Ansbaugh v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.

334 P.2d 442, 80 Idaho 515, 1959 Ida. LEXIS 174
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1959
Docket8683
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 334 P.2d 442 (Ansbaugh v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ansbaugh v. Potlatch Forests, Inc., 334 P.2d 442, 80 Idaho 515, 1959 Ida. LEXIS 174 (Idaho 1959).

Opinion

*518 McQUADE, Justice

This appeal is taken from an award of compensation to the claimant, Roy F. Ansbaugh. The assignments of error which will be disposed of on appeal are: 1. That claimant did not receive any injury in the course of and arising out of his employment for Potlatch Forests, Inc.; 2. The Industrial Accident Board erred in finding that the delay in giving notice as soon as practicable did not prejudice the defendants, and that the defendants would be permitted to show upon further hearing the nature and extent of the prejudice suffered by the delay; 3. The Board erred in permitting Burton R. Stein, M. D., to testify as to his opinion based in part upon history related to him by claimant when the purpose of his examination was to enable him to testify as a medical expert for the claimant; 4. The Board erred in its decision in that the facts found by the Board do not as a matter of law justify the conclusion reached.

Claimant was in his sixty-second year the night of the alleged injury, March 15, 1957, and had been an employee of Pot-latch Forests, Inc., for many years.

Four weeks prior thereto, and on March 15, his duties were those of a spotter and checker on the night shift in the rough storage sheds. He had been doing this same class of work on the day shift for about two years. Generally his duties consisted of throwing blocks of wood measuring five by five by 52 inches, weighing from 18 to 28 pounds, onto loads of lumber; he lifted normally 400 to 500 such blocks during the shift from 5 p. m. to 2 a. m. In addition to lpading and unloading blocks, the claimant’s duties required him to push empty lumber buggies into position for loading. These buggies actually are wooden flat beds mounted on heavy iron axles and small solid iron wheels, and run on iron rails. From photographs, these carts appear to be about three feet in width and not to exceed five feet in length.

During the last four weeks of Ansbaugh’s employment on the night shift he was both spotting and checking, a combined job, which before that time had been segregated. The change was a part of the reduction of force made by the management incident to curtailed production. A number of workers, including claimant, through their local labor union, joined in filing a grievance, contending that each worker retained had to do two men’s work, and raising an issue between the union and the company. It appears that the workers were unsuccess *519 ful in their efforts to have the company revert to the former practice.

Ansbaugh, whose work prior to the reduction of force had been on the day shift, testified he found the combined job difficult. Required to go from place to place, he said: “I just couldn’t get around without an exceptional amount of fast work * * * I have even had to run to keep up.” He also experienced pain in his left arm, which he attributed to “pulling on those blocks.”

“Due to my height I would have to belly right up to the load and, stand on my tiptoes and jump and get ahold of a five-by-five on top and pull it down.”

Antedating March 15, 1957, the medical history of the claimant was set out in the Board’s findings of fact as follows:

“Some seven or eight years ago, claimant had two surgical operations, one for a hernia and the other for hemorrhoids * * *.
“From January 5 to March 22, 1955, Ansbaugh was treated with antibiotics by Dr. George A. Thompson for cough and chest pain. No diagnosis of his then malady appears in the record. The doctor encouraged him to give up smoking and the patient told him that he had. * * *
“Ansbaugh described his pain at that time as pleurisy pains * * *. He was told he had a spot on his lung * * *. It was a stabbing type of pain * * *. He felt it at times on the right side, at times on the left * * * sometimes in the back * *. He had experienced such pain for as long as six years * *

Dr. Burton R. Stein, an internist who examined the claimant and was called as a witness for him, testified it was his opinion Ansbaugh suffered coronary atherosclerosis prior to March 15. He testified in part:

“ * * * As a rule this coronary artery trouble, coronary atherosclerosis precedes by considerable years the clot or the infarct. That is not a steadfast rule, but it is true in the vast majority of patients.
“ * * * I very seriously doubt he would have experienced the myocardial infarction without a coronary atherosclerotic condition.”

Claimant testified as follows concerning the circumstances which he alleges brought on his injury:

“Q. You stated the 15th of March —was there anything unusual that took place on that particular day in connection with your work? A. Well between six and seven o’clock that evening — now I had, I would say four— possibly five — little attacks. I call them attacks, they really weren’t attacks but *520 I had angina pain. I had that several times. I didn’t know what was wrong at the time.
“Q. When did the pain come on? A. The first one I noticed, and the worst one, I was shoving two buggies out of shed one.
“Q. What date was this, rather— what time was it? A. That was between six and seven on the 15th of March — I don’t know exactly what the time was.
“Q. What had you been doing prior to that time? A. Well we was probably piling lumber — I don’t remember just what was going on, whether we were piling lumber from the unstacker. I don’t know whether it was the first or second drag into the plant.
“Q. You said you had angina pain —what were you doing at the time? A. In pushing the buggies from shed one to two, sometimes that pushing is pretty dog-goned hard, and one wheel — the wheel nearest to me, I was really pushing on it, there was a bar in there against the buggy — it was kind of dragging and I was pushing harder than I ever pushed. One wheel was barely turning, barely going. It would turn for a little while and stick, and then turn again. I had to put my back to the buggy to lift up on it to keep my feet from slipping out from under me. As soon as I got the buggy to where the crane operator could reach it, I had to sit down on a buggy —that’s when the pain hit me — as soon as I quit pushing. I sat down and I couldn’t keep my breath coming fast enough. I don’t know what happened. I sat there, I would say possibly thirty seconds or forty seconds until this pain had just started slowly going away and I got my breath and felt normal again.
“Q. Had you ever, at any time in your entire life, experienced pain such as you experienced then ? A. I never did.”

He went to bed at 2:30 in the morning without further distress, but on awakening around 6 or 7 he had a severe pain which he characterized as “angina pain— terrific.” His wife called George A. Thompson, M. D., who caused claimant to be placed in a hospital for treatment which extended over a period of 16 days to the thirty-first of March. Thompson diagnosed the ailment as myocardial infarction. Ansbaugh was further examined and treated by Burton R. Stein, M.

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Bluebook (online)
334 P.2d 442, 80 Idaho 515, 1959 Ida. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ansbaugh-v-potlatch-forests-inc-idaho-1959.