to the concrete floor. On his descent, part of his back came in contact with the steps. When he reached the bottom, his feet were straight and he was lying in a twisted position on his right side. He was red in the face. Plaintiff, at first, did not think that he was injured, but when he tried to get up he realized that he was injured; he was helped up to his feet by Jack Scott, one of his men, who assisted him by holding his arm and took him to the office of Mr. Alfred P. Giroir and sat him down in a chair. Mr. Giroir noticed plaintiff's abnormal appearance and, after plaintiff's complaint of having hurt his back coming down the stairs, he, Giroir, told plaintiff to go to the first aid station. Plaintiff at that time was complaining of pain in the pit between his two shoulders.

The plaintiff, on the first visit to the first aid station, complained of pain between his two shoulders and the nurse in charge gave him diathermy treatment on the affected area. The next day, she bandaged the back. Neither he nor the nurse thought much of the injury at that time, he, plaintiff, then believing that he was suffering from a torn or strained ligament. But because of the pain continuing in plaintiff's back between the shoulder blades, plaintiff received infrared light treatments and the strapping of his back several times at the first aid station between the date of the accident and September 1, 1944.

The evidence is conclusive that plaintiff, from the date of his fall to his termination on September 1, 1944, when the plant was finally closed, continued to suffer pain between his shoulder blades. The evidence is also conclusive that after the injury plaintiff was not able to walk around like he had before and was furnished with a truck and a driver to visit the several parts of the plant until his final termination. It is also conclusive that the injury had incapacitated him to perform hard manual labor. On account of the plant's pending closure within a few weeks or months plaintiff remained on the job, performing such duties as he could while in pain. *Page 502

At the end of his employment, plaintiff returned to his home in the country in the Parish of St. Landry, still suffering with pains between his shoulders. During his absence from home, the front of his home had become weedy. A day or two after returning to his home, he attempted to mow his lawn, and while so doing, he immediately felt a severe aggravation of the pains in his back at the same place where it had been ever since his fall. Some three or four days thereafter he consulted his family physician, who applied light treatment and tried to bandage his back. Not receiving any benefits from the treatment, his family physician then sent him, in the first part of October, 1944, to the Ochsner Clinic in New Orleans, and he was there placed in the medical care of Dr. Guy A. Caldwell. After several subsequent visits to the Clinic, Dr. Caldwell diagnosed plaintiff's condition as a complete collapse of the body of the sixth dorsal vertebra due to its destruction by a giant cell tumor. On June 4, 1945, Dr. Caldwell performed a serious and dangerous operation of a bone fusion of plaintiff's spine. Plaintiff made good progress and was dismissed the latter part of June, 1945, with instructions to wear a brace and to remain in bed, on a hard mattress, the greater part of the time at first, and gradually to sit up with the brace, but not to engage in any standing work for several months. According to Dr. Caldwell, plaintiff, at the time of his discharge, was totally disabled to perform hard manual labor and he would not venture to say how long he would so remain. On the date of trial, Feb. 5, 1946, plaintiff was still wearing the brace, obviously indicating that he was not able then to do the kind of work which he was doing at the time of his falling down the stairs.

Although in defendant's answer the alleged accident of June 28, 1944, was denied, it is now conceded that plaintiff did fall down the flight of steps on that day. The defendant now contends that the accident merely caused a slight injury or strain which did not prevent him from working for a single day and that his present condition is not due to the said light injury or strain he then received, but is caused by the complete collapse of the vertebra by the giant cell tumor, there being no causal connection between the fall and the collapse of the vertebra. Therefore, there are two questions presented to us, viz.: first, whether or not the plaintiff was disabled by the accident, and, second, whether or not the injury aggravated, activated or accelerated a pre-existing tumor of the vertebra, or whether or not if the accident did not produce the result stated, then the tumor reduce plaintiff's recovery from the injury.

In determining and in reaching a conclusion in this case, being a compensation case, it is important that much consideration should be given to the character of the claimant. We say this because it is often contended by the defendant that the claimant is a malingerer and is faking his injury, pain and claim. However, in this case, there isn't any suggestion or intimation of plaintiff being a malingerer or faking his injuries.

In this case we find, from the testimony, that plaintiff, prior to June 29, 1944, was a strong, healthy man, forty-two years of age, had been a farmer all his life, had never had any trouble with his back. He is shown to be a man of good character, and it does not appear that he is in any manner trying to impose on the Court. He candidly told what happened to him at the time he sustained the injury on June 28, 1944, and without exaggeration or pretence related how he continued to work at his job at the aluminum plant, regardless of his suffering quite a bit, but hoping all the time that his injury was not serious and that he would get over it in due course of time. He is corroborated in the manner of his fall, his pains, his inability perform his former duties and the treatments he received at the first aid station during the period from June 28, 1944, to his termination on Sept. 1, 1944, by two of his coemployees and Mrs. Norma Sharp, the nurse at the first aid station up to August, 1944, the date of her termination.

[1] The question now arises as to whether or not the fall could have caused plaintiff any continuing disability from, June 28, 1944, to September 1, 1944. That question is answered in the affirmative by Dr. Guy Caldwell, the only doctor to testify *Page 503

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Bluebook (online)
32 So. 2d 500, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vautrot-v-maryland-casualty-co-lactapp-1947.