Ware v. J. Ray McDermott & Co.

180 So. 2d 573, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 3855
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 1965
DocketNo. 1569
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 So. 2d 573 (Ware v. J. Ray McDermott & 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
Ware v. J. Ray McDermott & Co., 180 So. 2d 573, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 3855 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

SAVOY, Judge.

This is a suit in workmen’s compensation. On January 15, 1964, the plaintiff, R. L. Ware, sustained an injury to his back while employed as a welder for defendant, J. Ray McDermott and Co., Inc., who held a workmen’s compensation policy with the co-defendant, The Travelers Insurance Company.

The district court rendered judgment awarding plaintiff full benefits under the Act, less a credit for amounts previously paid. From this judgment, the defendants have appealed to this Court.

The sole issue before us on appeal is whether or not plaintiff was totally disabled under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act subsequent to March 15, [574]*5741964, the date through which plaintiff-was paid compensation payments.

The record shows that plaintiff sustained the injury to his back as he was welding within a 32-inch pipe. He was using an electric welding machine, half sitting in a ■cramped position within the pipe, and felt .a popping sensation to his back as he started to weld above his head. He felt pain immediately, crawled out of the pipe, and reported the incident to his foreman. For the remaining hour or two of the day, he was placed on lighter work, which did not require any bending.

Plaintiff had trouble with his back all that night and was hardly able to walk the following morning. His employer sent him to Drs. C. G. Whitley and Melvin G. Bourgeois of Morgan City for treatment. These two doctors practice together in a •clinic and both followed plaintiff’s treatment in Morgan City. Both are general practitioners.

Dr. Melvin G. Bourgeois testified that he ■examined plaintiff on about January 17, 1964. He found plaintiff to have acute pain in his low back, with muscle spasm, and made a diagnosis of lumbosacral sprain. He hospitalized plaintiff from January 17, 1964, to January 23, 1964, placing him in traction approximately two-thirds of the time and administered medications. While in the hospital plaintiff was also treated for prostatitis. Dr. Bourgeois found no obvious pathology demonstrated in the X-rays which were taken. It was Dr. Bourgeois’ opinion that plaintiff was still disabled at the time he was released from the hospital, but that he should have recovered from the back sprain within two to six weeks thereafter.

Dr. C. G. Whitley followed plaintiff’s course of treatment in the hospital jointly with Dr. Bourgeois. He first examined plaintiff in the hospital on January 18, 1964, and found plaintiff to have an acute spasm •of the lumbar muscles in his back, compatible with a lumbosacral sprain. Dr. Whitley testified he did not see any fracture or other evidence of pathology in the X-rays taken of plaintiff’s back: It was Dr. Whitley’s opinion that plaintiff should have recovered from his back injury in two or three weeks after his release from the hospital.

After his release from the hospital in Morgan City, plaintiff returned to his home in Oakdale, where he sought the services of his family physician, Dr. Rigsby Har-grove. Dr. Hargrove, a general practitioner, testified he saw plaintiff on January 27, 1964, and found him to have extremely severe pain in the lower part of his lumbar spine, with pinpoint tenderness over 1^5 and S^l, with a rather marked muscular spasm overlying the area. His original diagnosis was a severe lumbosacral strain. He admitted plaintiff to a hospital for treatment, applying traction for two hours twice daily, and gave medication in the form of sedation and muscular relaxants. He also applied ointments, and gave plaintiff ultrasonic treatments and diapulse, which is a vibration-type treatment. Plaintiff remained in the hospital on this visit from January 27, 1964, to February 3, 1964. On February 11, 1964, Dr. Hargrove fitted plaintiff with a corset-type brace. Plaintiff was instructed to sleep on a firm bed and was given a traction device for home therapy treatment. He was also continued on medication, and the application of ointments. Since plaintiff did not respond satisfactorily to the treatments, Dr. Har-grove referred plaintiff to Dr. Paul M. Davis, Jr., an orthopedic surgeon of Alexandria, Loitisiana, for consultation. Dr. Hargrove received a report from Dr. Davis which gave the diagnosis that plaintiff had a non-united fracture of the distal spine, which was symptomatic; and, suggested that an injection of local anesthetic be made about the fracture to confirm the diagnosis. If such an injection knocked out all pain for the period of the anesthesia, and if the condition continued to be symptomatic, then it was recommended that surgery was indicated to remove the tip of the spine of the [575]*575fifth lumbar vertebra. Dr. Hargrove reexamined the X-rays he had taken January 27, 1964, and found the fracture reported to him by Dr. Davis. He placed plaintiff in the hospital from May 31, 1964, to June 4, 1964, to perform the instillation of the anesthetic. The test proved positive. After the test, Dr. Hargrove supplemented his original diagnosis to also include a fracture of the distal spine of the fifth lumbar vertebra, symptomatic. Dr. Har-grove strongly recommended surgery for the correction of plaintiffs condition, and was of the opinion that the operation would be successful. He estimated that plaintiff would have to remain in the hospital about a week after the operation and would be rehabilitated in approximately four to six weeks thereafter.

Plaintiff was again hospitalized for a four day period in September, 1964, when he had recurrence of severe pain in his back. At this time he was also treated for another condition that was not connected to the bade injury. Dr. Hargrove testified that he has continued to see plaintiff regularly and at the last visit shortly before the trial, plaintiff was still complaining of not being able to bend and of having difficulty sleeping at night because of pain. Dr. Hargrove testified that the pain had always been localized in the same area, L-S and S-l, at the time of all examinations. He testified that he had known plaintiff all of plaintiff’s life, had treated him for several years prior to the injury, and that plaintiff had never had anything wrong with his back. He felt plaintiff was disabled from performing heavy manual labor, had been so disabled since he saw him on January 27, 1964, and would remain disabled until the operation was performed. He testified that if the condition shown on the X-rays was an epiphysis, which is a developmental condition, rather than a fracture, he felt the condition had been aggravated so as to cause it to become symptomatic. He was of the opinion that plaintiff needed surgery regardless of whether the condition was a congenital defect that had been aggravated or whether it was a non-united fracture.

Dr. Paul M. Davis, Jr., an orthopedic surgeon, of Alexandria, examined plaintiff on April 8, 1964, at the request of Dr. Har-grove. He found plaintiff showed stiffness in his back from L-3 down through D-5 and S-l, and there was well localized pain on palpation over the lumbosacral joint, between L-5 and S-l, of plaintiff’s back. An X-ray examination revealed a translucent line which appeared to be an old fracture of the tip of the spine of L-S, with a very definite margin to the fragment on the distal tip of the spine. His diagnosis was a fracture of the distal spine of the fifth lumbar vertebra with non-union, being symptomatic. This type fracture is usually caused by direct trauma. Dr. Davis was under the erroneous impression that the accident occurred in June, 1963.

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180 So. 2d 573, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 3855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-j-ray-mcdermott-co-lactapp-1965.