Cooper Industrial Products, Inc. v. Worth

508 S.W.2d 59, 256 Ark. 394, 1974 Ark. LEXIS 1451
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 15, 1974
Docket73-288
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 508 S.W.2d 59 (Cooper Industrial Products, Inc. v. Worth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper Industrial Products, Inc. v. Worth, 508 S.W.2d 59, 256 Ark. 394, 1974 Ark. LEXIS 1451 (Ark. 1974).

Opinions

Lyle Brown, Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. The crucial question is whether an injury to the right knee rendered claimant permanently and totally disabled. Appellant contends (1) that there is no substantial evidence to support the commission’s finding of total and permanent disability, (2) that claimant received a scheduled injury which cannot be related to the body as a whole, and (3) that under the facts in the case claimant is limited to an award of $19,500, based on the theory that if she is permanently disabled, it was caused by a succession of injuries.

Appellee-claimant began working for appellant in 1964 as an assembly line worker. During that employment she sustained four job-related injuries. On July 6, 1964, she sustained a compensable injury which resulted in the removal of her left index finger. Upon return to work she was taken off the assembly line and began working as an inspector. On April 17, 1967, claimant sustained a second compensable injury to her neck. Her permanent disability was rated at 10% to the body as a whole. The claim was joint petitioned. Then on March 9, 1970, she sustained an injury to the right knee vyhich resulted in a disability of 40% to her right lower extremity. Claimant was off the job for about one year. Because of that injury claimant wears a brace which attaches to her upper thigh and extends to her instep. The brace is stiff and causes claimant to walk with her leg in a locked position. In order to sit, stoop, or bend, she disengages a latch on the brace. When she arises the latch is reengaged so she can walk. About two months after her return to work she suffered a fall and was off work four days. Shortly after that fall she was terminated by appellant, it being considered hazardous to herself and her fellow employees for her to continue working.

The commission adjudged claimant to be totally disabled as a result of the knee injury of March 9, 1970. Alluding to the previous injuries the commission said: “It is true claimant sustained other injuries which were anatomically disabling. However, these prior injuries were not disabling in the compensation sense. Disability means incapacity because of injury to earn. Claimant testified that she was able to do her work and earn her way after her two previous injuries but could not do so after the third injury.” The commission also declined to limit recovery to $19,500 on the theory that the limiting statute was not applicable because her disability was a result of only the one injury. That finding had reference to Ark. Stat. Ann. § 81-1313 (f) (1) (Repl. 1971), which placed a ceiling on recovery when permanent total disability results from previous and subsequent injuries.

We proceed to examine the testimony to ascertain whether there is any substantial evidence to support the judgment of the commission in its finding that claimant was totally and permanently disabled because of the injury to the right leg.

Delona Pauline Worth. She is forty-one years old and lives in El Dorado. She dropped out of school before finishing the eighth grade and went to work when she was twelve years old washing dishes at a hospital where she worked for seven years. She was promoted to nurse’s aide, giving baths, making beds, and attending to patients. When she left the hospital she went to work at Wood Manufacturing Company on the assembly line, doing work similar to her work for appellant. After working there seven years she worked briefly at two other places, both involving manual labor. In 1964 she went to work for appellant and did assembly line work, machine work, and inspection with the latter being her main job. “An inspector examines rubber car parts for possible defects. While inspecting, you can sit down part of the time and you can stand up part of the time. It does involve some stooping and squatting.”

Before going to work for appellant she had never suffered an injury and was in good health. (She then described the four accidents which we have heretofore related.) Following the injury to the right knee she was examined by Dr. Callaway and Dr. Sheppard of El Dorado and by Dr. Kenneth.}ones of Little Rock, all at the instance of appellant. She now wears a long leg brace prescribed by Dr. Callaway. It is impossible to walk without the brace or a crutch. The stiffness in her knee causes the other leg and back to ache “when I am on my feet very much”. She has no skills except hospital work and manufacturing work and does not feel physically able to do either one. She wears the brace at all times except when sleeping. Her husband helps with the housework.

Royce F. Worth. He is claimant’s husband. Before the described injuries his wife was able to help him roof the house and in plumbing. If claimant is on her feet very much around the house she complains of her leg and back. In doing her housework she has to sit down and rest quite often. “Presently I do all of her mopping and help her as much as I can in other ways around the house. I must do much more of the housework since this last injury.”

Ronald Murphy. This witness is an employment counselor for the Arkansas Security Division. He evaluates job applicants and determines if there are jobs available for which they might be suited. He had never interviewed claimant and would be unable to say whether she could be retrained without more information. There are three employers in El Dorado who employ primarily women, basically assembly line work. “This assembly line work involves some stooping, lifting or bending but basically requires employees to use their hands and fingers at a rapid rate of speed.” Most of the work requires prolonged standing in one area. Anyone with a seventh grade education is not generally considered good rehabilitation material.

On cross-examination he recalled other businesses in the area which employ large numbers of women. Those companies have women employed as PBX operators. The jobs require a little more than normal intelligence. Some such operators must have a high school education — others do not. The fact that claimant worked up to an inspector would indicate that she had a little more intelligence than others working on the assembly line; however, without further information he could not say whether claimant was retrainable.

Dr. Kenneth G. Jones. He saw claimant professionally in August 1971, more than a year after the knee injury. She was sent to him at the request of appellant. The doctor was called to testify on behalf of claimant.

Q. Dr. Jones, you expressed the opinion that she was totally disabled from engaging in gainful employment. Did you attribute that to the leg injury or to a conglomerate of all her problems of industrial injuries?.
A. It’s a conglomerate of all of them, although, I don’t think she could be able to work with her leg injury itself.
Q. As far as you are concerned, were she a whole woman except for the leg and the leg was in the condition that it is in, is it your opinion that she would be permanently disabled?
A. It’s my opinion she wouldn’t go back to work, yes.
Q. Why is that, Doctor Jones?
A.

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Bluebook (online)
508 S.W.2d 59, 256 Ark. 394, 1974 Ark. LEXIS 1451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-industrial-products-inc-v-worth-ark-1974.