Coomes v. Robertson Lumber Company

427 S.W.2d 809, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 693
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 10, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 427 S.W.2d 809 (Coomes v. Robertson Lumber Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coomes v. Robertson Lumber Company, 427 S.W.2d 809, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 693 (Ky. 1968).

Opinion

MILLIKEN, Judge.

The Workmen’s Compensation Board denied compensation to the appellant, William Gerald Coomes, a forty-eight year old employee of the appellee, Robertson Lumber Company, and the circuit court affirmed the Board’s decision on appeal. The appeal to us presents the question of whether the Board had to grant compensation to Coomes as a matter of law.

This is a case where no one saw the accident, and little circumstantial evidence was available to suggest exactly how it happened, yet happen it did, and during the course of Coomes’ employment with the Lumber Company. Coomes drove a truck for the Company and worked in its lumber yard. On the day of his injury, September 10, 1964, he went home for lunch at noon and returned to his work about an hour later, unloading two-by-fours from a truck. A salesman for the Company saw him after his return to work and testified that Coomes appeared normal at that time, but within an hour later, when the salesman went into the lumber yard for a purpose he could not recall, he saw Coomes stagger to his feet with a bloody forehead, found him dazed, led him to a stack of lumber where he set him down, then telephoned Coomes’ wife to come for him. The salesman said he recalled seeing nothing on the ground which would suggest what caused Coomes to fall or what he may have struck when he fell, but there was a truck with lumber on it “and some — a couple of pieces may be pulled out three or four feet.”

Mrs. Coomes, who worked at night and slept in the daytime, took her husband home, cleansed his cut head, put him to bed and returned to bed herself. She said that she had “kind of dozed off to sleep myself. In a few minutes I felt the bed just quiver and he already had just stiffened out.” She said his body was so stiff she could not manage him so she called an ambulance to take him to the hospital where examination revealed a severe fracture of his skull. She testified that her husband appeared to be all right when he was home for lunch that noon.

The Workmen’s Compensation Board denied compensation because of its “conclusion that the evidence of this record fails to establish a causal connection that demonstrates abnormalities or compensable injuries resulting from the accident which occurred on September 10, 1964. * * * On the basis of the medical and factual proof included, we are not able to find that the plaintiff sustained a compensable injury in the course and out of his employment with this defendant on or about September 10, 1964.” (Emphasis ours.)

The Board’s conclusion is stated too broadly, for it is apparent that Coomes’ injury occurred in the course of his employment. The “causal connection” which the Board could not satisfy itself about goes to the other vital concept in Workmen’s Compensation law — the “arising out of the employment”. It is axiomatic that for an injury to be compensable under the Workmen’s Compensation law it must occur in the course of, and arise out of, the employment. Like due process, these two *811 factors are concepts of law, and the evidence offered to sustain a claim must satisfy both those concepts if compensation is to be allowed. We do not imply that they are concepts so clear and precise that they could be programmed in a computer and all Workmen’s Compensation cases could be easily solved by pushing a key.

Pulsing through all legal concepts such as “due process of law”, “the equal protection of the law” and others is our sense of fair play or justice, and the same spirit animates the legal concepts vital to the administration of the Workmen’s Compensation law in its limited and specialized field. And in Kentucky, after thirty-five years of experience with the Workmen’s Compensation law, the legislature found it necessary in 1950 again to direct specifically that the Workmen’s Compensation law “ * * * shall be liberally construed on questions of law, as distinguishable from evidence * * KRS 342.004. (This was in the original Workmen’s Compensation law as K.S. 4987 and was omitted in the 1942 Revision because KRS 446.080 says all statutes should be liberally construed.) This statutory re-enactment means, if it means anything, that governing legal concepts peculiar to Workmen’s Compensation definitely should be construed liberally by this court.

What we have before us in the case at bar is a severely injured workman, injured in the course of his employment on his employer’s premises, and the Board denying compensation because it could not decide specifically how the injury happened. Coomes was unable to tell what happened, but he had been unloading the lumber truck, and the witness who found him said there was a truck with lumber on it “and some — a couple of pieces may be pulled out three or four feet”. Should not our legal concept, “arising out of the employment”, be adaptable enough and broad enough for us to conclude that a re-buttable presumption of compensability arises when an employee is found unex-plainably injured on his employer’s premises in the course of his employment? We think it should be if the admonition of our statute (KRS 342.004) is to be observed.

Dr. William E. Pearson, the neurosurgeon who examined and treated Coomes during his hospitalization after the accident testified a year later that he found Coomes had a “ * * * large skull fracture running vertically in the anterior parietal region down to the left temporal region * * * the patient was somewhat drowsy, dazed and confused.” This physician said that someone told him Coomes had seizures or “spells” of some sort for several years before the accident, but he did not know who told him. In any event, Coomes definitely suffered seizures or “spells” after the accident which, Dr. Pearson thought, were traumatic in origin and were caused by the accident. He said that Coomes was suffering from a cerebellar disease which affects the coordination of the body as a whole and that the medicine Coomes necessarily was taking might be the cause of it. It was this physician’s opinion that Coomes was still totally disabled at the time of his testimony — a year after the accident, but it was difficult to say whether it was permanent.

Dr. James Callis, Coomes’ family physician who called Dr. Pearson to the case on the day of the accident, testified a year later that he had treated Coomes twenty-five or thirty times in a period of six to seven years and found no suggestion of Coomes’ having grandmal seizures before the accident. He said he had treated him for gout, had removed a tumor from his shoulder, and had treated him for alcoholism on one or two occasions, and that he responded well to treatment. He said arteriograms of Coomes’ brain were taken to rule out tumor as the cause of his post-accident seizures and that no tumor was found, and that withdrawal of medication (chiefly dilantin) proved that Coomes’ continued cerebellar disorder was not caused by any toxic effects of his medication. Dr. Callis thought his patient had lost *812 ground during the year.

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Bluebook (online)
427 S.W.2d 809, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coomes-v-robertson-lumber-company-kyctapphigh-1968.