Anthis v. Department of Labor & Industries

555 P.2d 1009, 16 Wash. App. 335, 1976 Wash. App. LEXIS 1708
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 4, 1976
DocketNo. 1512-3
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 555 P.2d 1009 (Anthis v. Department of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anthis v. Department of Labor & Industries, 555 P.2d 1009, 16 Wash. App. 335, 1976 Wash. App. LEXIS 1708 (Wash. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Green, J.

Claimant, Peggy Anthis, appeals from a judgment entered upon a jury verdict upholding a decision of the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals.

On June 11, 1970, claimant was injured during the course of her employment when a ladder fell upon her as she was preparing to thin some pears. A claim was filed with the Department of Labor and Industries and after authorized treatment it was closed on March 22, 1971. Due to aggravation, the claim was reopened and again closed on November 11, 1971, with an award for permanent partial disability of 10 percent of the maximum allowable for unspecified disabilities. The Board of Industrial Insurance. Appeals increased the award to 25 percent. On appeal to the Superior Court, a jury upheld that award. She now appeals to this court.

Error is assigned to (1) the refusal to give a proposed interrogatory; (2) the exclusion of portions of one witness’ testimony. We reverse.

[336]*336The court instructed the jury, in part, as follows:

Instruction No. 25
This is a civil action and requires only five of you to agree upon a verdict. Your verdict in the cause will be in the form of answers to the following interrogatories.% Interrogatory No. I:
Was the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals correct in determining that, as of August 15, 1973, Mrs. Anthis was not in need of further treatment for her injury of June 11, 1970, that she was capable of performing.gainful employment on a reasonably continuous basis, and that her disability did not exceed 25% of the maximum allowed for unspecified inj uries ?
Answer:_(Yes or No)
If your answer to Interrogatory No. I is “yes” you will . answer no further interrogatories. If your answer to.Interrogatory No. I is “no” you will answer Interrogatory No. II.
Interrogatory No. II:
On or about August 15, 1973, as a proximate result of her industrial injury of June 11, 1970, was Mrs. Anthis capable of obtaining and performing gainful employ- ' ment on a reasonably continuous basis?
Answer:_(Yes or No)
If your answer to Interrogatory No. II is “no” you :will not' answer any further interrogatories. If your answer to . Interrogatory No. II is “yes”, you will answer Interrogatory No. III.
Interrogatory No. Ill:
On or about August 15, 1973, was Mrs. Anthis in need of further treatment for her injury of June 11, 1970? ' Answer:_(Yes or No)
The jury answered “yes” to interrogatory No. 1 and was thereby relieved of answering the other interrogatories.
First, claimant assigns error to instruction No. 25 for failure to include its proposed interrogatory No. 4: Interrogatory No. IV:
Expressed in percentage terms, what was Mrs. Anthis’ permanent partial disability ón or about August 15, 1973, proximately resulting from her injury of June 11, 1970?
Answer:_ % (not less than 25%)

It is claimant’s position that instruction No. 25 without [337]*337interrogatory No. 4 limited the .jury -to a choice .between finding permanent total disability under other.instructions or permanent partial disability of 25 percent of the maximum allowable for unspecified disabilities awarded by the board. Claimant contends that since the record creates a question of the extent of her partial disability and' would súppoft an award greater than the board’s award, if the jury, so found, the refusal to give proposed interrogatory No. 4 was error because instruction No. 25 precluded submission of that issue to the jury. We agree.

RCW 51.32.080, the statute in effect at the time of claimant’s injury, provides a method for computing an award for permanent partial disability. First, the statute sets forth the amounts to be awarded for various specified injuries, and second, outlines the method for computing, the amounts to be awarded for unspecified injuries as follows, in subsection (2):

Compensation for any other permanent partial disability . . . shall be in . . . the proportion which the extent of such other disability, called unspecified disability, shall bear to that above specified, which most closely resembles and approximates in degree of disability such other disability ...

Here, claimant suffered from an unspecified physical and psychiatric injury, and by comparison to the schedule of specified injuries in RCW 51.32.080, the board concluded that she should receive 25 percent of the maximum - specified. for “Loss By Amputation ... Of arm at or above the deltoid insertion or by disarticulation at the shoulder.”

The propriety of the trial court’s refusal to give -claimant’s proposed interrogatory No. 4 depends upon whether there is evidence from which the jury could have increased the percentage awarded by the board. To answer this question, we turn to the record. ''

The department’s expert witnesses, Drs. Bocek,. McCarthy, and Gottlieb, testified that claimant’s permanent partial disability was 10 percent of the maximum allowable for unspecified disabilities. Dr. McCarthy, a .psychiatrist, made no allowance for psychiatric disability.

[338]*338Claimant called two expert witnesses, one of whom was Dr. McDermott, a psychiatrist, who testified:

Q. Doctor, if you were to place percentage disability rating on her psychiatric disability as you found it, what kind of percentage rating would you put on it?
A. I placed 15 percent on it.
Q. Would that be 15 percent of the whole person or what?
A. I think that would be the best way to describe it. It’s hard from the psychiatric standpoint to talk about anything but the whole person because it’s the whole functioning individual that I am looking at. I am looking at their ability to function as a human being and work at home or anywhere else and that’s a reasonable figure.
Q. How would you compare this percentage disability reading with a loss of an arm, for example, greater or lesser?
A. Do you mean in the psychological impact of it?
Q. I shouldn’t have asked it that way. You have stated that she has a percentage disability as a person to function. Would the loss of an arm cause a greater impairment of function than psychiatric disability which you have diagnosed?
A. It—you’ve got to take them case by case, but in this case I think she could probably deal better if she lost an arm than she could with basic personality problem. That’s more disabling.

(Italics ours.)1

On cross-examination he testified:
Q. I didn’t understand, Doctor, what your 15 percent rating ultimately reflected.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
555 P.2d 1009, 16 Wash. App. 335, 1976 Wash. App. LEXIS 1708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthis-v-department-of-labor-industries-washctapp-1976.