Casebeer v. Casebeer

433 P.2d 399, 199 Kan. 806, 1967 Kan. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 13, 1967
Docket45,053
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 433 P.2d 399 (Casebeer v. Casebeer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casebeer v. Casebeer, 433 P.2d 399, 199 Kan. 806, 1967 Kan. LEXIS 458 (kan 1967).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kaul, J.:

The claimant (appellee and cross-appellant) was awarded workmen’s compensation in proceedings before the workmen’s compensation director and in the district court. The respondent employer and his insurance carrier appeal. The claimant contends compensation was properly allowed except as to the amount in regard to which he has filed a cross-appeal.

The award of the workmen’s compensation director was affirmed in all respects by the trial court except the date of the accident was correctly changed from April 4, 1965, to April 12, 1965.

*807 The claimant, Charles H. Casebeer, and the employer, John Case-beer, are brothers. John is in the oil and gas business. He owns an interest in a number of leases and is also sole proprietor of Case-beer Oil & Gas Company, a business primarily concerned with operating and servicing oil and gas wells.

On January 29, 1962, the employer filed his election to come within the provisions of the Kansas Workmens Compensation Act. In the election the employer is identified as J. W. Casebeer DBA Casebeer Oil Operations engaged in the business of oil production, drilling and oil field equipment.'

The claimant worked for his brother (John) most of the time since 1939 or 1940. Approximately eighteen months prior to the accident, claimant was fired of laid off. He was later rehired and had been working for employer regularly for several months prior to the accident. He was hired by the month as a pumper and was paid $50 each for pumping four oil wells and $12 each for picking up meter charts on two gas wells, or a total of $224. In addition to his work as a pumper, claimant was frequently hired by the employer to do welding and miscellaneous labor on an hourly basis. The evidence discloses that claimant was paid five or six dollars an hour for welding and two dollars an hour for other labor. Claimant operated a welding business known as “Charley’s Welding” and did welding and miscellaneous labor for other employers as well as the Casebeer Oil & Gas Company.

Claimant when working for employer as a pumper, welder or common laborer, was supervised by the employer or his superintendent, Allen Koehn. If claimant needed any helpers they were hired by the employer.

On Sunday, April 11, 1965, the day preceding the accident, the employer went to claimant’s house and told him about an orbital valve at a junk yard. The employer testified that he told claimant to mark the valve so that his (employer’s) boys could take a look at it; that he didn’t want the valve destroyed until either he or his men could inspect it.

Claimant’s version of the conversation was that employer told him to look at the valve and if he could buy it cheap enough to go ahead and buy it. Claimant testified that it was his understanding that he was to pick up the valve on his way to pump the wells the following morning. Claimant stopped at the junk yard the next morning, inspected the valve and loaded it in his pickup truck with *808 the help of another man. Claimant delivered the valve to the equipment yard of the employer.

An orbit or orbital valve is a safety valve used in drilling oil and gas wells and weighs about 270 pounds.

Claimant testified that he hurt his back while loading the valve. He continued with his work, however, and pumped the wells, did welding for two hours, worked on a compressor for two hours and graded a road for two hours on one of the leases his employer was servicing. Claimant had been employed a day or two in advance to do this work by the employers superintendent, Allen Koehn. Claimant testified that during the day he got to the point where he could not get around. His condition continued to get worse every day. He contacted several doctors, including two psychiatrists who had previously treated claimant for a nervous condition and alcoholism. Claimant was referred by one of the psychiatrists to Dr. Charles Rombold, an orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Rombold diagnosed claimant’s injury as “a degenerated intervertebral disc at the lumbosacral level, symptoms of which apparently had been aggravated by a strain four weeks previous to the time of the examination.” (Emphasis supplied.) Dr. Rombold performed a spinal fusion on claimant on May 27, 1965.

Proceedings were had before the examiner on November 2, 1965, and January 4, 1966. The record was assembled disclosing the evidence for the claimant, consisting of his testimony, that of his wife, Dorothy Casebeer, and the junk yard operator, H. E. Copeland, and the depositions of Drs. Rombold and Harris. Respondent’s evidence consisted of the testimony of John W. Casebeer and the deposition of Dr. John Morton.

Compensation was awarded by the examiner and on application of claimant the award was reviewed by the director.

The director found claimant’s average weekly wage to be $143.69 based upon claimant’s wage as a pumper in the amount of $53.69 a week, as a welder $60 per week and as a laborer $30 per week. Based on such findings the director awarded compensation for 22 weeks temporary total disability at the rate of $42 per week and 393 weeks of permanent partial disability at the rate of $12.93 per week based upon a 15% disability to the body as a whole. The director further ordered the payment of claimant’s medical expense, the amount of which is not in dispute if claimant is entitled to compensation.

*809 The trial court made no separate findings of its own but, as we have previously indicated, affirmed the director’s award in all respects except as to the date of the accident.

On appeal the employer and insurance carrier contend the trial court erred: (1) In failing to find that employer and claimant were partners and that claimant could not collect workmens compensation from a partnership of which he is a member; (2) in finding an employer and employee relationship existed between claimant and employer with reference to the orbital valve; and (3) in its computation of claimant’s average weekly wage. It is further contended that there was no substantial evidence to support the award or any part thereof.

The claimant in his cross-appeal contends the trial court erred in computing the amount of compensation. Specifically, claimant contends the trial court erroneously omitted one item of four dollars for two hours of labor in grading a road on the day of the accident and further that partial disability of 25% rather than 15% should have been allowed.

Before discussing points raised on appeal we must again reiterate that on appellate review of a workmen’s compensation case, this court does not weigh the evidence and it must be considered in the light most favorable to the prevailing party. We have so held in a long line of cases. Some of the most recent decisions are Gray v. Beller, 199 Kan. 284, 428 P. 2d 833; Mooney v. Harrison, 199 Kan. 162, 427 P. 2d 457; Morgan v. Sholom Drilling Co., 199 Kan. 156, 427 P. 2d 448.

Respondent and insurance carrier contend that respondent and claimant were partners rather than employer-employee at the time of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
433 P.2d 399, 199 Kan. 806, 1967 Kan. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casebeer-v-casebeer-kan-1967.