Big Sandy Community Action Program v. Chaffins

502 S.W.2d 526, 1973 Ky. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 7, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 502 S.W.2d 526 (Big Sandy Community Action Program v. Chaffins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Big Sandy Community Action Program v. Chaffins, 502 S.W.2d 526, 1973 Ky. LEXIS 79 (Ky. 1973).

Opinion

PALMORE, Chief Justice.

The appellee, Ernest Chaffins, was injured on July 1, 1969, when a school bus with defective brakes pinned him against the wall of a garage. His claim for workmen’s compensation resulted in a maximum award pursuant to findings that he is totally and permanently disabled and that the accident of July 1, 1969, was the cause of that disability. The employer appeals from a judgment sustaining the award. KRS 342.285, 342.290.

The principal ground on which the appeal has been taken is that the findings of the board rest upon evidence that is both incompetent and without sufficient probative weight to support them. In a nutshell, the point is that two medical witnesses whose services were engaged for the sole purpose of examining the claimant and testifying in his behalf gave opinions based in part on the case history as related to them by the claimant and that these opinions *528 provided the only evidentiary support for the board’s finding on the critical issue of causation.

The most severe injury apparent right after the accident was a fractured femur, or thigh bone, three or four inches above the left knee, as the result of which Chaf-fins underwent surgery and the fractured bone was fixed in place by a metal plate. The treating physician, and the only treating physician to testify in this case, was Dr. John S. Ashworth, an orthopedic surgeon of Ashland, Kentucky, who appeared for the defense. To make a long story short, Dr. Ashworth testified that in August of 1971, when he last saw him, Chaf-fins had substantially recovered and that what little disability then existed could and should now have been eliminated by proper exercise. Specifically, he denied that Chaffins had at any time complained of back trouble. Dr. Ashworth had released him for return to work as an automobile mechanic on December 14, 1970.

Chaffins testified that while he was in the hospital he did complain that his back was hurt, “but they ignored that. They gave me a shot for the pain I had .... and they didn’t pay any attention to my back,” etc. He said also that his chest was painful and swollen and that his left knee was hurt. Dr. Ashworth conceded that the patient was complaining of his knee when he last examined him, but no objective symptoms could be found to suggest any residual injury. Though he advised removal of the metal plate, Chaffins said he did not want any further surgery.

Dr. Herbert Knodt, an orthopedic surgeon of Columbus, Ohio, examined Chaf-fins on June 10, 1971. His Xrays indicated that the left leg was an inch shorter than the right and that there was what appeared to be a Grade I spondylolisthesis between vertebrae L5 and SI of the spine. The claimant was complaining of continuous pain in his low back and right hip and leg, frequent pain in his left leg, headaches, and a “catch” in the left knee when walking. It was this doctor’s opinion that in addition to the conditions made obvious by the Xrays the claimant had a “disc injury at the lumbosacral level,” in the same area as the spondylolisthesis. His reason for concluding that the back complaints were attributable to injury rather than the congenital anomaly was that according to the case history Chaffins had worked for years without ever having the symptoms until after the accident. Hence it was the opinion of Dr. Knodt that (1) there was a disc injury and (2) it had been caused by the accident.

Dr. Curwood Hunter, a neurological surgeon of Cincinnati, Ohio, examined the claimant on May 21, 1971. His findings, diagnosis and conclusions with respect to causation were virtually the same as those at which Dr. Knodt arrived in his subsequent examination except that Dr. Hunter attributed 50% of Chaffins’ functional disability to the congenital anomaly (which, of course, is immaterial for purposes of this case since spondylolisthesis is not a “disease condition,” cf. KRS 342.120) and also found some degree of objective support for his diagnosis of a disc protrusion or herniation by reason of the absence of certain ankle reflexes. Again however as in the instance of Dr. Knodt, Dr. Hunter made it clear that in forming his conclusions he had depended to an important extent upon the case history related to him by the claimant.

The most broadly-accepted view among the various courts of the country is that (with certain exceptions not relevant to this case) a medical expert whose services have been procured only to evaluate and testify cannot relate what the patient told him, nor can he express an opinion based in part upon such information. See annotations, 51 A.L.R.2d 1051 (admissibility of opinion) and 37 A.L.R.3d 778 (admissibility of testimony relating patient’s statements). That this was once the law in Kentucky is fully explicated in an opinion written by the late Judge E. C. O’Rear in Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. v. Wiley, 134 *529 Ky. 461, 121 S.W. 402 (1909). In the later case of Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Eiseman, 259 Ky. 103, 81 S.W.2d 900 (1935), which involved the admissibility of the statements but not the admissibility of the physician’s opinion, it was made clear that the rule applied alike to both case history and subjective symptomatology.

Between the C. & O. and A. & P. cases came Stearns Coal & Lumber Co. v. Williams, 177 Ky. 698, 198 S.W. 54 (1917), in which the court said this: “The cases relied upon, however, do not go to the extent of disallowing to a physician the right to obtain a history of the patient’s case, and to form an opinion therefrom which he may give in his testimony upon the trial. The rule only forbids such witness from testifying to the matters and things which the party stated to him concerning the case,” etc.

Though it was observed in 65 A.L.R. 1221-1222 with respect to Stearns that the court apparently had misread the meaning of the C. & O. opinion, in Mary Helen Coal Corp. v. Bigelow, Ky., 265 S.W.2d 69 (1954), an attempt was made to reconcile the cases as follows:

“The correct rule, consistently applied in these and other cases, is that a physician whose examination is made for a purpose other than treatment may express an opinion as to the patient’s physical condition and degree of disability although the opinion is based upon subjective symptoms alone, but he may not relate statements or voluntary acts of the patient as a means of bolstering his testimony.”

Mary Helen held that the examining physician’s professional findings and conclusions based on “objective and subjective symptoms” were admissible in evidence. Since it appears, however, from the text of that opinion that the physician also had received a case history, it is not entirely clear whether the court in remanding the case to permit the testimony meant to in-elude or to exclude his use of the case history as a partial foundation for his opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
502 S.W.2d 526, 1973 Ky. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/big-sandy-community-action-program-v-chaffins-kyctapphigh-1973.