Atlas Powder Company v. Grimes

292 S.W.2d 13, 200 Tenn. 206, 4 McCanless 206, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 397
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 292 S.W.2d 13 (Atlas Powder Company v. Grimes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlas Powder Company v. Grimes, 292 S.W.2d 13, 200 Tenn. 206, 4 McCanless 206, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 397 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinion

Mr. Justice BurNett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, T.C.A. sec. 50-901 et seq., to recover compensation and medical expenses necessary from an accident sustained by an employee. The trial court gave judgment for the petitioner and found that he was totally dis- *208 ablecl from April 27, 1954, to May 18, 1955. From this period there was deducted a period from September 30, 1954, until February 15, 1955, both inclusive, in which the employee suffered from a kidney ailment and .was operated on for the same. The court also found that the employee was entitled to temporary total disability from April 27, 1954, through September 29, 1954, less compensation already paid, and from February 18, 1955, to May 19, 1955, and in addition thereto a 20% permanent partial disability to his body as a whole since May 18, 1955. The court also found that the claimant was entitled to recover medical and hospital expenses in the sum of $1,111.90, for treatment to his back injury, and an additional sum of $652, as compensation for temporary total disability and a further sum of $5.60 weekly for a period of 265 weeks, as compensation for 20% permanent partial disability. From this judgment the employer has appealed and assigns some nineteen errors and brief and argument in support thereof. We have heard oral argument on the question and after reading the record and' the briefs and making some independent study of the matter we are now ready to dispose of the same.

The petitioner was employed as a laborer at the Atlas Powder Company at the time he was injured on April 27,1954. At that time he was engaged in unloading lumber when struck by a plank across his lower back as he was stooped over. The plank’s dimensions were 1 inch by 7 or 8 inches and 12 to 14 feet long. The petitioner was knocked to the ground and was unable to arise, having been temporarily or momentarily, at least, knocked unconscious. At the time of his injury he was earning considerably above the maximum allowable under the *209 compensation law. Immediately after Ms injury he was removed by ambulance to the Plant Hospital but was released shortly thereafter. The next day the Plant authorities sent him to their doctor, Doctor Robertson, but at the time they made no offer to him of a choice of one of three doctors.

As viewed from the employee’s viewpoint and as accepted by the trial court, Doctor Robertson hospitalized the petitioner for 16 days. On the first examination by Doctor Robertson he noted that petitioner walked with a left-sided hip limp, moved with apparent low back pain, had swelling of the left lumbar muscle, and complained of severe pain upon pressure. Movements at that time were severely limited. There was no atrophy at the time, indicating that the petitioner had not had any back trouble of long duration prior to the accident. Dr. Robertson concluded at that time that the petitioner had an acute severe contusion of the left lumbar muscle, and that he had a large kidney stone. Petitioner was admitted to the hospital for absolute bed rest and daily physical therapy. "When he was released from the hospital he was advised to continue sleeping on a hard board and to continue daily physical therapy. He continued under the care of the company physician, Dr. Robertson, until July 19, 1954, during which time his motions were limited and there were repeated complaints by him of pain at each visit that he made to the Company doctor. Petitioner was repeatedly advised by this doctor to return to work and was discharged from this doctor’s care while still complaining of pain. At the time of the discharge the doctor still did not feel that the petitioner was able to do heavy work and estimated that he would be disabled for an additional two month period.

*210 Apparently the petitioner felt that lie was not getting the necessary treatment (this is a natural human feeling when one is suffering) and some two or three days after he had been discharged by the Company doctor, he went, upon recommendation of his attorney, to an orthopedic surgeon, July 22, 1954. At this time he was complaining of dull aching pain in the lower part of his back, exaggerated by lifting and bending. He was placed by this doctor on a routine of conservative care which did not relieve his pain and complaint. This doctor at that time did not consider him able to do heavy work. On August 14,1954, while the petitioner was attempting to do moderately heavy work in tying some brush onto a jeep his symptoms became increased and he went to his doctor and complained of severe pain. Thereafter he failed to improve.

The petitioner was fitted, by the doctor of his selection, on August 18, 1954, with a brace and was thereafter hospitalized on September 15, 1954, and placed on a hard bed, traction being applied to his left leg and receiving daily specific physical therapy treatment. X-rays were taken at this time and it was discovered that he had a “large staghorn type calculous in the left kidney”. As a result an operation was performed to relieve the employee of this disability. The petitioner remained in the hospital as a result of this kidney trouble from September 14,1954, until September 23,1954, when he was placed in the care of another doctor who was a specialist in kidney trouble. This doctor operated and treated him for this kidney trouble until February 1955. All during this period it was necessary for the orthopedic surgeon who had been selected by the employee to examine and give advice, etc., in reference to the herniated disc that was *211 found in this man’s back and which is testified to by Doctor Donaldson as:

“In my opinion the accident was sufficient to canse the pathology which we found at the time of surgery, and which I expected to find all through those months.”

This is in answer to a question of whether or not this herniated disc was removed from the back by this orthopedic surgeon as a result of the accident which he suffered on April 27, 1954.

One reading the testimony of this doctor is convinced that this doctor is convinced of the fact that it was the injury which the employee received on April 27, 1954, that caused this injury to the back which in turn resulted in the operation performed by this orthopedic surgeon in remedying this herniated disc.

Dr. Donaldson testified that the petitioner was unable to work from the time that he first saw him on July 22, 1954, until the date of the trial on May 18, 1955. Prior to this time the Company doctor had likewise advised him that he was unable to work. The period that we have set out above wherein he was not able to work was when he was being operated on for the trouble to his kidneys. For this time and for this operation no finding is made against the employer. Complaint is made for a part of the orthopedic surgeon’s charge wherein this orthopedic surgeon was treating the man for the back trouble which was caused by the injury during this period of time. It seems to us that that is a reasonable charge.

The Company doctor found that the employee had this trouble with his kidney but this doctor did not inform the employee of this fact. The Company doctor also found that the man was suffering with muscle spasm which would indicate a spinal injury.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W.2d 13, 200 Tenn. 206, 4 McCanless 206, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-powder-company-v-grimes-tenn-1956.