Antwi v. C-E Industrial Group

619 P.2d 812, 612 P.2d 656, 5 Kan. App. 2d 53, 228 Kan. 692, 1980 Kan. App. LEXIS 251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMay 30, 1980
Docket51,479
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 619 P.2d 812 (Antwi v. C-E Industrial Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antwi v. C-E Industrial Group, 619 P.2d 812, 612 P.2d 656, 5 Kan. App. 2d 53, 228 Kan. 692, 1980 Kan. App. LEXIS 251 (kanctapp 1980).

Opinion

Swinehart, J.:

This is an appeal of a workmen’s compensation award rendered by the district court of Dickinson County in favor of the claimant, Ebenezer Antwi, against the respondent, self-insurer C-E Industrial Group and/or Combustion Engineering, Inc. Claimant was awarded 141 weeks of temporary total disability and 274 weeks of compensation for a 12%% permanent partial general disability.

The claimant raises the following issues for our review. (1) Whether the district court erred by construing K.S.A. 1979 Supp. 44-510g, the vocational rehabilitation statute of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, to require that a claimant’s permanent partial general disability rating, after successful completion of a rehabilitation program, must be based upon his ability to engage in the work for which he was vocationally rehabilitated. (2) Whether the district court erred by finding that the claimant had a 12%% permanent partial general disability after rehabilitation. (3) Whether the trial court erred by refusing to allow an open court statement made prior to rendering its decision awarding disability benefits to claimant to be set out in the journal entry.

The claimant, a 42-year-old machinist, injured his back during the course of his employment with the respondent on December *54 18, 1975, while lifting a part with a hoist. Claimant had worked for the respondent since January of 1970. At the time of his injury, his job consisted of heavy physical labor such as stooping, bending, and lifting heavy pieces of equipment. Although claimant had access to hoists to lift heavy materials, he was often required to lift machinery weighing fifty to eighty pounds without such assistance. Claimant immediately notified his boss of the injury, but finished working the remaining hour of his night shift. He returned to work the next afternoon at 3:00 p.m., but by 7:00 p.m. the pain in his back became very severe and he could hardly move.

An ambulance was' called and claimant began an extensive and lengthy series of medical treatments for his back condition. He received pain medication and was hospitalized for traction, physical therapy, rest and back surgery. Dr. S. C. McCrae, an orthopedic surgeon, initially examined the claimant and administered conservative treatments for his back. Later, claimant asked to receive medical care from Dr. Jack Lungstrum, another orthopedic surgeon, and the respondent’s attorney granted his request. After consulting with a neurosurgeon in Wichita, Dr. Lungstrum performed a laminectomy on April 6, 1976, which relieved much of the pain the claimant had been experiencing.

A detailed description of the treatment received by the claimant is unnecessary for disposition of this appeal. Furthermore, the employer admitted that the injury occurred during the course of claimant’s employment and that he had already paid all of the medical expenses by the time the case came before the examiner.

While employed by the respondent, claimant was also attending Kansas Wesleyan, where he hoped to obtain his bachelor’s degree with an education major. However, he wished to obtain a job with the respondent as an industrial psychologist after he completed his education rather than pursue a teaching career. Claimant was forced to drop several courses during the spring of 1976 due to his back problems, but in April of 1976, he applied for vocational rehabilitation. Dean Rensberger, claimant’s vocational rehabilitation counselor in Salina, was apprised that the claimant wanted to teach, probably in an elementary school. Therefore, claimant was allowed to continue to complete his degree requirements at Kansas Wesleyan for his vocational rehabilitation program. Rehabilitation payments covering his books, *55 supplies and tuition (limited to that amount equal to the fees for a similar course of study in a public institution) were provided claimant until May, 1978. The respondent reimbursed claimant $1,600 which was the amount he had paid for tuition over and above that paid by the vocational rehabilitation agency. Additionally, respondent paid the claimant temporary total disability benefits during his rehabilitation program.

Claimant received his bachelor’s degree in the spring of 1978 and was certified to teach in elementary schools and in high school psychology classes. However, according to Linda Harold, the Kansas Wesleyan placement director, claimant did not apply for any teaching positions to her knowledge, and had informed her that he intended to pursue a master’s degree at Ohio State University. The claimant admitted that he had not sought any teaching positions. He believed that he would be unable to obtain a job teaching psychology in a secondary school because the opportunities were very limited for a person only qualified to teach psychology, since many Kansas schools did not even offer it as a part of their curriculum. He also did not feel that he could adequately teach elementary school children because he had an English accent which would interfere with effective communications. (Claimant was an immigrant from Africa.) However, Albert Nelson, director of the teacher education program at Kansas Wesleyan; Gene Davis, head of the elementary education program at the college when claimant was a student there and who supervised claimant during his elementary education practice teaching; Linda Harold; and Dean Rensberger agreed that the claimant was qualified as an elementary school teacher. Further, Davis and Rensberger did not believe that claimant’s accent would prevent him from obtaining employment with a school district in this state or impair his ability to instruct elementary school-age children.

Drs. Lungstrum and McCrae provided the only medical testimony regarding claimant’s condition that was considered during the workmen’s compensation proceedings. McCrae, who had last examined claimant in September of 1977 after claimant’s back surgery, opined that as of that date claimant had a permanent partial impairment of function of 10% of the body as a whole. He diagnosed that the claimant had “[f]ibrositis, lumbosacral area with slight residual soreness secondary to herniated disc and *56 subsequent removal of the same.” He stated that if the claimant returned to the work he was performing prior to his injury, it would increase the probability of further back problems. However, he believed that claimant was at least physically capable of teaching in an elementary school.

Dr. Lungstrum stated that claimant suffered from a 15% permanent partial disability of the body. During the course of his treatment, Lungstrum variously opined about claimant’s future ability to perform heavy or moderate physical labor. His most recent opinion, however, was that claimant should not return to extremely heavy work, but could probably do light work or function physically as an elementary teacher.

Claimant testified that after his accident he had trouble bending and lifting anything weighing twenty to twenty-five pounds or over, and he could not lift that much continuously. He also stated he would be unable to stand at a job for an entire eight hour shift because the pain in his back would be too severe. However, he admitted that he was capable of teaching in an elementary school.

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Antwi v. C-E Industrial Group
619 P.2d 812 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
619 P.2d 812, 612 P.2d 656, 5 Kan. App. 2d 53, 228 Kan. 692, 1980 Kan. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antwi-v-c-e-industrial-group-kanctapp-1980.