Adkins v. Rives Plating Corp.

61 N.W.2d 117, 338 Mich. 265, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 319
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1953
DocketDocket 81, Calendar 45,632
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 61 N.W.2d 117 (Adkins v. Rives Plating Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adkins v. Rives Plating Corp., 61 N.W.2d 117, 338 Mich. 265, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 319 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Bushnell, J.

Plaintiff, Joseph Adkins, sustained an injury while in the employ of defendant Rives Plating Corporation on December 15, 1950, which resulted in a fracture of the radius bone of his left forearm. He was paid compensation at $28 per week for total disability from the date of the injury to and including May 30,1951. He returned to work with lighter duties on May 31, 1951, at which time 'his compensation ceased because of his partial re *267 covery. Thereafter payments were made to him of' wages at the same rate that he formerly earned.

On Sunday, September 9, 1951, plaintiff was involved in an accident while riding a bicycle. That accident and its results are described by Adkins, in his testimony, as follows:

“Well, I was riding a bicycle up the street and went around a corner, the bike tipped over with me, I hit with my right hand and my left hand came over and hit too, and when my left hand hit it broke; Well, I knew it was broken; I picked the bike up, took it back to the house, my neighbor was there, I told him to take me to the doctor in my car, that I broke my arm, he did and Dr. Parker he sent me to the hospital.”

Adkins filed an application for hearing and adjustment of claim on December 24, 1951, in which he stated:

“1. That this claim relates to a personal injury which occurred on or about December 15, 1950, or to a disablement from occupational disease, which occurred on or about * * *
“2. That the injury or disablement occurred at Rives Junction, Jackson, Michigan, and in the following manner: Injured was buffing, got away from him and struck him on the left forearm; Weekly earnings, $90.
“3. Nature .of disability — Injured left arm.”

Dr. Richard C. Demming and Dr. Earl E. Parker treated Adkins for the original fracture of his left arm, and also attended him after his second injury. Dr. Demming testified in part:

“Q. What did you find?
“A. We opened the radius and at the fracture site I found that actually there had been a little, or no bone union.
*268 “Q. You say had been — you mean prior to the second injury?
“A. Yes, that the previous fracture had never healed by bony union.
“Q. And what else did you find?
“A. Oh, that the bone ends were extremely hard, very dense, with an indication that there was a nonunion, nonbony union, or a very delayed union.
“Q. Then, from your observation, during- the surgery, were you able to form an opinion as to whether or not the fracture, original fracture had healed?
“A. The original fracture had not healed. * # *
“Q. Let me ask you if what you found when you performed the bone reduction, was in your opinion a new fracture, as distinguished from an aggravation of an existing fracture?
“A. Well the old fracture was still present and unhealed, and that there was a fracture through the fibrous union at the site of the previous fracture; in other words, a new fracture through an unhealed old fracture. * * *
“Mr. Bapaport: * * * Grive us your opinion Doctor, if you have one as to whether or not the original accident, namely the .fracture when the man was buffing, might, or could be considered to be the cause of the condition which you reduced in September of 1951?
“A. Yes, I feel that the original injury was the cause of the second fracture superimposed on a trauma.”

Dr. Parker’s testimony was confined to the treatment following- the first injury and his examination of Adkins’ condition after the second injury. He stated in part:

■“In September — on September 9, 1951, Joé was brought to my office with the story that he had fallen from the bicycle and had injured his left arm, and in looking at it it was obvious that it was injured, that it was fractured. I took him into Foote Hos *269 pital, had him X-rayed immediately and determined that there was a fracture, that there was an angulation at the site of the old fracture, and I called in Dr. Demming as the orthopedic consultant again and it was Dr. Demming’s opinion at that time that we should procrastinate no longer, but Joe should have bone reduction, with application of plate and bone graft. This was done on the 11th of September, and Joe had an uneventful recovery, except for his discomfort; and subsequent X-rays proved that there was good healing. The cast was eventually removed, I believe around the latter part of November or first of December, and Joe has had so far an uneventful recovery.”

The deputy commissioner awarded compensation “at the rate of $28 per week for total disability from December 16, 1950 to May 30, 1951 and at the rate of $28 per week for total disability from September 9, 1951 to December 28, 1951.”

He further found “that the employee is still partially disabled and entitled to receive compensation at the rate of $28 per week for the week ending January 4, 1952; $16.80 for the week ending January 11, 1952; $11.91 for the week ending January 18, 1952; $28 for the week ending January 25, 1952; payments to stop as of January 25, 1952, because plaintiff returned to work at equal or greater wages. Defendants may have credit for the compensation voluntarily paid.”

An amended award was later filed which included medical and hospital expenses. In affirming these awards the commission, on review, said in part:

“There can be no doubt that plaintiff had not fully recovered from the first accident when the second accident occurred. He was not able to do buffing, the heavier work at which he was employed at the time of the original injury, because of the condition of his left arm. His inability to work as a huffier *270 was a direct result of that injury. It is evident from the medical testimony that the failure to heal of the original fracture was the proximate cause of the second fracture. There is a causal relation between the accident plaintiff sustained December 15, 1950 and the disability commencing September 10, 1951.”

Appellant State Accident Fund denies that the plaintiff has suffered any compensable disability since May 30, 1951, or that he is entitled to reimbursement for hospital expenses when he himself did not make such expenditures.

Decision rests primarily upon the implication of the first question, which is stated by the appellee in this manner:

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.W.2d 117, 338 Mich. 265, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adkins-v-rives-plating-corp-mich-1953.