Ware v. Southern Kraft Corporation

190 So. 207, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 330
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1939
DocketNo. 5876.
StatusPublished

This text of 190 So. 207 (Ware v. Southern Kraft Corporation) 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. Southern Kraft Corporation, 190 So. 207, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 330 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

This is a suit under the Employers’ Liability Act of this state. Act No. 20 of 1914. Plaintiff alleged that on or about April 12, 1937, while in the employ of defendant and acting in the course and scope of his employment, he was carrying a sack of starch, weighing approximately 200 pounds, up a stairway when he missed a step; and as a result thereof he fell and injured his back and spine and the muscles, ligaments and soft tissues of. his body; that the accident was reported to the foreman of his department and plaintiff was sent to defendant’s doctor for treatment. He alleged his weekly wage at the time of the accident was $15.12, and he was employed to work 7 days a week. He further alleged that he has never recovered from the injuries received in said accident and is totally and permanently disabled from performing work of any reasonable character. He prayed for judgment for sixty-five per cent of his weekly wage for a period not to exceed 400 weeks.

Defendant in answer denies that plaintiff was injured in the accident as alleged by him, and contends that any disability from which plaintiff suffered was due to sickness caused otherwise than from an accidental injury. It admitted that plaintiff did make a report of an accident to his foreman and that the foreman gave him an order to visit the company’s doctor. Although it denied owing plaintiff anything, as a precautionary measure and giving plaintiff the benefit of all doubt, it tendered to him compensation in the amount of $165.14, and all court costs up to date of tender, the tender representing sixty-five per cent of .plaintiff’s wages for a period of 16 weeks. The tender was refused as a final settlement.

The lower court awarded plaintiff judgment for the amount tendered and ordered the court cost paid by defendant up to the time of tender.

From that judgment, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Plaintiff is a negro man 33 years of age. He had been in the employ of defendant company for approximately 10 months. He testified that he was carrying a sack of starch, weighing about 200 pounds, up a stairway when he slipped. He dropped the *208 starch and caught the banisters with his hands and kept himself from falling down the steps; that he felt pain in his back, all the way from the small of his back up to his shoulders; that one of his fellow employees picked up the starch and carried it up for him; that he descended to the room where he worked and sat down; that he soon thereafter reported the accident to his foreman, who gave him an order for hospitalization. He did not immediately go to the doctor, but remained on the job, not working, for several hours, until quitting time, when he went to the clinic and was examined by the company doctor. Heat applications were given to his back and he went home.

He is corroborated as to the near fall by his fellow employee. One other employee testified that plaintiff told him he had hurt his back, immediately after the occurrence; that plaintiff attempted to roll a wheelbarrow of lime and was forced to quit; that he rolled it to its destination for plaintiff; that plaintiff did no other work that afterT noon; and that he heard him make the report to his foreman. He did not hear everything said, but did hear him tell the foreman that he slipped and fell when attempting to roll a wheelbarrow loaded with lime. The foreman testified that the only accident plaintiff .claimed when'making his report was that he made a run with a wheelbarrow and got a catch in his side. The foreman asked him if he wanted to go to a doctor and plaintiff said he would wait until the end of the shift. There is no evidence by plaintiff or any other witness that he slipped while rolling the wheelbarrow.

There was one physician, used by plaintiff, who testified that he examined plaintiff eight months after the alleged accident and made several X-rays of the entire spine. His interpretation of these X-rays is that there is a chipped fracture of the fourth lumbar vertebra and a fracture of the fifth lumbar vertebra extending through the sacrum into the sacro-iliac joint; and a disturbance, by widening of the right sacro-iliac joint. He also found the muscles of plaintiff’s back on the right side were rigid, spastic, and held tense.

Plaintiff testified that his back hurt him constantly and that he was unable to perform any manual labor; that the only work he had done since the accident was to occasionally carry a small package from a store, where he loafed most of the time, out to a car, an accommodation to the storekeeper who was kind to him and who had helped him since he received his injury.

Defendant placed upon the witness stand the man in charge of the Louisiana Unemployment Insurance Office, at Bastrop, Louisiana, who produced documents showing that plaintiff had applied for and received pay through that office. The applications were signed by plaintiff and in said applications he had answered in the negative the question of whether his unemployment was due to accidental injury. He also stated in the applications that he was able and willing to work. He also filed sworn statements showing small earnings for each week, ranging from 50 cents to-$1. Plaintiff denied earning anything and swore that the statements of earnings were false. He explained his answer to the questions regarding accidental injury not being the cause of his unemployment, by showing he did not fill out the application, but that it was done by the man in charge of the office, and that he signed it without knowing its contents.

Plaintiff’s alleged injury occurred on April 12, 1937. On May 20, 1937, Dr. Gar-nier examined him and operated on him for acute appendicitis. The operation revealed an unusual appendix. It was down against the source muscles and carried up 6½ to 7 inches. The original incision had to be enlarged in order to remove the appendix.The case developed a wound infection and plaintiff was kept in the hospital for several weeks. Dr. Gamier also saw plaintiff prior to May 20, 1937, and saw him last on April 4, 1938. He is positive that plaintiff never complained to him of his back until April 4, 1938, after suit was filed, and then his complaint was of the upper part of his back, between his shoulders and back of his chest. He could find no evidence of back injury. The only thing he could find wrong with plaintiff was an unhealed fistula. He examined, in the shadow box in court, the X-rays which plaintiff’s doctor testified about, and he is positive they do not disclose any fractures or widening of the sacro-iliac joint. He testified that plaintiff’s appendix could have caused pain in his back; that the accident could not and did not cause the acute appendicitis.

Dr. Ogden testified that he just saw plaintiff on the evening of April 12, 1937. He was complaining then of generalized aches and pains over his body, had a little fever and was feeling bad. He made no *209 mention of an accident at the mill. This physician made a diagnosis of malaria and gave him a prescription for same. He further testified,—

“A. * * * I saw him next a couple of days later. He came in on the 14th, and I saw him about every other day after that until he was operated on on May 20th. I also made an examination. He came back in about a week and he said he had pains in his joints, and he still had some fever, and he was still feeling bad, so I made an examination of his urine. Found pus in his urine.

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190 So. 207, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-southern-kraft-corporation-lactapp-1939.