15 La. App. 229 | La. Ct. App. | 1930
Plaintiff alleges that he was employed as a common laborer by the defendant, and that while at work in the course of his employment he was accidentally injured, and that as a result he is now totally and permanently disabled. He prays for compensation for four hundred weeks under the Compensation Acts.
The defense is: First, that plaintiff was not employed by defendant at the time he was injured; and, second, if it should be held that he was its employee at the time, his injuries were slight, soon healed, and he was discharged by his physician as well at the end of thirty days.
From a judgment awarding plaintiff compensation for four hundred weeks, defendant appealed.
The testimony warrants the holding that plaintiff was an employee of defendant at the time he was injured.
Defendant at the time was engaged in the tie and timber business, buying and selling pilings, cross-ties, telephone poles and the like, and in buying timber to be converted into such commodities. It contends that it was purchasing these ties, pilings, etc., at so much per foot f. o. b. the cars, and that it was the duty of those from whom they were purchased to load them and to pay the expense thereof, and that it did not become the owner of them until they were loaded. Because plaintiff was injured while engaged in loading these ties, etc., on the cars, defendant contends that he was in the employ of those from whom it had purchased them. But the testimony shows that plaintiff had no contractual relations with any of these other par
The fact that plaintiff was accidentally injured is not disputed, the only contention being that his injury was slight and that he soon recovered.
Plaintiff was engaged in loading cross-ties or poles on to cars along with others and while at work struck his left leg just below the knee against the end of a piece of piling, which caused a slight contusion which Dr. Simonton, who first treated him, thought amounted to but little. He discharged the patient as well at the end of thirty days — hence defendant’s contention that he had recovered. But the testimony as a whole shows that he had not recovered at the time of the trial six months later.
While Dr. Simonton testified that he found no injuries except to the outer portion of the leg just below the knee, which soon healed, and that the patient did not complain to him of any injury to the knee joint, yet the testimony of Drs. Boyce, Wright, and Harper is that there was injury to the joint itself consisting of a fracture of the semilunar cartilage of the knee. Dr. Wright made two X-ray pictures, one in December, 1929, and the other in April, 1930. He and Dr. Boyce say that the injury consists of a dislocation of the cartilages of the knee joint and they think the injury is permanent.
After Dr. Simonton had discharged plaintiff, plaintiff went to Dr. Harper of Ruston for further treatment, and Dr. Harper sent him to Dr. Wright in Monroe for examination. Dr. Wright made an X-ray of the knee, reported his findings, and sent plaintiff back to Dr. Harper for treatment. Dr. Harper put his knee in a plaster east, where it remained for five or six weeks. When this was removed he used rubber bandages, and after that hot applications, to reduce the swelling and remove the inflammation. Dr. Harper testified that when he first began to treat the injury he found the knee swollen, being considerably larger than the other, immobilized to a certain extent, sore, and that it could not be used. He testified that the inflammation extended four or five inches below the knee and two or three inches above it, and that there was hut little improvement in plaintiff’s condition the last time he saw him, which was a short time before the trial.
Dr. Blume testified that in his opinion plaintiff was a malingerer, but he was rather inconsistent in his testimony. At one time he said he thought plaintiff was deliberately faking, yet he was asked if he thought the knee was normal, and he said:
“Well, not altogether, no sir, it is swollen some.”
The testimony as a whole conclusively shows that plaintiff had not recovered at the time of the trial. He was then going on crutches, and he, as well as Dr. Harper, testified that he c.ould not bear the weight of his body on that leg. Drs. Wright and Boyce testified that this disability is permanent, and the other physicians concede that if there was a rupture of the cartilages of the knee joint the condition is serious. We think that plaintiff has lost the use of his leg in so far as performing manual labor of any kind is concerned. He cannot bear the weight of his body upon it and therefore cannot stand up to work.
However, as the injury is to the leg only he cannot recover compensation for a period exceeding one hundred seventy-five weeks under section 8, subsection (d), paragraphs 8 and 14 of Act No. 242 of 1928, page 356. James v. Spence & Goldstein, 161 La. 1108, 109 So. 917; Hicks v. White-Crandin Lumber Co., 7 La. App. 73; LeBlanc v. Ohio Oil Co., 7 La. App. 721; Joseph v. Higgins Lumber Co., 12 La. App. 600, 126 So. 255.
For the reasons assigned, it is ordered and decreed that the judgment appealed from be so amended as to reduce the period during which compensation shall be paid from four hundred weeks to one hundred seventy-five weeks, and as thus amended it is affirmed, the appellee to pay cost of appeal, all other costs to be paid by appellant.