Bigar v. Tri-State Sand & Gravel, Inc.

486 P.2d 881, 157 Mont. 459, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 439
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1971
DocketNo. 11974
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 486 P.2d 881 (Bigar v. Tri-State Sand & Gravel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigar v. Tri-State Sand & Gravel, Inc., 486 P.2d 881, 157 Mont. 459, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 439 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

On November 20, 1969, the Industrial Accident Board held a hearing at Bozeman, Montana, which resulted in its order of June 15, 1970, awarding to claimant minimal permanent partial disability. Claimant appealed to the District Court of Gallatin County. The district court reversed some of the findings of the Board and ordered new findings and conclusions in part to be adopted by the Board. From this judgment the employer and his insurance carrier appeal.

The claimant John Bigar suffered an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment by Tri-State Sand & Gravel, Inc. at West Yellowstone, Montana, in Gallatin County, on May 30, 1968. At that time his employer Tri-State Sand & Gravel, Inc. was enrolled under Plan II of the Montana Workmen’s Compensation Act. The carrier was Continental Insurance Company. Hereinafter the employer and carrier will be referred to collectively as the carrier.

At the time of the accident John Bigar was 46, unmarried, and had no dependent minor children. He was a laborer earning $2.75 to $3.00 per hour, averaging 10 hours per day, 7 days per week. His actual wages averaged $192.50 per week.

For years prior to, and on May 30, 1968, John Bigar had been employed as a common laborer and as a general farmhand. At the time of the accident he was employed as a common laborer, laying sewer pipe in a trench for Tri-State Sand & Gravel, Inc. of West Yellowstone, Montana.

The cause of the accident was an excavation cave-in. Large solid chunks of dirt and earth backfill, weighing up to 25 pounds apiece, fell on claimant, hitting him in the lower back and filling the excavation to the extent that he was buried up to his waist, before he could free himself.

At the hearing before the Industrial Accident Board, testi[461]*461mony for the claimant was taken from the claimant, Dr. Albert De Heetderks, the attending physician at the time of the accident, and Dr. Charles A. Kirkpatrick, a radiology expert.

Following the accident claimant was hospitalized for approximately 10 days with fractures of the left transverse spineous processes of L-l, L-2, and L-3, directly attributable to the excavation cave-in. The nature of the injury was a combination of damage to muscle and soft tissue in the back and fractures to the skeletal structure of the back.

Claimant received temporary total disability from the insurance carrier from the time of the accident, May 30, 1968, to July 8, 1968. At this time Dr. Heetderks had claimant fitted to a back brace. Thereafter, claimant testified, he tried to work at various jobs but back and leg problems forced him to try and seek lighter work. He worked for a short time as a dishwasher in Las Vegas, Nevada, but had the same difficulty and suffered considerable weight loss, in addition to being without sufficient funds to get medical aid. In May 1969, a Dr. Beeman in Las Vegas referred claimant to the Veterans Administration Hospital at Los Angeles, California, where he remained in the domiciliary unit until the Industrial Accident Board hearing, November 20, 1969.

At the hearing it was established that claimant was not able to enter the labor market and his ability to earn a living was almost nil. It was established by Dr. Heetderks that the fractures in the lumbar had healed but there was chronic soft tissue damage in the area; that there was a pre-existing alcoholic condition from which claimant had withdrawn and which was detected on examination for an unrelated problem in March, prior to the accident in May. In May, the doctor felt the nervous condition associated with this problem was improved, however, the tremulous condition had increased on examination November 17, 1969, sixteen months later just prior to the hearing. The doctor felt that this condition contributed more to his - total disability than the tissue injury and this condition was probably aggravated by the accident, but testified he was not familiar [462]*462enough with the history of the claimant to go further into the matter.

On May 11, 1970, the Industrial Accident Board entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law. Insofar as they pertain to this appeal, they held:

“That by reason of the injury Claimant has suffered a minimal permanent partial impairment, a fair and reasonable award being 25 weeks at the lawful rate of $37.00 per week for a total of $925.00, which should be paid forthwith in a lump sum.
“That the Claimant is entitled to hospital and medical benefits for the period of the award in accordance with the Act.
“That the Claimant accept this award as a full and final award of all compensation due under the Act.”

Petition for rehearing was filed by claimant on or about June 17, 1970; the Board denied rehearing on June 22, 1970. Claimant then appealed to the District Court of the Eighteenth Judicial District, Gallatin County.

On July 6, 1970, claimant’s attorney was paid $925 (25 weeks at $37 per week) for claimant, being a minimal Board award as provided by section 92-825, R.C.M.1947, and the carrier’s attorney obtained a receipt from claimant’s attorney which reads as follows:

“Received of Lyman H. Bennett; attorney for Continental Insurance Co., the sum of $925.00, the amount ordered paid by the Montana Industrial Accident Board in its Order herein dated the 11th day of May, 1970, subject to claimant’s appellate rights. ’ ’

On August 3, 1970, the carrier moved the district court of the eighteenth judicial district for an order dismissing the appeal upon the ground that the award of the Industrial Accident Board was fully paid to the claimant on July 6, 1970; that accordingly, the judgment and decision of the Board was fully paid and satisfied and questions presented by the appeal to the district court were moot.

The court, prior to this motion, had set the trial date on the appeal for Tuesday, August 25, 1970 at 10 a.m. The court’s [463]*463order dismissing the carrier’s motion to dismiss was entered August 24, 1970.

The carrier did not appear on August 25, 1970. The court permitted claimant to introduce additional evidence and proceeded with the hearing, noting for the record that the carrier had been served with notice of the hearing.

The court heard testimony from Dr. Heetderks, Dr. Bayliss, and claimant John Bigar.

Dr. Albert De Heetderks clarified his Board testimony • as follows:

“Q. In connection with your findings of chronic scarring and chronic injury to the lower muscles, in your testimony in 1969 at the Board hearing, by that chronic scarring and chronic injury you had in mind a permanent type of scarring or injury on account of that accident, didn’t you doctor? A. My allusion at that time was to the fact that a crushing injury sufficiently severe to fracture the underlying bones in the spine would in all probability result in some sort of tissue injury as well, and, of course, the soft tissues involved in this area are muscular and I believe that such an injury would be permanent.”

Additionally, Dr. Heetderks testified:

“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
486 P.2d 881, 157 Mont. 459, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigar-v-tri-state-sand-gravel-inc-mont-1971.