Wolf v. Louisiana Milk Products Co.

8 La. App. 657, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 216
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 La. App. 657 (Wolf v. Louisiana Milk Products 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
Wolf v. Louisiana Milk Products Co., 8 La. App. 657, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 216 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

ELLIOTT, J.

Lewis Wolf, an employee of Louisiana Milk Products Co., Inc., on the 10th of July, 1926, while engaged in doing the work he was employed to do, fell on the floor of the ice cream vault and injured his right knee.

The injury was a bad one. Plaintiff alleges in his petition that he has not been able to walk since, except on crutches, a period of about nine months, counting from the time of the injury to that of the trial. That because of his injury he is totally incapacitated to do work of any reasonable character. That his injury is incurable and produces in him a permanent disability. That he was receiving as wages at the time of the injury $125.00 a month. He claims compensation at sixty-five per cent of his weekly wages, or $18.74 a week for a period of four hundred (400) weeks.

Defendant denies liability and alleges that plaintiff is a malingerer, and alternatively, if it is liable for any amount, that it is only for sixty-five per cent of his weekly wages for two hundred weeks.

There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff for sixty-five per cent of his [658]*658weekly wages, or $18.74 a week, for the period of his disability, not to exceed four hundred (400) weeks, subject to twenty-six weeks already paid.

Defendant appeals.

The main dispute is as to the gravity of the injury, and whether ¡plaintiff is permanently disabled, as he contends.

The case was tried in the lower court on June 9, 1927, about eleven months after the injury. Plaintiff testified that his knee still hurt him sometimes at night to the extent that he was unable to rest.

That following his' injury he was confined to his bed at home for about eighteen days. That he then, on the instruction of the physician employed by defendant to treat him, went to the Hospital of Our Lady of the Lake, for an operation on his knee, and was in bed there for a couple of days. That he then, on the instruction of said physician, returned home and stayed in bed for about thirty days under treatment of the physician employed to treat him by defendant. That he can not use his right leg at all, can not bend his knee, and that it can not be bent except by force, which causes him great pain. That he had accepted and followed the treatment and instructions given him by each of the physicians employed to treat him. That the use of his leg has been entirely lost; that he is unwilling to submit to an anaesthetic because he fears to do so.

The evidence shows that defendant employed a physician to treat plaintiff at the time he Was first injured. That this physician had plaintiff’s case in charge for two months or more, and that no other physician examined him until after he had reported him to defendant as a permanent disability.

This physician testified that on calling at plaintiff’s home a couple of days after the injury he found his knee enormously swollen. That as the swelling continued he had plaintiff removed to the Hospital of Our Lady of the Lake, in Baton Rouge, and obtained several 30 cc. syringes full of a pinkish, straw colored fluid from his knee joint by aspiration, which he believes resulted from rupture of the knee capsule and the flow of the fluid into the tissues around the joint. That the removal of this fluid did not relieve plaintiff; his condition, however, slowly improved, the knee joint remaining very tender and painful. That his knee finally lapsed into a chronic condition which he treated for several months by every means he knew of, without success. He finally referred plaintiff to another physician for another kind of treatment which was also without effect. That the muscles of plaintiff’s leg had apparently atrophied somewhat from disuse of the thigh and calf. That there is no injury to the bone. That plaintiff’s leg stiffened gradually, finally becoming inflexible, which condition he saw coming on, and informed plaintiff that such would be the result. That the pain of which plaintiff complained is real and not assumed. That plaintiff suffered from chronic arthritis of the right knee, due to his injury, and will not, in his opinion, substantially improve, but will be a cripple for the rest of his life, suffering some pain at Intervals. That plaintiff may get so he can walk and may not. That fixation of his knee by force may be the means of stirring up infection, if any is present at the time, and cause serious trouble. That having treated plaintiff so long and studied his case so closely it was not necessary for plaintiff to submit to an anaesthetic in order for him to properly classify his condition, and he had so informed plaintiff. That he had reported plaintiff’s condition correctly to the de[659]*659fendant. His report to the defendant that plaintiff’s injury was permanent is in the record dated July 10, 1926.

A witness testified that plaintiff had been a steady worker and was industriously disposed.

The Court, on motion of the defendant, about two weeks after the suit was filed, appointed a bone specialist to examine plaintiff’s knee. This physician made an examination and reported to the Court that he found no injury to the bone. His report, received without objection, states that plaintiff held his knee at the time, at an angle of about 175 degrees, with the pattella apparently fixed. That by diverting plaintiff’s mind he was able to flex the knee to an angle of about 160 degrees and that when plaintiff was not thinking about it the pattella was perfectly free. That plaintiff was at the time incapacitated for doing any work which necessitated walking or standing. That most of the stiffness in plaintiff’s knee, was, in his opinion, due to voluntary muscular spasm, and was not permanent but would subside under treatment.

He was not sure of the above, because in .order to be sure, he says, he would have to examine plaintiff’s knee under an an-aesthetic. He gave it as his belief that if plaintiff would not submit to an anaesthetic for the purpose, that his condition was seventy-five per cent voluntary.

This report is prima facie of the fact therein stated. Act 20 of 1914, Section 9, amd. Act. 38 of 1918.

Two other physicians in the employ of the defendant examined plaintiff; one during the month of October and the other during November, 1916. These examinations were approximately three and four months after the injury. One of the physicians testified that he had obtained about thirty degrees of flexion of the knee under pressure, the. plaintiff complaining of pain under the pressure. That at the time of his examination he noticed mark spasm of the muscles of plaintiff’s thigh. He did not consider plaintiff a permanent disability at the time, and told him to throw his crutch away and get a stick, and to get a little confidence in himself.

At the time of the trial he saw plaintiff’s leg examined by other physicians and his former opinion was not changed.

The other physician examined plaintiff and treated him about three months. The treatment did not terminate until five months before the trial. This physician testified that on his first examination he obtained a knee flexion of about twenty or twenty-five degrees, the plaintiff holding his leg rigid and complaining that the flexion caused him pain. He was satisfied that plaintiff did not try to use his knee as he was directed to do, and in that way did not co-operate with him.

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Bluebook (online)
8 La. App. 657, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-louisiana-milk-products-co-lactapp-1928.