Viator v. New Hotel Monteleone, Inc.

106 So. 2d 121, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 664
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 1958
DocketNo. 20884
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 106 So. 2d 121 (Viator v. New Hotel Monteleone, 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.

Bluebook
Viator v. New Hotel Monteleone, Inc., 106 So. 2d 121, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 664 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

McBRIDE, Judge.

This is the second occasion this workmen’s compensation suit has been before us. After trial in the district court, plaintiff’s claim for benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, LSA-R.S. 23:-1021 et seq., were denied on the ground that the statutory provisions were inapplicable to her, and on plaintiff’s appeal to us we affirmed the judgment and held that since plaintiff was employed wholly in the nonhazardous portion of her employer’s business, she was not covered by the provisions of the Act (92 So.2d 730).

Plaintiff made application to the Supreme Court for certiorari, which was granted, and ultimately the Court, after reviewing the case, reversed the judgments of the district court and this court and held that under the existing jurisprudence of this state the plaintiff was covered by the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Law. The Supreme Court remanded the case to us for a determination of the other issues raised by the pleadings (234 La. 1075, 102 So.2d 461). The case is now before us on said remand, and the only question involved which requires our decision is the nature or extent of the injuries sustained by plaintiff.

Plaintiff was a woman 63 years old when the accident befell her on October 14, 1954. She was then employed as an in-spectress by the defendant hotel corporation, and during the course of her occupational duties, in attempting to step out of an elevator, she stumbled and fell against a bed stored in the passageway sttstaining a cut on her left shin and slight injuries to her head and arm. She stated the head and arm were “all right” at the time of the trial below.

Plaintiff insists her left leg, as a result of the accident, is in a weakened condition at the present time, and she is unable to return to her employment of inspectress in the hotel because she had charge of about one hundred rooms and the duties of the [123]*123.job require that she stand most of the working day which she cannot do. She stated:

" * * * j just crumble down sometimes when I am walking, just crumple down to the floor it is so weak, and sometimes I can’t even pick it up, and it drags.”

Plaintiff is now employed as manager of a guest house in New Orleans which consists of fourteen rooms, the occupants of which are weekly or monthly tenants. She pointed out that she is able to carry on this occupation as she is not required to stand for any considerable period and may place herself in a sedentary position when her leg troubles her. Her present work, therefore, is of a different character than that she formerly carried on.

Plaintiff concedes that for thirty years before the accident due to some sort of previous accident or malady, the nature of which she was unable to explain, she had a stiffening of her left hip and as a result ■of this she limped perceptibly on the left leg. She testified “the ligaments or something drew up back there.” This previous ■condition existing in her left leg, according to plaintiff, did not inhibit her even partially from carrying on her job as in-spectress in the hotel and she worked under no handicap whatever, suffered no pain, and experienced no inconvenience. The record would seem to bear out all this in that the plaintiff was capable of working for the hotel corporation for a number of years. It is reasonable to suppose that had the limp affected her ability to carry on her occupational duties, her employer would have terminated her services. There was no attempt made to show her employer ever complained of or manifested any dissatisfaction with plaintiff’s work.

The plaintiff maintained her previous condition was rendered considerably worsened as a result of the accident in the hotel. She points out that while she did limp for many years, her leg was not in the weakened condition it presently is, and since the accident she has been dragging her foot and has had to employ the use of a walking cane. She states, also, her limp has become accentuated and upon changes of atmospheric conditions, her leg feels as though it were “artificial” and there is hardly any sensation or circulation in it.

After her accident plaintiff was treated in the office of Dr. J. T. Scott, Jr., now deceased, who was the employer’s physician. When first seen there on October 18, 1954, she was complaining of an open wound over the left shin bone which had been sustained in the fall at her work a few days previously-

Although sixteen members were on the staff at Dr. Scott’s office, none of these physicians were called as defense witnesses, and the only evidence emanating from Dr. Scott’s office is a statement signed by Dr. Scott himself under date January 7, 1955, submitted to the employer’s insurance carrier, as follows:

“X-rays revealed no bone injury and she was treated the next four weeks with terramycin ointment and allowed to continue work. However, when seen on November 16,1954, it was noted that she was getting no better and that the circulation in her leg was poor as evidenced by varicose veins. At this time it was decided that, due to circulatory situation, the only way we could get this ulceration healed was to get her off her feet and she was told not to work. The wound at this time had developed into a chronic ulceration and she was advised to use Bacetracine soaks four times a day at home and given a prescription for vitamin C to augment wound healing.
“During the subsequent five and a half weeks the wound slowly progressively healed under this treatment. We would like to note that this location is one of the slowest healing areas of the body, especially in an elderly person with a circulatory deficiency, and that the ordinary methods do not suffice.
[124]*124“Mrs. Luce was seen on the 27th. of December at which time the wound was completely closed. She was given a felt pad to wear over this area to protect the new skin for a week and was discharged from our care.”

As her medical expert plaintiff produced Dr. Blaise Salatich, conceded by counsel to be a qualified orthopedic expert. This physician did not have occasion to treat plaintiff, and his testimony pertains to his examinations of her made on two occasions. He first saw the plaintiff on May 20, 19S5, and again on April 24, 1956. Dr. Salatich testified the conditions he found on his second examination were the same as he had found the first time he saw the patient, and that during the interval between the examinations no significant change in her condition took place. He stated throughout his testimony that the plaintiff complained of persistent and somewhat consistent deep-seated aching-type pain of the lower leg with instability of the limb, and that located on her left shin was a discolored irregular-shaped healed scar measuring approximately three inches in length; there was generalized soft tissue thickening and tenderness was present over the region, including “deep soreness” over adjacent portions of the leg. Dr. Salatich states plaintiff was fully cooperative throughout the two examinations, and he believes plaintiff’s complaints of pain would be compatible with the conditions he found, and when interrogated as to whether he thought the plaintiff would be able to perform the duties of an inspectress which required her to be on her feet for long periods of time, he stated that the plaintiff must be considered a poor candidate to perform such occupational duties and he considers her totally disabled from performing them as a result of direct trauma.

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 2d 121, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/viator-v-new-hotel-monteleone-inc-lactapp-1958.