Verdin v. Succession of Wiseman

162 So. 2d 67, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1424
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1964
DocketNo. 1307
StatusPublished

This text of 162 So. 2d 67 (Verdin v. Succession of Wiseman) 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
Verdin v. Succession of Wiseman, 162 So. 2d 67, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1424 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

Plaintiff, Sylvan Verdin, instituted this suit against the defendants, the Succession of Felix A. Wiseman, Jr., and Mrs. Zelda Agloff, widow of Felix A. Wiseman, Jr., as the owners of a tugboat designated as “Mr. Mark”, endeavoring to recover the sum of $100,000.00 for injuries which he sustained when he fell from a ladder as he descended from the deck to the engine room of the ship. Plaintiff explained therein that the accident occurred as a result of the negligence of the owners thereof and the unseaworthiness of the vessel.

The defendants answered and initially asserted that the Succession was not a proper party defendant. On the merits, they denied the existence of any negligence on their part and insisted that the vessel was seaworthy.1

From a judgment awarding plaintiff the sum of $35.00 per week for a period not to exceed 400 weeks2 for past and future maintenance against both Mrs. Zelda Ag-loff Wiseman and the Succession of Felix A. Wiseman, Jr., the defendants have prosecuted this appeal. Plaintiff has answered the appeal, requesting that the award be increased to $100,000.00.

Plaintiff’s petition does not specify the nature of his cause of action; however, the trial court very properly treated it as a combined action to recover damages for negligent injury in conformity with the rationale of the Jones Act, and also as a suit for maintenance and cure.3

Relative to plaintiff’s claim under the Jones Act, he testified that he was employed as a relief captain aboard the tugboat “Mr. Mark” on August 28, 1962. In the course of descending a ladder which extended from the deck to the engine room, he slipped and fell a distance of four feet, causing him to injure his back, chest, and knee. When the accident occurred, he was carrying a mop in one hand and a bucket in the other, which he used to clean the engine room. Plaintiff had been employed both as a deck hand and as a relief skipper aboard the “Mr. Mark” by the Wiseman family from 1956 until he was injured. He said the vessel had always been maintained in a seaworthy condition, and that the ladder, which was constructed of a perforated steel material, was in excellent repair when he fell.

Plaintiff did state that the ladder was without handrailings on either side thereof. However, it was approximately four feet high, and no evidence was introduced which' would even tend to reveal that the lack of a handrail constituted unseaworthiness. In fact, the litigants stipulated that if John Lombas 4 was requested to appear as a witness for the defendant, he would relate that ladders similar to the one aboard the “Mr. Mark” are generally used on tugboats safely; thus, the failure to provide a railing did not render the ladder unseaworthy in any respect.

[69]*69In view of the fact that the plaintiff affirmatively established as a fact that the vessel was seaworthy, and that the accident occurred through his own negligence, the trial judge properly dismissed his damage suit. However, he did permit the plaintiff to recover a judgment for maintenance and cure, which the defendants insist is neither supported by the medical evidence adduced on the trial hereof or by the law applicable thereto.

The pertinent facts relating to plaintiff’s suit for maintenance and cure are these:

On the date he was injured, he returned to his home complaining of severe back and chest pains. His wife consulted their family physician, Dr. William Bagnetto, a general practitioner, who, after an examination at home, ordered him removed to the West Jefferson General Hospital for observation. He remained there for three days and was treated for an injury to the chest and a contusion of the low back. The physician’s diagnosis revealed that the plaintiff’s back muscles were in spasm, and his chest was swollen and tender.

Dr. Bagnetto treated plaintiff as an outpatient biweekly at his office, primarily for complaints relating to his back, until this matter was tried in April of 1963. In October of 1962, he referred the plaintiff to Dr. Winters, an orthopedist, since he was not satisfied with his progress. Dr. Bag-netto’s last examination of the plaintiff occurred three days before the trial hereof. Relative thereto he testified that he was unable to discover any objective findings to support plaintiff’s complaints of low back pain, but he did state that pain could exist without objective manifestations. In addition thereto, he expressed the opinion that the plaintiff’s injury possessed some degree of permanency, and his pain would incapacitate him from working. He was then interrogated relative to future treatment:

“Q. Is there any other treatment you would specify for this man, beside what you are giving him?
“A. I feel like I have nothing more to offer him. I did recommend that he go back to Dr. Winters, but he told me that he was told by either your firm or someone else, to see another orthopedist.”

In the course of the trial, plaintiff complained of a knee injury which he said resulted from the accident, but Dr. Bagnetto’s records failed to reveal any treatment therefor.

Plaintiff, at the defendants’ request, was examined by two orthopedic surgeons, both of whom discovered a spondylolesthesis at the fifth lumbar vertebrae, a developmental defect of the back which occurs when two parts of the vertebral arch fail to join together during growth. In addition thereto, their examination disclosed a ligamentous looseness or laxity of the left knee, a condition causing instability which is usually referred to as a “football knee”.

One of the specialists, Dr. John Saer, examined him on January 28, 1963. He related that the plaintiff complained of pain in the low back and the left knee, which he had endured since the occurrence of the accident in August of 1962. He was of the opinion that the spondylolesthesis actually occurred when the plaintiff was six or seven years old. Although he made no objective findings to support plaintiff’s complaints of pain in the back, he conceded the possibility that he could be suffering from the pain he described, and that the trauma to the area produced by his fall could have caused a back pain not previously experienced by him. Relative to the condition of his knee, Dr. Saer believed that the injury predated the accident because of plaintiff’s failure to complain thereof immediately after his fall.

Dr. G. Gernon Brown, defendant’s other specialist, testified that he examined the plaintiff on March 19, 1963, which was approximately three weeks prior to the trial. He also failed to observe objective symptoms to support his complaints of back pain, but he did concede that the trauma could [70]*70produce pain not previously experienced from the developmental defect and that pain could exist without objective manifestations in support of the complaint. With reference to the knee injury, he discovered instability of the ligaments and swelling of plaintiff’s left thigh. He stated that the objective findings in this area would indicate that the knee condition was more painful than plaintiff had indicated.

Plaintiff and his wife both testified that the back and knee injuries caused him severe pain immediately after the accident, and that these conditions had not noticeably improved up to the date of the trial hereof. Plaintiff stated that he had been wearing a back corset prescribed by Dr. Winters to alleviate the pain.

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 2d 67, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verdin-v-succession-of-wiseman-lactapp-1964.