Castellanos v. Industrial Commission

488 P.2d 675, 15 Ariz. App. 319, 1971 Ariz. App. LEXIS 759
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedSeptember 21, 1971
Docket1 CA-IC 404
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 488 P.2d 675 (Castellanos v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castellanos v. Industrial Commission, 488 P.2d 675, 15 Ariz. App. 319, 1971 Ariz. App. LEXIS 759 (Ark. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

STEVENS, Presiding Judge.

This case is before the Court by writ of certiorari to test the lawfulness of an award and findings of The Industrial Commission of Arizona that the applicant had suffered no greater disability than that previously awarded to him.

The petitioner sustained an industrial injury on 19 March 1953. He was then a 29-yciar old- laborer with a third-grade education, employed in Yuma in the yard of the respondent employer, Home Lumber and Supply Company. His regular duty at the time of his injury was grading, sorting and stacking lumber. While petitioner was in the process of cleaning up a place to start a new pile of lumber, an adjacent stack of lumber collapsed and fell on him, pinning him under it.

The principal injuries then reported as sustained by the petitioner were: fracture of the right hip; fracture of the right supraorbital area; partial avulsion of the nose; fracture of the maxilla; and loss of teeth.

After emergency treatment in Yuma, the petitioner was transferred to Phoenix. Orthopedic surgery was performed for open reduction of a fractured femur by application of a metal plate and screws. Petitioner was also treated for injuries to his face and teeth. The maxilla was re-fractured and a Steinman pin and Jelenko arch bars were inserted to treat the jaw fractures. Surgery was later performed on the nasal area to correct an obstruction of the airways. Dentists also extracted teeth and installed bridgework to replace the teeth lost or removed.

A consulting board thereafter found, in substance, that petitioner’s condition was stationary, that he sustained a permanent, partial disability of facial disfigurement and loss of teeth, and a 10% loss of function of the right leg. The board also observed that considering the loss of function of the leg together with the facial disfigurement “[t]he overall disability in terms of general physical functional disability is that of approximately a ten per cent general.”

The Commission thereafter entered its findings and award providing total temporary disability from the date of the accident through 8 October 1953, and partial temporary disability through 11 October 1953. The facial injuries, and the permanent functional loss of use of the leg, were each found to be separate scheduled disabilities, with compensation allowed for an initial *321 period of four months at $141.63, then at $128.76 for an additional five months. There was no protest of this award and it became final.

On 18 September 1956, petitioner filed a petition for readjustment or reopening of the claim, alleging complete disability. Subsequent medical examination resulted in a report that no new or additional disability was found beyond that on petitioner’s prior discharge in 1954, except possibly as to subjective complaints related to the metal bone plate. On 8 October 1956, the case was reopened to provide surgery for removal of the metal bone plate.

On 18 February 1957, an order was issued closing the case due to the petitioner’s failure to submit himself for surgery.

The case then lay dormant for several years until petitioner filed a petition to readjust or reopen, alleging an injured spinal column, pelvic bone and painful jaws and gums. An examining physician, Dr. Greth, recommended the case be reopened for reevaluation. Petitioner was examined, and the Commission entered an award denying the petition to reopen.

About a year later, petitioner filed another petition to reopen, claiming that a new and additional disability had resulted in a loss of earning capacity. The petition was supported by a report of examination by Dr. Cain, finding petitioner to be suffering from chronic fibro-myositis and arthritis secondary to the original injury. In December 1964, petitioner was seen in consultation by a board which included Dr. Johnson who had previously examined petitioner. In the opinion of the consultants, there was no evidence of new and additional disability attributable to the original injury; that the current complaints were on the basis of degenerative joint changes and that the petitioner should be able to perform his regular work as a laborer.

The Commission entered an award denying reopening of the claim. The award was timely protested and a petition for hearing filed, alleging that petitioner had a 10% general disability and a loss of earning capacity. At the hearing, petitioner’s counsel raised the issue that, taking into consideration the two separate scheduled disabilities, to the face and to the right leg, the original award should have been for an unscheduled disability.

The referee’s report following this hearing indicated that probably the original award should have been on an unscheduled basis, but concluded the award was res judicata since the original award was allowed to become final. The Commission issued another award affirming its previous award denying reopening.

Another year elapsed and the file now moved into the phase directly concerned in this proceeding. Another petition to reopen the case was filed by an attorney on behalf of the petitioner. This petition was summarily denied, and a petition for hearing timely followed. Another formal hearing was held in Yuma in December 1966.

At the hearing, the petitioner and two lay witnesses testified concerning his inability to work, and Dr. Bailey gave medical testimony concerning his treatment and examination of the petitioner. Following the hearing, as recommended by the referee, petitioner was examined by Dr. LyttonSmith, an orthopedic surgeon. He was also scheduled to be seen by an orthodontist, but the orthodontist selected by the Commission refused to examine him. Dr. Lytton-Smith reported that he found changes in the petitioner’s low back, that he found changes in the sacroiliac articulation, which in his opinion were probably attributable to the original injury. He recommended removal of the metal plate and screws in the leg, and gave as his opinion that the petitioner had new and additional disability over that previously awarded which he believed to be “ * * * not more than a 15% general physical disability * *

The petitioner was later seen by a Yuma dentist, Dr. Thurmond, who recommended certain dental treatment, including replacement of the bridge which was necessitated by the accident. He stated in his report that it was not possible for him to deter *322 mine whether the additional dental treatment was the result of the accident or not. Th.ere is no indication as to whether he received the medical report from the date of the accident or the Commission file for his review.

The Commission issued an award for new, additional or previously undiscovered disability on 15 May 1967.

' Unfortunately for the petitioner, Dr. Lytton-Smith was. on vacation, and was not available to begin treatment until after Labor Day of 1967. In his absence, the petitioner was sent to'Dr. Haines for treatment. Instead of treating the petitioner, based upon the recommendations of Dr. Lytton-Smith, Dr. Haines submitted an examination report to the Commission in which he gave as his opinion the fact that the'petitioner did not suffer a new or additional disability as the result of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
488 P.2d 675, 15 Ariz. App. 319, 1971 Ariz. App. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castellanos-v-industrial-commission-arizctapp-1971.