Warning v. Royal Indemnity Co.

75 So. 2d 242, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 870
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 18, 1954
DocketNo. 20283
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 75 So. 2d 242 (Warning v. Royal Indemnity 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
Warning v. Royal Indemnity Co., 75 So. 2d 242, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 870 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This compensation suit is based on the allegation of William Warning that,. on September 12th, 1952, while ah employee of Jahncke Service, Inc., and engaged in hazardous employment he, as a result of accident, sustained physical injuries which caused permanent; ■ total disability. He alleges also that “in about the year 1936” he had sustained a severe back injury, and that, though he had been able 'to resume work about two months after the occurrence of the accident in 1936, “he has suffered painful recurrent injuries * * * which on occasions caused him to become confined.” He further alleges that, though as a result of the accident in September, 1952, he was permanently and totally disabled, the employer and the insurance carrier of the employer refused to pay him compensation after October 10th, 1952.

After being discharged by the physician as able to return to work on October 10th, 1952, Warning brought this suit against his said employer, Jahncke Service, Inc., and its insurance carrier, Royal Indemnity Company, averring that he had been permanently and totally disabled and praying for judgment against both corporations solidarily in the sum of $30 per week for four hundred weeks, subject to a credit for such amounts as had already been paid. He also sought reimbursement for medical and incidental expenses in the sum of $500 and for a reasonable attorney’s fee.

Defendants interposed pleas of prescription of one and two years to any ■ claim which might have resulted from an accident in 1936, and denied that on September 12, 1952, there had occurred any accident, or that plaintiff had sustained any accidental injury, and they, averred that if he did sustain any such injury on that date, he had entirely recovered and could have returned to work on October 10th, 1952, to which time compensation had been paid to him.

In the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans there was judgment in favor of plaintiff and against both defendants solidarily in the sum of $30 per week from the 15th day of September, 1952 to December 15th, 1952, subject to a credit for compensation .payments made to October 10th, 1952, and there was further judgment in favor of plaintiff for $77.51 representing medical expenses paid by him. From this judgment, on July 14th, 1953, Warning appealed. Defendants answered the appeal, praying that the judgment be reversed and that any recovery be denied plaintiff.

Warning died on July 25th, 1953, and on March 31st, 1954, while the matter was pending here, his widow filed a motion in which she suggested that, as the legal representative of Warning, she be made a party appellant. To- this motion she attached a copy of the judgment of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans [244]*244rendered in the succession proceedings of William Warning and under which judgment she, the widow, was. recognized as ‘‘the sole surviving spouse in community of the deceased, entitled as such to the ownership of all of the property left by the deceased. * *

When the matter was heard by us, the defendants-appellees made two contentions: first, that the record does not. justify a holding that Warning sustained any accidental injiiry on September 12th, 1952, or that, as a result of what occurred on that day, any disability from which he may have suffered was lighted up or accelerated, or resulted in any further disability; and second, defendants maintain that even if any accidental injury is shown with any. resulting disability, the right of the present plaintiff, Mrs. Warning, is limited to such recovery as Warning was entitled to at the time of his death.

The record is voluminous and is composed largely of technical medical evidence. There is much reason to doubt whether, on September 12th, 1952, anything occurred which in any way affected the physical' condition of Warning. He charged that on that day,’as he was operating a crane of the Jahncke Company, a defective lever became disengaged. and he was thrown to the floor of the crane and that his back was injured and that he reported the accident.

The evidence is conflicting as to whether he made any such report at the time alleged, although it seems evident that there was some defect in the crane which caused it to operate improperly.

The record shows that in 1936 Warning had sustained an injury to his back and that, as a result, near the lower extremity of his spinal column there were structural changes which appeared in several of the X-ray photographs which were taken after thé alleged occurrences in 1952.

The various histories of the occurrence of the accident in 1952 — if there was such an accident — as given by Warning to the defendants’ doctors show that, in all probability,'he hiniSelf was not at all certain as to how his alleged injuries were sustained. It seems also that, before the occurrence of the alleged accident, Warning was suffering either from a defective condition of his back or from some other cause.

The examinations made by Dr. Joseph T. Scott, Jr., Dr. Howard Carr and Dr. Lee C. Sehlesinger, all employed by defendants, showed no disability which could be traced to the accident of 195.2. Dr. Scott treated him for about ten days, but he says that during that period he found no objective symptoms of any injuries which could have resulted from the accident of 1952, but that he treated him because he continued to complain of pain. The same may be said of the findings of the other doctors produced by the defendants. They all found evidence of a back condition which could have been caused by trauma but all felt certain that the condition which was found could not have developed as a result of an accident in September, 1952.

Dr. Scott, referring to the “lipping” of two of the lumbar vertebrae said:

“ * * * that, of course, is something that comes over many years.”

When asked whether it could have resulted from an accident which occurred in September, 1952, he answered, “No, sir.”

Dr. Howard Carr said:

“ * * * The physical examination of the patient disclosed no disability from the episode as having occurred September 15, 1952.”

Dr. Charles Lilly, one of the doctors produced on behalf of plaintiff, when asked whether it takes a period of time for the development of hypotrophic arthritis answered, “That’s right, yes sir.” And when asked whether it could develop in a month or a week, he answered, “No, no.”

Dr. Lee C. Sehlesinger said:

“I stated in my report that although the patient’s complaint was considerable in relation to his back, orthopedic examinátion is objectively negative and [245]*245I do not believe that this patifent has permanent disability of his back from trauma sustained 12 September 1952 and therefore I gave him orthopedic clearance.”

And in a report of an examination which he had made Dri Schlesinger, after stating what he found, said:

“It is therefore obvious from radiological studies, that changes in the patient’s lumbar spine of hypertrophic arthritic origin preceded the date of the patient’s injury, and were there prior to his injuring his back, and there have been no further advancements of these changes in the intervening period between 16 September 1952 and 2 March, 1953. I must therefore conclude that the patient has suffered no structural damage as a result of the accident to his back on 12 September, 1952.”

Dr. George C.

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Bluebook (online)
75 So. 2d 242, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warning-v-royal-indemnity-co-lactapp-1954.