Windham v. W. Horace Williams Co.

18 So. 2d 854
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 1944
DocketNo. 6718.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 18 So. 2d 854 (Windham v. W. Horace Williams 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
Windham v. W. Horace Williams Co., 18 So. 2d 854 (La. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

This is a compensation suit in which plaintiff claims to have suffered an accident while in the employ of defendant, W. Horace Williams Company, alleging that injuries resulting from such accident brought about total permanent disability. After trial there was judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant employer company and its insurer in the amount of $20 per week, not to exceed 400 weeks, subject to credits for weekly compensation paid, and rejecting plaintiff's demands for additional medical expenses. *Page 855 From this judgment defendants have appealed, and plaintiff has answered the appeal, praying for the amendment of the judgment to the extent of allowing an additional amount for medical expenses.

At some time in or about the month of November, 1940, plaintiff entered the employ of the W. Horace Williams Company, which was then engaged in the construction of Camp Claiborne near Alexandria, Louisiana, in the capacity of a labor foreman. His duties consisted principally of directing the efforts of a crew of common laborers, numbering some 20 or more men, which was occupied in leveling off the terrain, constructing and placing tent bottoms, etc. In the course of his duties plaintiff at times actually used a shovel in instructing members of his crew in the proper method of leveling off the ground, and not infrequently gave a hand in the performance of the operations of lifting and moving tent bottoms, driving stakes, etc. To this extent it may be said that plaintiff did perform hard manual labor, but these incidents were exceptions rather than the rule. For the most part, plaintiff's duties were directional and supervisory in nature, and in the performance of these duties hard, manual labor was not essential.

On the morning of December 16, 1940, plaintiff and his crew were moved to a new area of the camp, and, finding that the necessary tools for their laborers had not been supplied, plaintiff set off for the nearest tool house in order to procure such implements. At a point some 40 or 50 yards from his crew, while passing along a narrow board walk, made slippery with mud and tilted to the right, plaintiff fell to the ground, striking his back upon a pile of junk lumber scraps lying near the right-hand side of the walk. After rising to his feet, he proceeded on his way in search of tools, later returning to his crew and continuing to discharge his duties until about the middle of the afternoon, at which time, according to his testimony, his suffering became so intense as to necessitate leaving the job and reporting to the first-aid station.

In spite of his alleged suffering and pain plaintiff continued on the job for a week following the accident, at which time he was forced to quit his employment.

On December 31, 1940, plaintiff reported to Dr. H.H. Hardy, Jr., in accordance with instructions from his employer, the W. Horace Williams Company. At the request of the company, Dr. Hardy took plaintiff's history, made a complete examination, and procured the making of X-rays.

After a short time plaintiff felt compelled to return to his home in Beauregard Parish, lacking financial ability to continue to live in or near Alexandria where he might receive treatment from the company's physicians, and thereafter placed himself under the care of Dr. David J. Drez at De Quincy, Louisiana. Plaintiff was subjected to examinations by a number of other physicians, who testified, either on trial of the case or by deposition, on behalf of the parties to this suit.

The record contains proceedings under the jurisdiction of the Industrial Accident Board of the State of Texas, which establish the fact that in March, 1940, plaintiff effected a compromise settlement with his employer, the Pure Oil Company, whereby he received the lump sum of $1,000, in addition to compensation of $597.87 which had been theretofore paid at the rate of $19.11 per week. These proceedings include a signed and witnessed statement made by Ward Windham, in which he briefly sets up the facts of the accident and injury to the effect that on July 1, 1939, while employed by the Pure Oil Company, he received an injury to his back as the result of falling backwards 2 or 3 feet. The statement further contains the declaration that the said Windham believed that he had improved to the extent where he could return to light duty work, and that, accordingly, he had agreed to accept the compromise sum as above set forth.

According to plaintiff's testimony in this case, after receiving this settlement he returned to a farm in Beauregard Parish and engaged in farming operations on a small scale for a number of months, until he applied for and received employment from the W. Horace Williams Company in November, 1940.

In response to questions on cross-examination, plaintiff testified that he had made a compensation claim for a leg injury sometime in or about 1921 or 1922. Being probed further by diligent counsel for defendants, plaintiff admitted that he had brought an action in or about the year 1932 for total disability against the Newport Company and its insurer. We find this case to have been reported, Windham v. Newport Company et al., La.App., 143 So. 538, 539, but since it was decided adversely to the plaintiff on a question of *Page 856 law, the facts in connection with his alleged injury are not set up, with the exception of a brief statement made in one paragraph of the court's opinion, as follows: "The testimony of the plaintiff is that, after blasting one of these stumps, a piece was left in the ground, that, while pressing against it, his hand slipped, his body fell on the piece of stump which struck him in the side, causing the injury for which he is demanding compensation."

While the rights of a claimant in any given case should not be prejudiced by reason of the fact that he has sustained the misfortune of receiving disabling injuries as the result of prior accidents, nevertheless, we are definitely of the opinion that justice between the parties requires that the circumstances and effects of such prior accidents should be closely and carefully scrutinized with reference to any bearing or effect which they may have or exert upon the cause at hand.

For this reason, we are impressed with the fact that the nature and character of the injury purported to have been sustained by plaintiff in Texas in the accident of July 1, 1939, is of an exactly similar nature and character as the injury which serves as the basis of plaintiff's claim in the instant case. Numerous examinations of plaintiff were made by Dr. W.J. Rollins of the Surgical and Medical Clinic, Houston, Texas. X-rays made in connection with these examinations were obtained and submitted to the expert medical witnesses testifying in this case. The testimony convinces us that there has been no appreciable change in the condition existing immediately subsequent to the accident of 1939 and immediately subsequent to the accident of December, 1940.

It is conclusively established by the medical testimony in this case that plaintiff suffers, and has suffered for a considerable period of time, from a malformation and diseased condition of the spinal and pelvic regions. There is a divergence of opinion among the learned members of the medical profession as to the approximate time of origin of this deformity, but not one of them questioned the existence thereof, nor, indeed, did any of them succeed in convincingly eliminating this condition and its natural consequences as being the most likely cause to which might be attributed any pain, suffering or disability to perform manual labor to which plaintiff might be subjected. The diagnosis of hypertrophic arthritis of the spine and scoliosis are established beyond question.

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Bluebook (online)
18 So. 2d 854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/windham-v-w-horace-williams-co-lactapp-1944.