Claphan v. Great Bend Manor

611 P.2d 180, 5 Kan. App. 2d 47, 1980 Kan. App. LEXIS 250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMay 23, 1980
Docket51,547
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 611 P.2d 180 (Claphan v. Great Bend Manor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claphan v. Great Bend Manor, 611 P.2d 180, 5 Kan. App. 2d 47, 1980 Kan. App. LEXIS 250 (kanctapp 1980).

Opinion

Meyer, J.:

In this workmen’s compensation case the claimant, Lillian F. Claphan (appellant), was awarded 26 weeks of temporary total disability compensation plus certain hospital and medical expenses by the workmen’s compensation examiner. The director and the district court affirmed the findings and award.

The workmen’s compensation fund filed a motion on appeal for dismissal in this action, but such motion was objected to by the attorney for the appellant, and denied by this court pending the hearing of the case on appeal.

Appellant was injured on January 27, 1977, while employed as a nurse’s aide by the Great Bend Manor (appellee), a nursing home. She had previously worked as a waitress and babysitter. At the time of the injury, she was 46 years of age and a divorced mother of six children. She suffered a disc injury to her back while putting a patient on a bedpan. She continued to work about 12 days until the pain was so extreme she could not get out of bed. There was testimony that the claimant had filed a workmen’s compensation claim in the late 1960’s for leg problems and that she had applied for but was denied social security benefits for those problems.

Among the examiner’s findings is the following:

*48 “6. Both Dr. Brown and Dr. Replogle in Great Bend were treating claimant for a disc problem. Dr. Stein did not eliminate the possibility of back strain as a result of the accidental injury occurring on January 27, 1977, but did indicate that notwithstanding any such injury, claimant would have arrived at the same point with the tumor within 3 to 6 months whether or not she had had an accident. Thereafter claimant’s disability is based solely on the lymphoma being treated by Dr. Stein, and other related physicians. From the testimony of Dr. Stein, it is apparent that this lymphoma was not caused by an injury on the job. Consequently, the resulting disability is not work related. The Examiner has concluded that the claimant would be entitled to receive 6 months of temporary total disability compensation or 26 weeks at the rate of $64 per week.”

Dr. Paul Stein, a neurosurgeon, examined claimant upon referral by Dr. Replogle, general practitioner, and Dr. Brown, orthopedic surgeon, who treated her after the injury. Dr. Stein testified that claimant was 100 percent disabled and that her problems were caused by a tumor which had “preexisted” the accident. He testified that the accident was at least an indirect cause of the tumor’s becoming symptomatic when it did and explained this conclusion as follows:

“I would think that the tumor was there at that time, preexisting to that, that she probably had adequate room in the spinal canal for the tumor, that it had, you know, at that point wasn’t causing severe pressure, but that the effort of lifting at that particular time may very well have exacerbated or caused that preexisting tumor to become symptomatic. That isn’t all that terribly uncommon. I’ve seen patients who had a minor car accident — or one particularly fell out of a tree and hit his head, started having headaches, never had them before. Well, he had a brain tumor but, you know, the cause — the fall simply caused that tumor to become symptomatic. His pressure relationships in the head were just adequately balanced until that. I think that’s what happened to her back. The effort of lifting might have stretched the tumor, caused it to swell, press on the nerve, might have caused the tumor to hemorrhage a little bit into itself, thus becoming larger and press on the nerve, but that’s the way I would think it happened.
“Q. But it didn’t cause the tumor in and of itself?
“A. No.”

Dr. Stein further stated that if she had not had the accident, the tumor would have become symptomatic within approximately 3 to 6 months.

The issues herein, as stated by appellant, are as follows: (1) Whether an accidental injury, within the scope of the workmen’s compensation law, which precipitates or accelerates activity of, or aggravates, a preexisting tumorous condition which permanently totally disables the injured worker is compensable under the Kansas Workers’ Compensation Law; and (2) whether the claim *49 ant, by reason of total disability due to a tumorous condition in her back, which was precipitated, accelerated, or aggravated by an accidental injury on January 27, 1977, is entitled to a maximum permanent total disability compensation and attendant medical benefits. We shall deal with these issues together.

The rule with regard to preexisting conditions is well established in Kansas.

“The act prescribes no standard of health for workmen, and where a workman is not in sound health but is accepted for employment, and a subsequent industrial accident suffered by him aggravates his condition resulting in disability, he is not to be denied compensation merely because of a preexisting physical condition. In other words, it is well settled that an accidental injury is compensable where the accident only serves to aggravate or accelerate an existing disease or intensifies the affliction. [Citations omitted.]” Strasser v. Jones, 186 Kan. 507, 511-12, 350 P.2d 779 (1960).

Admittedly, both Dr. Stein’s testimony and the examiner’s findings stress that the injury did not cause the tumor. However, the test is not whether the injury causes the tumor, but rather whether the injury aggravates or accelerates the condition.

An examination of cancer cases decided in Kansas makes this clear. In all of the cases, the issue on appeal was whether there was substantial evidence to support the finding that the injury aggravated the cancerous condition. In all cases the court on appeal sustained the trial court’s finding of aggravation.

In Waltrip v. Acme Foundry & Machine Co., 147 Kan. 781, 78 P.2d 898 (1938), the test indicated that the trauma (injury) caused or aggravated the mass which became malignant.

In Johnson v. Skelly Oil Co., 181 Kan. 655, 312 P.2d 1076 (1957), the tumor was found to have been aggravated by the blow, but the bruise did not cause the malignant tumor.

In Strasser v. Jones, 186 Kan. 507, the delay in cancer surgery caused by the infection from the injury was found to have aggravated the cancerous condition because earlier surgery might have prevented the spreading of the cancer.

In Cox v. Ulysses Cooperative Oil & Supply Co., 218 Kan. 428, 544 P.2d 363 (1975), the medical testimony was that the trauma probably induced malignancy in a preexisting mole.

The case at bar is most similar to Johnson, in that here the tumor was not the result of the injury, but the injury affected the onset of the symptoms related to the tumor.

The tumor, however, would have become symptomatic regardless of the injury within 3 to 6 months.

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Bluebook (online)
611 P.2d 180, 5 Kan. App. 2d 47, 1980 Kan. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claphan-v-great-bend-manor-kanctapp-1980.