Vidrine v. Employers Mutual Liability Insurance

103 So. 2d 292, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 888
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 1958
DocketNo. 4623
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 103 So. 2d 292 (Vidrine v. Employers Mutual Liability Insurance) 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
Vidrine v. Employers Mutual Liability Insurance, 103 So. 2d 292, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 888 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge.

In this suit for workmen’s compensation benefits, the plaintiff, Huey Vidrine, sued Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Company of Wisconsin, the compensation's insurer, Central Excavating Company, Inc. The plaintiff was employed by Central Excavating Company, Inc., on November 23, 1956, when he was allegedly injured during the course and scope of his employment. Vidrine claims that he is totally and permanently disabled as a result of this injury, and therefore, that he is entitled to compensation benefits at the rate of $35 per week for 400 weeks. He also seeks statutory penalties and attorneys fees.

After a trial on the merits, the District Court rendered judgment for the plaintiff, finding that he had a temporary total disability and awarding compensation at the [293]*293rate of $35 per week beginning November 23, 1956 for the entire period of plaintiff’s temporary total disability not to exceed three hundred (300) weeks, with legal interest on past due amounts, subject to credits for compensation paid through March 1, 1957. Plaintiff was granted a judgment for reasonable medical expenses not to exceed $2,500 and medical expert fees of $50 for each medical expert.

From this judgment the defendant compensation insurer has taken an appeal.

The defendant conceded that Vidrine received the accident during the course and scope of his employment with the Central Excavating Company, Inc. The only question posed by the defendant on this appeal is whether or not the plaintiff has proven that the accident resulted in his inability to perform his usual and customary work on the date of the trial. Plaintiff contends on appeal, that judgment for permanent total disability should be granted since defendant would be fully protected by the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Laws, LSA-R.S. 23:1331, concerning the modification of awards.

The facts presented are substantially as follows:

On November 23,1956, Huey Vidrine was employed at heavy labor with Central Excavating Company, Inc. During the course of this employment, he and another employee were carrying a heavy board and Vidrine slipped and fell. This occurred at approximately 10:30 A.M. After the fall, the foreman gave him lighter work to do and after dinner, Vidrine could not work at all. At 3:30 P.M., the shift was over and the foreman took Vidrine to Dr. Ray F. Marceaux, a general practitioner, in Bas-ile, Louisiana. Dr. Marceaux diagnosed it as a lumbosacral strain and found “some complaint of pain in the lumbar region and spasms of the erectus muscles, the big muscles on each side of the spinal column in the back”. Dr. Marceaux taped the affected region and gave Vidrine medication including something to relax the spasms of the muscles and relieve the pain. Thereafter, he gave Vidrine about 25 microtherm treatments. It should be noted that Dr. Marceaux never discharged Vidrine. The report and medical bills from Dr. Marceaux, which is in the record, indicates that Dr. Marceaux did not estimate the date on which the patient would be able to return to work, but merely filled in this portion of the report with question marks. This report was dated April 26, 1957.

Vidrine did not return to Dr. Marceaux’s office on March 8, 1957, for an appointment. According to Vidrine, there was a misunderstanding and he had iio knowledge that he was supposed to return on that date. Dr. Marceaux testified that he did not find-any spasms of. muscles and .he found that motion was not limited because of pain, at the time Vidrine last came to his office.

Dr. Marceaux did not note the tightness of the large muscles in the back of the thigh, commonly known as the hamstring muscles. Over a period of time, Dr. Marceaux concluded that Vidrine’s complaints were not consistent with the nerve distribution and also that Vidrine’s complaints were not genuine, due to a lack of objective findings.

On December 6, 1956, Dr. Marceaux had referred Vidrine to Dr. Charles V. Hatch-ette, an orthopedic surgeon in Lake Charles, Louisiana. At that time, Dr. Hatchette found that the plaintiff had received a mild lumbosacral injury, that the application of a lumbosacral brace of the canvas type would benefit the patient and that the patient should be instructed in hard bed sleeping and complete rest of the lower back for a period of two to three- weeks. Dr. Hatchette felt at this time that the patient would recover within 4 to 8 weeks and that physiological therapy treatments (micro-therm treatments) to the lower back would expedite recovery. Dr. Hatchette examined Vidrine again on January 21, 1957 at which time he did not find any evidence of muscle spasms. On direct examination, Dr. Hatchette stated that he felt that Vidrine was exaggerating his complaints to the extent that he was not being truthful at the [294]*294time of the second examination, and that Vidrine was physically able to return to work on January 12, 1957. Dr. Hatchette did not mention the tightness of the hamstring muscles.

On February 11, 1957, Dr. Marceaux sent Vidrine to Dr. William L. Meuleman, who practices orthopedic surgery in Lafayette, Louisiana. Dr. Meuleman felt that on the first examination that the patient was able to return to work. He found no muscle spasms in the hack and no other objective symptoms of any injury, although Vidrine complained of localized pain in the lumbo-sacral region. There was no complaint of radiating pain. Dr. Meuleman found in certain of the leg tests that there was a pulling in the hamstring muscles of the leg, “but we battered that around and felt that was muscular and not a radiation type pain.” Dr. Meuleman testified further on this point as follows:

“I have never been favorably impressed with hamstring muscles tightness as a cause of disability per se. I see it often, as I am sure everyone does, and people tell you that it pulls and that is about as far as it goes. I am not impressed. I grant you Vidrine has got a good deal; with him lying down I could only get his legs off the table, with him lying flat I could get his legs off the table 45 degrees bilaterally, and that was all. The only paradox, to me at least, was this: straight leg raising does not rotate the pelvis. When you raise the man’s left or right leg individually, you are not moving his lumbosacral spine one wit; you are moving his hip and this man was so tight where you could practically flick them and you would expect them to sing. He didn’t refer any of the complaints to his legs. Everything was up in his back, which again to my mind I just don’t see how if you don’t shift his lumbosacral spine you can produce pain when you are not testing his lum-bosacral spine.”

At the request of Vidrine’s attorney, Dr. George B. Briel made an examination on May 28, 1957, and again on August 14, 1957. On both of these examinations, Dr. Briel found a slight flattening of the normal lordotic curve and a considerable amount of tightness in the parivertebral muscles in the lumbosacral region of the back. Dr. Briel found that nerve stretch test and sciatic nerve tension caused some pain in Vidrine’s back, but felt that that was a result of the tightening of the muscles.

Dr. Briel concluded that Vidrine had definite spasms of the left lumbosacral region and was not attempting to mislead concerning the gravity of the injury.1 Dr. Briel’s considered opinion was that with [295]*295proper treatment Vidrine would be able to overcome his disability within a period of a few months.

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 2d 292, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vidrine-v-employers-mutual-liability-insurance-lactapp-1958.