Williams v. Russell

87 So. 2d 761, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 769
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 1956
DocketNo. 8506
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 So. 2d 761 (Williams v. Russell) 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
Williams v. Russell, 87 So. 2d 761, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 769 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinions

AYRES, Judge.

This is an action for workmen’s compensation wherein plaintiff was awarded compensation at the rate of $23.40 per week from July 27, 1953, to September 7, 1953, and $5.85 per week thereafter for 294 weeks, less payments previously made, and for $100 medical expenses.

The defendant appealed from the judgment and plaintiff has answered the appeal, praying he be awarded compensation as for total and permanent disability.

Plaintiff sustained accidental injuries July 27, 1953, while employed by defendant at a rate of pay of $1 per hour, 40 hours per week, in the operation of a lumber and' tie mill combination of the defendant located in Sabine Parish, Louisiana. Specifically, plaintiff was employed to run the edger and “tail” the saw, at said mill.

That plaintiff sustained accidental injuries of a disabling nature is amply established by the record. During the afternoon of the aforesaid date the carriage used in-conveying the logs to the saw “jumped” the track rails upon which it was operated. Plaintiff, with the assistance of others, engaged in lifting and placing this machinery-back on the track. The weight of the machine was approximately 2,600 pounds.. While so engaged, plaintiff strained and injured his lower back in the lumbosacral' area. The strain and injury, which were-then and there reported, required immediate medical attention. Accordingly, plaintiff was conveyed by automobile to the clinic-of Dr. O. L. Sanders in Converse, Louisiana, but soon thereafter was transferred to-the clinic of Dr. Prothro in Pleasant Hill',, Louisiana, where he remained hospitalized under the doctor’s treatment for eight days. Upon his release he returned home, and for several months was treated by Dr. Sanders.. Neither of these doctors testified in the case.. Apparently, their testimony was relatively unimportant as both plaintiff and defendant rested their case upon the findings and conclusions of Drs. Ford J. MacPherson, for plaintiff, and Carson R. Reed, Jr., for defendant, both orthopedic surgeons of Shreveport.

The issue presented pertains primarily to the extent and duration of plaintiff’s disability. The determination of this question is somewhat complicated by the fact that, seven or eight years previous to the accident herein specifically concerned, plaintiff sustained an accident, particularly to the upper portion of his back, wherein there was a massive fracture of the second lumbar vertebra, with considerable involvement of the first and third vertebra and an obliteration of the upper interspaces, the result of which was the formation of a kyphosis, commonly known as a “hunchback”, in the upper part of his back, with a compensating curvature of the lower spine, producing [763]*763a lordosis, commonly known as “sway back”.

On account of said accident and injury, plaintiff was disabled for a period of three years, after which he recovered to such an extent that he was enabled to resume work as a manual laborer for a period of five years and extending until the occurrence of the accident of July 27, 1953. The work performed by him in the meantime and particularly at the time he was injured on the aforesaid date was hard manual labor, requiring stooping, straining and lifting of heavy objects, such as railroad ties and lumber and slabs sawed therefrom.

The later injury was confined to the lower part of the back and principally to the lumbosacral region. While both orthopedists treated said injury as being more or less a strain of that area, the record strongly suggests that the old back injury was of such severity that plaintiff’s back was more susceptible to subsequent injury and recurring pain than would have ordinarily been the case. Particularly, the kyphosis, with the compensating reverse lower spinal curve, predisposes plaintiff to straining injuries, with the result that lifting or straining places further tension on that area.

As of the date of his examination, April 19, 1955, Dr. MacPherson found tenderness in the area of plaintiff’s lower back with persistent involuntary muscle spasms and that plaintiff was suffering pain. In his report the witness stated as his opinion that plaintiff had reached the maximum recovery from his injury of July 27, 1953, notwithstanding he remained incapacitated and disabled from performing heavy manual labor, due, in part, to the old fracture of the second lumbar vertebra, which predisposed him to lumbosacral degeneration, and, in part, to the later acute straining injury. The doctor’s belief was that if plaintiff should return to heavy manual labor he would have an immediate recurrence of incapacitating lumbosacral pain, with the possibility of complete disablement, which would require the performance of an operation to fuse or immobilize the spine. Consequently, the witness recommended that plaintiff remain at light labor indefinitely. His evaluation of plaintiff’s condition was that plaintiff was totally and permanently disabled and incapacitated from doing heavy manual labor, attributable both to the injuries received in the previous accident and to those received in the accident of July 27, 1953, in about equal proportions.

Dr. Reed’s testimony unquestionably indicates the existence of pain and difficulty in plaintiff’s back. He says that straight leg raising on the right by plaintiff, while recumbent, is limited to 30 degrees and on the left to 70 degrees, due to pain in the region of the lumbosacral joint. His opinion was that plaintiff sustained a normal strain to his back, which without complications, should have disappeared in the 15 or 16 months elapsing between the accident and the date of his examination. Nonetheless, Dr. Reed states that spurring noted in the region of the fifth lumbar vertebra could have developed in the same period of time. This spurring was said to evidence osteoarthritis capable of causing pain.

Following the aforesaid accident, plaintiff apparently performed no labor of consequence until September 10, 1953, when, due to the exigency of the situation and the needs of his family, he secured employment with Matthews Lumber Company, operating a mechanical log loader. He continued with this work with some degree of regularity until the date of trial. In the respect that this work was manual labor, it was comparable to his former work, otherwise, very dissimilar. His work at the saw mill required standing, walking, straining and lifting. In operating the loader, plaintiff was seated and the operation of the machine was carried on by means of levers, brakes and pedals operated by hand and foot. No walking, standing, straining or lifting was necessary or required. Undoubtedly, the operation of this loader constituted much the lighter work and it was to this to which Dr. MacPherson referred in recommending that plaintiff be kept on lighter work indefinitely.

Plaintiff’s ability to perform heavy manual labor of the kind and charac[764]*764ter lie was performing at the time he was thus injured has been so impaired as to constitute total and permanent disability within the intent and purpose of the Workmen’s Compensation Statute, LSA-R.S. 23:1021 et seq. His right to compensation is unaffected by the fact that the accident may have, and, in all probability, did activate, and aggravate a preexisting physical condition resulting initially from a prior accident.

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Bluebook (online)
87 So. 2d 761, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-russell-lactapp-1956.