Champagne v. Department of Labor & Industries

156 P.2d 422, 22 Wash. 2d 412, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 368
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1945
DocketNo. 29271.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 156 P.2d 422 (Champagne v. Department of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champagne v. Department of Labor & Industries, 156 P.2d 422, 22 Wash. 2d 412, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 368 (Wash. 1945).

Opinions

Millard, J.

While engaged in extrahazardous employment May 1, 1940, Ray J. Champagne was struck by a falling tree. As a result of that accident, both bones of the victim’s left leg about halfway between the knee and the ankle were fractured. He also suffered a chip fracture of the front surface of a vertebrae in the base of his neck.

Champagne was afforded necessary medical treatment and hospitalization for his injuries and paid time loss from date of accident to May 14, 1941. His claim was closed by order of the supervisor of industrial insurance May 23, 1941, with payment of 15.6 degrees for permanent partial disability. The claim was reopened in July 1941. Claimant appealed February 27, 1942, to the joint board, which, after reviewing the cause, entered an order sustaining the action of the supervisor in closing the claim and awarding to claimant for permanent partial disability twenty per cent as compared to amputation of the left leg at or above the knee and fifteen per cent of the maximum award for unscheduled or unspecified disability for the chip fracture of the vertebrae in the base of the neck. Claimant appealed to the superior court for King county, where the cause was tried on the departmental record to a jury, which returned *414 a verdict in favor of defendant department. From judgment entered on the verdict, plaintiff appealed.

The author of respondent’s brief did not represent respondent in the trial court or in this court. Counsel representing respondent on appeal was not counsel for respondent on trial of the cause.

It is contended that the court erred in denying the right to counsel to argue to the jury the amount in dollars and cents to which appellant is entitled, that the court erroneously charged the jury and committed reversible error in refusing to give certain requested instructions.

By reason of the statutory restriction, the only evidence introduced on appeal to the superior court was that contained in the departmental record.

“In all appeals to the superior court from any order, decision or award of the joint board . . . either party shall be entitled to a trial by jury upon demand ... no party to the appeal shall be permitted to introduce evidence in court in addition to that contained in the departmental record.” Laws of 1939, chapter 184, § 1, p. 579 (Rem. Rev. Stat. (Sup.), § 7697-2 [P. C. § 3488-21].

The gist of the court’s instructions to the jury, immediately following reading of the departmental record to the jury, is as follows:

Instruction No. 1. Appellant received May 1, 1940, while employed in the logging industry, an injury to his back, and his left leg was broken between the knee and the ankle. The department made certain allowances to Champagne for time loss and permanent partial disability. The claim was reopened and hearing before the joint board resulted in confirmation of the department’s decision. From that ruling Champagne appealed to King county superior court. The sole issue to be decided by the jury is the amount of permanent partial disability compensation, if any, to which Champagne is entitled.

By instruction No. 2, the jury was charged that, under the statute by which the department is instituted, the legislature created a schedule of awards for certain types of injuries — so much for the loss of an eye, so much for the *415 loss of a hand. The system under the statute is one of limited insurance. While the jurors may feel that the amount payable to a person for the loss of an eye or a hand is inadequate, that is not a matter in this case for the jury’s consideration. The question presented is whether the department, in making its award in this case, found the correct percentage of injury; hence, the jurors are not concerned with what the award may have been in dollars, but are concerned with a determination of what is the per cent of the injury. In that connection, the jurors were instructed that Champagne had already been allowed a permanent partial disability award of fifteen per cent of the maximum allowable for an injury to the neck and upper back. He had also been allowed an award of twenty per cent of the amputation value of his left leg at or above the knee. Champagne contends that the awards are erroneous and should have been fifty per cent of the maximum allowable for an injury to the neck and upper back, and fifty per cent of the amputation value of his left leg at or above the knee; hence, the problem for determination, with regard to each item, is whether the department found the correct percentage, and if not, what is the correct percentage.

Instructions Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6 correctly charged the jury as to the burden of proof, the meaning of “preponderance of the evidence,” that the decision of the department is prima fade correct but that presumption no longer persisted after the claimant introduced credible evidence to the contrary, and that the jurors were the sole and exclusive judges of the evidence and of the weight to be attached to the testimony of each witness.

The jury was finally instructed (instruction No. 7) to select, when retired to the jury room, a member of the jury to act as foreman, whose duty it would be to sign the answers to the following interrogatories:

“(1) Did the department find and allow to the plaintiff the proper percentage for the injury to his upper back and neck?
“ (2) Did the department find and allow to the plaintiff the proper percentage for the injury to his leg?”

*416 By instruction No. 7, the jury was further informed that it would be given the exhibits in the case, a copy of all the instructions, and the two quoted interrogatories. The jury was advised that if its answer to either interrogatory was “yes,” then the jury would be no further concerned with the question; if the answer to either of the interrogatories was “no,” then, under the evidence it became the duty of the jury to fix what should have been the proper allowance in percentage for such injury; and that, as this is a civil cause, ten members of the jury were sufficient to bring in a verdict. The answer of the jury to each interrogatory was “yes.”

Following the court’s instructions, which counsel for appellant assume as a whole are so erroneous as to excuse breach of the rule which precludes consideration of an assignment of error, based upon court’s refusal to charge the jury correctly, in the absence of specific objection to the instructions, counsel for appellant endeavored to inform the jury in dollars and cents the amounts allowable for injuries to hip, amputation above the knee, amputation below the knee, and loss of foot. Counsel was admonished by the court to refrain from argument on any basis except that of disability (not the jury’s function, on the theory and under the evidence of the case, to determine in money the amount of damage but to determine the degree of disability from which the law computes amount to be allowed), and that the jury had been instructed “that we are not to discuss it in dollars.”

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215 P.2d 416 (Washington Supreme Court, 1950)
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Spalding v. Department of Labor & Industries
186 P.2d 76 (Washington Supreme Court, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 P.2d 422, 22 Wash. 2d 412, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champagne-v-department-of-labor-industries-wash-1945.