Williams v. Texsun Supply Corp.

47 So. 2d 93, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 660
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1950
DocketNo. 3273
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 So. 2d 93 (Williams v. Texsun Supply Corp.) 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. Texsun Supply Corp., 47 So. 2d 93, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 660 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

The plaintiff has filed this suit in which he is seeking to recover compensation for total and permanent disability as the result of an alleged accident in which a log fell on his back on October 8, 1947, while employed by the defendant. He is asking for judgment at the maximum rate then in effect, $20.00 per week, from the date of the injury for a period not exceeding 400 weeks, with credit for compensation payments previously paid, together with interest.

The defendant admitted the material allegations and admitted the payment of compensation up to February 5, 1949, on which date the defendant set forth in its answer that the plaintiff was well and able to return to his former employ and perform all duties thereof.

After trial, the District Court with written reasons rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff as prayed for. From this judgment, the defendant has appealed.

As it is admitted that plaintiff did receive injuries on the date alleged, for which compensation was paid through February 2, 1949, amounting to $1380.00, together with medical expenses of $739.40, the questions to be determined are whether or not plaintiff had recovered from the injury and resulting disability when his compensation was discontinued, and if he had not recovered at that time, would he have done so had he cooperated with his doctors? The answer to these questions involves principally the weighing and evaluation of the testimony given in the case, most of it of a medical nature. The trial judge found as a fact that plaintiff had not fully recovered from his injuries when the compensation ceased and that plaintiff, at the time of the trial of the case, was totally and permanently disabled. He also found that the plaintiff was not unreasonable in hesitating to perform the exercises prescribed for him in that such exercises would produce such pains as necessitating sedatives. In other words, the trial judge resolved these two questions in favor of the plaintiff.

The witnesses who testified in the case were the plaintiff, a resident insurer in charge of claims, and seven doctors composed of three radiologists, two general practitioners, an orthopedic surgeon, and a general surgeon. The medical testimony is quite conflicting.

[95]*95On October 8, 1947, the plaintiff was injured as the result of an accident in which a log fell on his back and he was immediately taken to Dr. J. H. McClendon of Amite, who referred him to New Orleans, where he was seen the same day by Dr. J. K. Stone, who thereafter treated him and who, on that date, diagnosed his injuries as severe contusions, hematoma, multiple abrasions of the left side of his face, severe contusions of the chest and back, with probably fracture and shock. X-rays were made and the plaintiff was found to have a fracture of the first left rib and a compressed fracture of the first lumbar vertebra. In Dr. Stone’s report of October 13th, 1947, he stated that he estimated plaintiff’s disability at approximately six months.

On October 14th, he was placed in a plaster of Paris cast and kept in the hospital until October 19th, during which time he could walk around the hospital if he so desired. On the latter date, he returned to Amite, where he was under the treatment of Dr. McClendon, with instructions to report to the latter doctor at least once a week for six or eight weeks, and at the end of that time, to return to the hospital for the removal of his cast and the fitting of a Taylor brace. The plaintiff returned to Dr. Stone as instructed on December IS, 1947, and the cast was removed, and X-rays then taken showed a sufficient healing. A Taylor brace was made for him and fitted, and he was discharged from the hospital on December 19, 1947. He then returned to Dr. McClendon and was given physiotherapy treatments.

He was seen by Dr. Stone again on January 19, 1948, February 19, 1948, March 18, 1948, April 20, 1948, June 21, 1948, and January 21, 1949. In February, Dr. Stone again had X-rays made and he was still of the opinion that plaintiff should discard his brace, that some form of physiotherapy should be instituted daily, that he be treated with massage and exercise which should involve stooping and bending, both front and laterally, so as to restore the function of his muscles, and that if suffering at the end of the active motion, he be given a mild sedative.

In April, 1948, when Williams again visited Dr. Stone, he was still wearing the brace and complained of stiffness, weakness and discomfort in his back, and Dr. Stone again advised him that it was very essential to discard his back splint and exercise his back in order to restore the functions of the back muscles. He also advised him to return to light work. Dr. Stone testified that at this time it was his opinion that the plaintiff was not co-operative and had done nothing that had been prescribed for him. In June of 1948, when Dr. Stone saw this plaintiff, there was some rigidity of the back muscles and an appearance of weakness generally which he attributed to the lack of exercise.

On January 21, 1949, Dr. Stone again examined the plaintiff and found the compressed fracture of the first lumbar vertebra healed, but stated in his report, that plaintiff was suffering from weakness which developed from his immobilization in the plaster cast and splints and his lack of co-operation and proper exercise during the last six months. On the 9th day of May,' 1949, the day of the trial, Dr. Stone testified that from an orthopedic standpoint, plaintiff had recovered in that his rib, and vertebra had healed, but that he had not restored the function of the muscles and ligaments involved during the treatment of the fracture, due, in his opinion, entirely to failure to co-operate on the part of the plaintiff in the recommended treatment. On that date, it was Dr. Stone’s opinion that if the plaintiff would carry out instructions he could completely recover within three or four months. He refused to state categorically that the plaintiff could become fully recovered.

Dr. Lubritz, a general practitioner of Amite, examined the plaintiff on February 12, 1949, and at that time took an X-ray,- which is in evidence, and which he interpreted as showing ,an unhealed, un-united fracture of the bilateral transverse process of the first lumbar vertebra, healed fracture of the left transverse process of the third lumbar vertebra, with the appearance of an unhealed fracture at the tip of the right transverse process of the fourth lumbar vertebra, which, however, he [96]*96stated'might be'due to a blood vessel making a shadow. A physical examination by Dr. • Lubritz revealed normal and ' equal movements of the upper and lower extremities with a definite limitation of the motion of the spine anteriorly and posteriorly, with a tender area over the entire lumbar region: It was Dr. Lubritz’s diagnosis that plaintiff was suffering from “chfonic disability, permanent one hundred per cent from old fracture of lumbar vertebra and vertebra portions.”

Dr. McClendon, on December 6, 1948, wrote a letter to the Insurers Service Corporation, which was handling the claim, that, in' his opinion, further treatment would ¡be useless. Dr.

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47 So. 2d 93, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-texsun-supply-corp-lactapp-1950.