Woodward v. Blair

197 So. 920
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 3, 1940
DocketNo. 2140.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 197 So. 920 (Woodward v. Blair) 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
Woodward v. Blair, 197 So. 920 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

W. S. ROWND, Judge ad hoc.

..This is a suit for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Louisiana, Act No. 20 of 1914,'and its amendments. The-plaintiff was employed by. A. Farnell Blair, contractor, who was engaged at the time doing some construction work on the; Jail House .of the Parish of Tangipahoa. He is a carpenter by trade, and on March 23, 1938, while engaged regularly in the scope and course of his employment, ! fell .some twenty-two feet, as a result df -which he fractured his. left wrist, and injured his back in the region of the sacro-iliac joint. He was receiving wages at the sum of 65^ per hour, or $5.20 per day, and alleges that *921 the working week consisted of six days, and therefore his weekly wages were $31.20. On that basis, at the rate of 65% of his weekly wage which he is entitled to receive as compensation under the Statute, he would obtain a maximum of $20 per week.

Plaintiff alleges in his petition that he received some payments covering his claim of disability, but that the last payment so received by him was for the. period from June 16 to June 22, 1938. He alleges total permanent disability and prays for judgment against his employer and its compensation insurance carrier, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, in solido, in the full sum of $8,000 plus $250 for medical expenses, less a credit for whatever amount has been paid.

For answer, the defendants admit plaintiff’s employment, and that he sustained the injuries alleged by him, but aver, upon information and belief, that at the time the answer was filed, to-wit: October 10, 1938, he had recovered from such injuries. They admit that he was receiving the wages of 65$ per hour, or $5.20 per day, but aver that he was limited to forty hours work per week, divided into five days of eight hours each, and aver further that on that-basis they paid him such compensation as was due him until he had recovered, at the rate of $16.90 per week. They aver moreover that they paid all necessary medical and contingent expenses required by the Statute, and that when they ceased making any further payments on June 22, 1938, it was because they had been informed and believed that he had fully recovered from his injuries.

On the issues as thus made the case went to trial and resulted in a judgment in the district court in favor of plaintiff, awarding plaintiff compensation at the rate of $16.90 per week for a period not however beyond three hundred weeks, subject to a credit for whatever payments had been made. The judgment also decreed that defendants pay all medical and contingent expenses up to the amount of $250, less a credit of the amount already paid, and also taxed as costs the sum of $25, expert witness fees each to Dr. A. L. Lewis and Dr. Jessie H. McClen-don.

The judgment as rendered was read and signed in open court on October 27, 1938. On October 18, 1939, counsel for plaintiff filed a petition for an order of devolutive appeal to this court, and asked that the return day therefor be fixed, and an appeal bond be ordered furnished. The district judge granted the order, making the appeal returnable on or before November 15, 1939, conditioned upon the plaintiff furnishing bond in the sum of $100. The defendants, through their counsel, accepted service of the petition and order, and on-November 2, 1939, the plaintiff furnished the appeal bond required by the order of the district judge.

As the filing mark of the Clerk of this Court on the transcript of appeal showed that it was not filed until January 22, 1940, or more than two months after the return day as fixed in the order of appeal, and it appearing that there had been no order granting an extension of time for the filing of the transcript or record, counsel for ap-pellees filed in this court a motion to dismiss the appeal.

Inasmuch as there does not seem to be much dispute on the merits of the case, except on the point relating to the period of compensation, that is, whether it should be for three hundred weeks, as fixed in the judgment appealed from, or four hundred weeks, as contended for by counsel for plaintiff, the motion to dismiss the appeal is the most serious matter that confronts this court for decision. The issue which it raises presents a rather complicated question, in view of the decisions of the various courts, and one which has heretofore not been free from doubt by any means. Our investigation of the matter leads us to the conclusion that the motion should be dismissed and the appeal heard. We have reached this conclusion because of certain decisions of this court, and, more particularly, because of the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Stockbridge v. Martin, 162 La. 601, 602, 110 So. 828.

The whole question revolves on the point as to whose duty it is to see that the transcript of appeal is timely and properly lodged in the Appellate Court. Is it the duty of the appellant, or that of the Clerk of the District 'Court from which the appeal was sent up? Under Article 587 of the Code of Practice, it is made mandatory upon the appellant to file the transcript in the Appellate Court on or before the return day, and under Article 883 that duty is clearly imposed on him, as it is therein provided that if he, the appellant, has not filed the record in the Supreme Court on the day fixed for the return of the appeal he may obtain an extension of time in the manner pointed out in that Article. Particularly under the provisions of this last Article it may be said that the appellant is the one who is guiding the whole proceeding relative to having the *922 transcript prepared and filed, and he is the one who has to be on the lookout to see that it is filed in time, and if not to provide the ■Clerk with additional time in which to do so. Article 884 prescribed the penalty, if it may be referred to as such, which the appellant suffers if he has not obtained the extension of time, and has not filed the record in the Supreme Court on the return day. These Articles of the Code of Practice refer, however, to appeals to the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court of the State has significantly observed the provisions of those Articles of the Code of Practice by incorporating them in their own rules, one to the effect that it is the appellant’s duty to see that the transcript is filed in time, in order to avoid a dismissal of the appeal. From the very early days will be found decisions too numerous to mention to the effect that such duty is imposed on the appellant, and invariably the appeal has been dismissed when it is shown that appellant failed in his performance. See Maurer v. Haefner, 192 La. 929, 189 So. 579.

Prior to the decision by this Court in the case of Vinyard v. Stassi, 152 So. 161, this Court had always followed the ruling of the Supreme Court and held the appellant to the duty of filing the transcript of appeal in time. In Opelousas-St. Landry Bank v. Fontenot, 1 La.App. 195, this Court stated that: “The rules of practice regulating appeals to and proceedings in the Supreme Court shall apply to appeals and proceedings in the Court of Appeal, so far as they may ■be applicable until otherwise provided. Constitution 1921, Sec. 27 of Art. 7.” The Court then added that it was settled jurisprudence that a transcript of appeal must be filed on or before the return day, under penalty of dismissal. That decision was handed down December 30, 1924, and rehearing refused February 18, 1925.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-v-blair-lactapp-1940.