Wyatt v. Consolidated Underwriters

98 So. 2d 537, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 902
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1957
DocketNo. 8756
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 98 So. 2d 537 (Wyatt v. Consolidated Underwriters) 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
Wyatt v. Consolidated Underwriters, 98 So. 2d 537, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 902 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

HARDY, Judge.

This is a compensation suit in which plaintiff claims to have suffered total permanent disability in the nature of a back injury as the result of an accident while engaged in performing the duties of his employment. From a judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demands he has appealed.

The facts of the case are correctly set forth in the district judge’s written reasons for judgment, which we quote in full, as follows:

“This is a suit for workmen’s compensation by Marvin W. Wyátt against a partnership of Hall and Cooper and the individual members thereof, Howard Hall and B. L. Cooper, and also against Consolidated Underwriters, who are the insurers of Gross and Janes Company, of whom plaintiff alleges that he was an employee or sub-employee.

“Plaintiff alleges that he suffered an accident on or about the 6th day of December, Í9S6, while lifting a cross tie to be loaded on to a truck. He further alleges the usual scatterload allegation which is all embracing and all inclusive, that he sustained an injury to the bones, muscles, tendons, tissues, cartilages, ligaments, joints, nerves, flesh and intervertebral discs of his back, and then narrows it specifically to a nerve root compression diagnosed as a ruptured intervertebral disc.

“He is seeking to recover compensation based on an average weekly wage of $52 per week of the partnership of Hall and Cooper and the individual members thereof, and of Consolidated Underwriters, the insurer of Gross and Janes Company. Counsel has reduced this to $48 per week in his brief filed herein.

“Defendants Hall and Cooper have answered and admitted the employment, but denied that plaintiff was injured at the sawmill being operated by them and denied that he had ever reported an injury to them. In the alternative, they have inter-pleaded Gross and Janes Company as parties defendant and called them in warranty.

“The defendant Gross and Janes Company filed exceptions herein which were referred to the merits, and their answer is largely one of general denial. In the alternative, Gross and Janes Company plead that if any judgment should be rendered against them in favor of the plaintiff, that the partnership of Hall and Cooper was-that of subcontractor and that they would be entitled to indemnity from Hall and Cooper under the provisions of [LSA-] R.S. 23 ¡1061-1063.

“In answering the allegation with reference to the call in warranty, defendant Gross and Janes Company allege that their relationship with the partnership of Hall and Cooper was that of vendor and vendee of cross ties manufactured.

“Upon these issues the case was duly taken up and tried and submitted to the Court on briefs.

“In this case, there does not seem to be any serious dispute as to the wages or as to the amount of compensation that the plaintiff would be entitled to if he should recover. The Court has also been spared the ordeal of having to unravel and sift contradictory medical testimony. At least this feature of the case which usually confronts the Court in cases of this kind is absent, for the reason that the only evidence before the Court was that the plaintiff is disabled and was disabled at the time of the trial to perform heavy manual labor.

“The only feature of this case that is seriously contested, and which has caused the Court any concern, is whether or not the plaintiff has suffered an accident within the intendment of the law and the contemplation of the statute.

I listened to the case very attentively at the time of trial and have since had occa[539]*539sion to review the evidence very carefully, as well as briefs of counsel, as there is such a wide discrepancy between the plaintiff’s evidence and that of some of his fellow workmen.

“The cases are legion, and it is so well settled in our law that it requires no citation of authorities here, that the plaintiff must prove his case by a preponderance of evidence in a compensation case as well as in all other cases, although greater liberality is allowed in cases of this kind than in others.

“The cases are also legion, and it requires no citation of authority here that even though there is no witness to the accident, his evidence may be taken as confirming the accident if he is corroborated by existing circumstances. I think this is a good principle of law, because oftentimes an accident can happen to a laborer on the job where there would be no witnesses and if he is of otherwise good character and worthy of belief, his statement with reference to the accident should be taken if there are other corroborating circumstances in connection with it.

“I think it is also proper that a court should be liberal in introduction of evidence in a case of this kind, and also that minor doubts should be resolved in favor of the employee. However, the Court is confronted with the principle of law that the plaintiff must establish his case by a preponderance of evidence, and that the statute is very plain that there must have been an accident giving rise to the injury. In this particular case the plaintiff’s evidence is so fraught and shot through with the inconsistencies that it is hard to accept it as being a true representation of an accident having happened.

“Plaintiff testified that on the date of the accident he was helping to load some cross ties on the top of a truck and that he felt a sharp pain in the lower part of his back; that it was about quitting time and he performed no work thereafter, and that he caught a truck with other laborers to'return to his home. He did not tell the' men he was working with that he had suffered the injury, neither did he mention it to any of the other members of the sawmill crew that went on the truck. He further testified that the last tie was placed on the cap or rocking bolster. Whereas, Mr. Cooper, who was assisting in loading it, and the other laborer, Odis Brown, testified that the last tie was placed on the truck and that Odis Brown bound the load down and carried it to Provencal. On this feature the plaintiff is disputed by one of the defendants and a disinterested laborer who was there at the time.

“It is entirely possible, but it is rather a strange coincidence that the plaintiff suffered the accident that he complained of, if such happened, while assisting in the loading of the last tie at approximately the last minute of the working day.

“He further testified that when he got off of the truck to go to his home that he was stooped over and some of the laborers told him to ‘straighten up, we want you back tomorrow’ or words to that effect. This is denied by those laborers who were on the truck, that he walked in any stooped position or any unusual manner and that any such remarks were made.

“He further testified that he had performed no labor since the work was done, but evidence was introduced by Mr. Raymond Hamous that he helped him cut pulpwood about Christmas time and loaded iron junk and told him that he did not want anyone to see him working as he was trying to get a little money. This was denied by the plaintiff. Counsel for plaintiff in his brief refers to Mr. Raymond Hamous as a ‘jailbird’ but Mr. Hamous has testified that the plaintiff was arrested each time he was and plaintiff admits to several arrests for various and sundry misdemeanors as apparently both Mr. Hamous and the plaintiff were in the same boat as to being ‘jailbirds’, if any such appellation were to be given to either.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 So. 2d 537, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyatt-v-consolidated-underwriters-lactapp-1957.