Washington v. Swanner

98 So. 2d 913, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 946
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 2, 1957
DocketNo. 21025
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 98 So. 2d 913 (Washington v. Swanner) 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
Washington v. Swanner, 98 So. 2d 913, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 946 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

McBRIDE, Judge.

Plaintiff, a colored man 45 years of age, filed this suit against his former employer and his workmen’s compensation liability insurer for workmen’s compensation at the rate of $30 per week for a period not to exceed 400 weeks, his claim being that he was rendered totally and permanently disabled from performing work of any reasonable character by reason of an accident which befell him on May 25, 1956, during the scope and course of his employment. Plaintiff recovered judgment after a trial on the merits below for compensation as prayed for (subject to certain credits for compensation previously paid by defendants), and.the defendants have taken this appeal therefrom.

The defendants in a joint answer to the suit admitted that plaintiff met with an accident on the above date, and alleged that upon his reporting an injury to his employer, he was sent to the employer’s physician who treated him until July 30, 1956, when the physician discharged him as being able to return to his job. The defendants specifically deny that plaintiff is totally and permanently disabled as he claims to be.

The accident and the resultant injury occurred while plaintiff was handling an automobile tire.. Plaintiff testified that he bounced the tire, which fell to the ground, and that upon stooping to lift it, he felt a knife-like pain in his back. Plaintiff testified that as a result of the accident he cannot perform any sort of hard work because of the inability to stoop and the pain in his middle back which runs down the left leg.

Plaintiff was sent to the office of Drs. Plouston, Roy & Faust on the date the injury occurred and was there seen by Dr. Richard A. Faust who specializes in surgery. While this physician made no X-rays of the [914]*914plaintiff’s back he concluded that plaintiff had sustained a strain of the ligaments and' muscles of the back, and prescribed that the patient sleep on a hard bed with a board under his mattress, that he utilize external heat applications at home, that he take sedatives, and that he return to the doctor’s office on subsequent days for diathermy treatment. From Dr. Faust’s testimony it appears he saw plaintiff several times a week thereafter and that on June IS, 1956, his opinion was that plaintiff had progressed so well he could return to his job. According to a stipulation in the record, plaintiff did make an attempt to return to his employment, but because of pain he was unable to do the work and left the job on June 18, 1956. The stipulation between counsel also discloses the fact that plaintiff was paid full compensation by the defendants from the date of his accident through July 31, 1956.

After plaintiff found it necessary because of his condition to quit the job on June 18, 1956, he returned to Dr. Faust’s office, and one of this physician’s associates referred him to Dr. H. R. Soboloff, an orthopedic specialist, for examination.

Dr. Soboloff on June 20, 1956, after having X-rays taken, made an orthopedic examination, his findings being that plaintiff had congenital malformations of his entire lumbar spine, and he pointed out an offset between vertebrae L-4 and L-5 which in his opinion indicated a spondylolisthesis. Dr. Soboloff also noted a narrowing of L-5 and S-l which he said “was on a congenital basis.”

However, Dr. Soboloff felt that plaintiff had symptoms in his back consistent with his complaints “within a reasonable degree,” and that he felt plaintiff should continue to have treatment. He explained that because of the congenital malformations it would take a longer period for plaintiff to recover than in the case of a normal person, and so the patient was referred back to Dr. Faust for further treatment.

Dr. Faust testified that he did not agree with Dr. Soboloff, but that nevertheless he continued treating plaintiff up until July 30, 1956, when he discharged him as completely cured. Dr. Faust states that his discharge of plaintiff on July 30, 1956, was based not only on his own opinion that plaintiff had recovered but also on the opinion Dr. Soboloff reached after a second examination of the plaintiff made on July 27, 1956.

Plaintiff claimed to have pain when he went to Dr. Soboloff for the July 27, 1956, or second examination. However, Dr. Soboloff’s conclusion was that there was a lack of any orthopedic findings and the examination was negative, and he believed that the plaintiff was fully able to return to the same job in which he had been previously employed. Dr. Soboloff stressed there was no evidence of an injury by trauma and brought out that the accident did not in any way aggravate the congenital condition already mentioned.

In order to maintain the chronology of the medical examinations which plaintiff was subjected to, it should be stated here that between the first and second examinations by Dr. Soboloff, plaintiff’s counsel sent him to Dr. Homer D. Kirgis, neurosurgeon, who saw and examined plaintiff the one time, July 12, 1956, the examination being made with the aid of X-rays. According to Dr. Kirgis, there was a narrowing of the fourth lumbar interspace and possibly a minor anterior subluxation of the fourth lumbar vertebra and the fifth lumbar vertebra. Dr. Kirgis thought that the plaintiff suffered from a rupture of the fourth and fifth lumbar intervertebral discs, which condition he described by saying that the spinal column is made up of a series of vertebrae, one on top of the other, between each pair of which is a cartilaginous inter-vertebral disc which acts like a cushion between the bodies of the vertebrae. The physician explained that with a sudden compression of the spine, such as occurs from a fall, or with a leverage-type twisting, or a lifting effort, the vertebrae arc [915]*915forced tog-ether and the intervertebral disc slips partially out -of place. In medical parlance this condition is known as a herniated or a ruptured intervertebral disc and is considered very plainful. Dr. Kirgis also stated he observed multiple congenital lesions of plaintiff’s lumbar spine.

Dr. Kirgis’ conclusion was after this one examination that plaintiff, because of the condition resulting from the herniated or ruptured intervertebral disc, could not possibly return to his former employment.

On August 13, 1956, the defendant insurance company had the plaintiff examined by Dr. R. H. Corales, Jr., a neurosurgeon. Dr. Corales made no reference to the spondylolisthesis or congenital condition spoken of by Dr. Soboloff or the herniated or ruptured disc mentioned by Dr. Kirgis, his findings being that there was an exaggeration of complaints by plaintiff and that it was difficult to say whether there is some underlying organic pathology with any great degree of accuracy, but that if any pathology existed he believed that plaintiff greatly magnified it.

The last physician to whom plaintiff was sent was Dr. Irvin Cahen, orthopedist, who saw him on December 19, 1956, and made an examination with the aid of X-ray pictures. It appears that this examination was made at the behest of defendants’ attorney.

Dr. Cahen states he found no condition which he could trace to trauma, and he considered the back condition as representing potential abnormalities which had been present for a long time, particularly referring to a degenerative condition of the fourth and fifth vertebrae, and his opinion was the type of injury plaintiff had sustained had produced no effects which could be considered as an aggravation of his back abnormality. He thought that the plaintiff was fully competent to return to the duties of his- employment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 So. 2d 913, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-swanner-lactapp-1957.