Wright v. Urania Lumber Co.

95 So. 2d 838, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 853
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1957
DocketNo. 8662
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 So. 2d 838 (Wright v. Urania Lumber 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
Wright v. Urania Lumber Co., 95 So. 2d 838, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 853 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

AYRES, Judge.

Plaintiff, a former employee of the defendant, instituted this action to recover compensation provided for total and permanent disability as the result of accidental injuries allegedly sustained by him October 8, 1954, while performing services in the course of his employment in hauling logs by truck for the defendant. The accident occurred while plaintiff was engaged in unloading logs from a truck to a skid-way by means or use of a cant hook. While so engaged one of the logs, as it rolled from the truck, struck the cant hook, the handle of which, in turn, struck plaintiff’s knee, as the result of which plaintiff claims that he sustained injuries to his back of such a nature and to such an extent as to render him permanently and totally incapacitated to do work of the same or similar character.

In response to plaintiff’s demands defendant admitted that plaintiff was injured in an accident but contends that the injury sustained was only slight and confined to the left knee, and that the injury consisted of a mere contusion and swelling of the knee. Defendant further avers that plaintiff received all medical attention necessary for the treatment of the injury sustained and was discharged from further treatment after October 27, 1954, as having fully recovered, and, that at all times since, plaintiff has been fully able to resume the duties of his employment. In the alternative, it was claimed by defendant that, if plaintiff had any further disability, such disability had no causal connection with the accident sustained by him in its employ. During the trial it was stipulated that plaintiff was paid four weeks compensation at the rate of $30 per week.

The trial court concluded that plaintiff had not established his claim by a preponderance of the evidence and found that whatever disability plaintiff continued to suffer could not be attributed to the accident. Accordingly, plaintiff’s demands were rejected and he has appealed. The question for determination is, therefore, one of fact.

The injury suffered by plaintiff appears to have been of a minor nature. Following the accident plaintiff returned with his truck to the woods for another load of logs, the loading of which was apparently done by fellow employees. After returning to the mill with the load plaintiff reported to the clinic of Drs. Thomas and Tannehill in Urania, physicans of the defendant. [840]*840He was hospitalized for about three days. During that time swelling and tenderness were in evidence over the patella of the left knee. X-rays as to fractures or dislocations were negative. Plaintiff’s knee, however, sustained abrasions or brush burns.

Following his discharge from the clinic on October 11, 1954, plaintiff returned two days later complaining of pain in his knee and again returned on the 19th, complaining additionally that he could not bend his knee, a demonstration of which disproved the complaint.

Because of plaintiff’s continued complaints of pain in his knee he was referred by his local doctors to Dr. T. E. Banks, an orthopedist of Alexandria, Louisiana, who made an examination on October 22, 1954, as the result of which the doctor expressed an opinion that, although plaintiff was able to return to work, due to the fact of the recent injury two additional weeks was advisable for complete recovery before resuming labor. Continuing to complain of pain in the area of his knee, plaintiff reported to Dr. Thomas at Urania and was again treated in the clinic at Urania from October 28th to October 30, 1954. During thÍ9 time plaintiff carried a slightly abnormal temperature and was given sedatives for pain and was administered penicillin and streptomycin. After plaintiff’s fever subsided he was again referred to Dr. Banks for re-examination and, on November 1, 1954, was referred to Dr. P. M. Davis, also an orthopedist, to whom plaintiff made no complaints nor gave any history of pain in his back. The examination revealed no pain suffered by plaintiff in his back, and that his back was straight with no evidence of any list. The doctor was of the opinion that plaintiff was fully able to pursue his occupation.

Drs. Thomas and Tannehill found no disabling injuries of a permanent nature. Neither did the two orthopedists find any such disabling injuries. Both orthopedists were of the opinion that plaintiff was able to resume his occupation at the time of their examinations. At no time did plaintiff complain to either of these four doctors of an injury to or a pain in his back.

Plaintiff, however, was, at his own instance, examined by Dr. A. Scott Hamilton, an orthopedist of Monroe, Louisiana, on December 3, 1954, when he caused plaintiff to be admitted to a hospital in Monroe for the application of pelvic traction, pursued during a course of several days. Further visits to Dr. Hamilton’s office were made on December 29, 1954, and January 11 and 31, 1955. On the last of these visits plaintiff was again admitted to the hospital for the performance of a myelogram. Other visits were made March 4 and 7, 1955, when Dr. Altenberg, another orthopedist, was called for consultation, following which an operation was determined for the correction or removal of a herniated disc. This operation was performed about April 11, 1955, from which it was disclosed that plaintiff was not suffering from a herniated disc. There was found, however, a thickened ligament, “presumably” pressing upon one part of the sciatic nerve, and another ligament less involved. Both ligaments, as was a small amount of bone, were removed to prevent any pressure upon the nerve.

Apparently following the operation plaintiff received some relief but continued to complain that because of the condition of his back he was totally disabled. Unquestionably, plaintiff continued, for some period of time, to suffer pain from some post operative condition in his back.

The record establishes that between the time plaintiff was examined by Dr. Davis on November 1, 1954, and by Dr. Hamilton on December 3, 1954, most probably during the Thanksgiving holidays, plaintiff, while visiting a residence under construction, fell face forward to the floor level while walking the floor joists. In that accident plaintiff sustained injuries to his face and possibly an injury to his back. There is no proof, however, that the condition of plaintiff’s back, as revealed by Dr. Hamilton’s [841]*841operation, was traumatic in origin, or that, if it was, it did not as likely happen in one of the accidents in which plaintiff was involved as the other.

Dr. Hamilton and Dr. O. P. Mauterer were of the opinion that plaintiff was disabled from the performance of manual labor. Dr. Mauterer testified that plaintiff was so disabled at the time of his examination of May 19, 1956, but that he was unable to attribute the disability to the accident sustained by plaintiff in defendant’s employ. Unquestionably, the weight of the medical testimony is that the original complaint of plaintiff was confined and restricted to his left knee and that such injury was, in all probability, of a minor nature.

It is contended, however, that plaintiff’9 back injury did not manifest itself until after plaintiff was first examined by Dr. Hamilton on December 3, 1954. The conclusion, however, is inescapable that plaintiff has not shown any causal connection or relationship between the accident sustained in defendant’s employ and the injury claimed to his back, in the treatment of which an operation was performed by Dr. Hamilton. That such causal connection was not established clearly appears not only in the testimony of Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 So. 2d 838, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-urania-lumber-co-lactapp-1957.