ARKANSAS WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COM'N v. Sandy
This text of 233 S.W.2d 382 (ARKANSAS WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COM'N v. Sandy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ARKANSAS WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COMMISSION
v.
SANDY.
Supreme Court of Arkansas.
John T. Jernigan and John P. Streepey, Little Rock, for appellant.
Wm. H. Roth, Searcy, for appellee.
DUNAWAY, Justice.
The Arkansas Workmen's Compensation Commission appeals from an order of the White Circuit Court. The court set aside a finding of the Commission that appellee, David R. Sandy, was not entitled to payment from the Workmen's Compensation "Second Injury Fund" as claimed by him, and allowed said claim for total and permanent disability.
In 1925, before the enactment of a Workmen's Compensation Act in Arkansas, Sandy received an injury to his left hand, whereby he lost all the fingers on the hand except the thumb. On July 21, 1943, while employed as a millwright by the Hansen & Haggott Lumber Company of Searcy, Arkansas, Sandy suffered an injury to his right arm, necessitating its amputation *383 above the elbow. Compensation at the rate of $20.00 per week was paid him for 20 weeks, covering his period of temporary total disability. Claimant was then paid a lump sum settlement in the amount of $3,754.76, representing the sum he was entitled to at $20.00 per week for 200 weeks for loss of his right arm, as provided for by the Workmen's Compensation Act. This order of the Commission was dated April 6, 1944.
On July 19, 1944, Sandy filed a claim with the Commission alleging that as a result of the 1925 injury to his left hand and the subsequent loss of his right arm in 1943, he was totally and permanently disabled. By this claim appellee sought additional compensation from the "Second Injury Fund" provided for by the Workmen's Compensation Act.
The section of the Workmen's Compensation Act under which Sandy was paid compensation for the loss of his right arm now appears as Sec. 81-1313(c), Ark.Stats. 1949 Suppl. That section provides the compensation which shall be paid for the specific loss of various members of the body.
The part of the Act under which the present claim for additional compensation was filed reads as follows, Ark.Stats.1949 Suppl. Sec. 81-1313:
"(f) Second injury. In cases of permanent disability arising from a subsequent accident, where a permanent disability existed prior thereto:
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"(2) If an employee has a prior permanent disability not occasioned by an injury resulting while in the employ of the same employer in whose employ he received a subsequent permanent injury, the amount of compensation for the subsequent injury shall be fixed as follows:
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"iii. If an employee who had previously incurred permanent partial disability through the loss of one hand, one arm, one foot, one leg, or one eye, incurs permanent total disability through the total loss of another member, enumerated in this sentence, he shall be paid, in addition to the compensation for permanent partial disability provided in section 13(c) (subsection (c) of this section), additional compensation during the continuance of such total disability not to exceed sixty-five per centum (65%) of the average weekly wage earned by him at the time of the accident which produced the total permanent disability. In case an employee who has been awarded additional compensation under this subsection subsequently establishes an earning capacity by employment, he shall be paid during the period of such employment, instead of the compensation above provided, sixty-five per centum (65%) of the difference between his average weekly wages at the time of the accident which produced total disability and his wage earning capacity as determined by his actual earnings in such employment. The sum total of compensation payable for all disabilities shall not exceed 450 weeks or eight thousand ($8,000.00) dollars. Compensation provided in this subsection shall be paid out of a special fund created for such purpose in the following manner: The employer, or, if insured, his carrier, shall pay the sum of five hundred ($500.00) dollars into such special fund for every case of injury causing death in which there are no persons entitled to compensation. The State Treasurer shall be custodian of this special fund, to be known as Second Injury Fund, and the Commission shall direct the distribution thereof."
After appellee's additional claim was filed, he was examined by Dr. D. T. Cheairs, medical examiner for the Commission. Dr. Cheairs' report reads as follows : "I have today, September 29, 1947, made examination of David R. Sandy, white male, age, 64 years. Injured his left hand in May of 1925, and lost his right arm July 21, 1943. Present Complaint: `I have lost my left index, middle, ring and little fingers where they join the left hand. My left thumb is o. k.' Findings: Claimant's right arm was amputated just above the elbow. His left index, middle, ring and little fingers were amputated in metacarpelphalangeal joints. Left thumb functions normally. Opinion: Claimant has 70 per cent permanent partial disability to his left *384 hand in addition to the loss of his right arm about the elbow."
This report and testimony of the claimant were considered upon hearing of the claim by Chairman Peel of the Commission in September, 1947. . Commissioner Peel's opinion denying the claim was filed December 16, 1947. At the hearing by the full commission upon review of Commissioner Peel's findings, a medical report of Dr. Porter R. Rogers, claimant's family physician, was filed. Dr. Rogers' report, dated February 21, 1948 is as follows: "This is to certify that I have been the family physician of David R. Sandy since 1942. In 1943, Mr. Sandy received an injury in which he lost his right arm. He has only the thumb on his left hand, having lost all of "his fingers in an accident in 1925. Physical Findings: The loss of all the fingers on his left hand and the loss of his right arm above the elbow, leave Mr. Sandy totally and permanently disabled from following any gainful occupation. It is my opinion that Mr. Sandy is totally and permanently disabled in his left hand."
The claimant's own testimony may be briefly summarized: Prior to the 1925 injury to his left hand, he was a millwright and continued in this occupation until he lost his right arm as a result of the accident in 1943. After the loss of his right arm he bought and sold timber tracts and timber until some time in 1947. His son had a small sawmill, and part of the timber was processed through this mill. He also bought some tie siding from his son and had it manufactured. He was only able to make a living through the aid of his son and because of the lump sum compensation settlement he had received. His plan (set forth as the reason for the lump sum settlement in 1944) to go into the beer business had not materialized. He could operate a rice farm in his physical condition, and thinks he could make a living doing this if he had the necessary capital.
The Commission also considered a letter dated November 1, 1944, from the District Supervisor of Vocational Rehabilitation, State Board of Vocational Rehabilitation, to the effect that because of Sandy's physical disability and his advanced age, there was nothing that department could do to assist him.
Upon the evidence above outlined, the Commission denied appellee's claim. The Commission found that Sandy was not totally and permanently disabled; and that he had not suffered the total loss or loss of use of his left hand prior to the 1943 injury.
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233 S.W.2d 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-workmens-compensation-comn-v-sandy-ark-1950.