Douglas Aircraft Co., Inc. v. Bounds

1946 OK 342, 175 P.2d 342, 198 Okla. 69, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 17, 1946
DocketNo. 32229
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1946 OK 342 (Douglas Aircraft Co., Inc. v. Bounds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas Aircraft Co., Inc. v. Bounds, 1946 OK 342, 175 P.2d 342, 198 Okla. 69, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 695 (Okla. 1946).

Opinion

OSBORN, J.

This is an original proceeding by Douglas Aircraft Company and Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York to review an award made by the State Industrial Commission to Royce L. Bounds, claimant, for an injury sustained by Bounds while in the employ of the Aircraft Company. Claimant Bounds has not cross-appealed. From the evidence it appears that Bounds was, on December 18, 1942, employed in the purchase parts storage department of the Douglas Plant at Oklahoma City, handling parts for airplanes, and that on August 10, 1944, while lifting a box of glass to place it upon a stack, he injured his back. He was taken to a hospital, where he remained ■ for eight days, and then to his home, where he remained until October 2, 1944, when he returned to work in the same department in a supervisory capacity. It fur-, ther appears that on January 5, 1940, while employed by Prichard Oil Company, he received a back injury, for which he filed a claim for compensation and thereafter settled by joint petition, approved by the State Industrial Commission. Both injuries affected the fifth lumbar vertebra, which, according to medical evidence introduced at the hearing on joint settlement petition, in 1940, and at the hearing on the injury received at .the Douglas Plant, had slipped forward until it was badly displaced, so that it barely rested on the edge' of the arterior portion of the sacrum. Physicians testifying with reference to this condition described it as a fourth degree spondylolisthesis of the fifth lumbar vertebra.

From the record it appears that the Douglas Company paid compensation to claimant for temporary total disability up to the time he returned to work at their plant, and that the only question involved in this proceeding is the question of permanent disability resulting to claimant from the injury of August 10, 1944.

The Special Indemnity Fund was made a party to the proceeding and filed its answer denying that claimant was an impaired person within the terms of the Special Indemnity Fund Law. The trial commissioner made an award finding that claimant was not a physically impaired person within the Special Indemnity Fund Law, and dismissed the proceeding as to the Special Indemnity Fund; found that claimant as a result of the injury of August 10, 1944, had sustained 33 1/3 per cent permanent partial disability over and above any and all pre-existing disability that claimant may have had at the time he sustained the injury of August 10, 1944, and awarded compensation for 166 2/3 weeks at the rate of $18 per week, amounting to $3,000. The award was affirmed on appeal by the commission en banc.

Douglas makes several contentions, but we consider one decisive, that is, that where the medical evidence adduced before the commission shows that claimant was totally and permanently disabled in 1940, and has been so disabled since that time, the commission could not award compensation for further permanent disability resulting from the injury sustained by claimant on August 10, 1944, and that the award made is not sustained by any. competent evidence. This necessitates a brief review of the evidence. The injury being of such character as to require skilled and professional men to determine the cause and extent thereof, the validity of the award necessarily depends on the medical testimony before the commission. Claude Drilling Co. v. Horner, 186 Okla. 61, 96 P. 2d 1027; Shephard v. Crumby, 146 Okla. 118, 293 P. 1049.

The Douglas Company produced before the commission reports of two physicians who had examined claimant. Both testified that the disability suffered by claimant as the result of the injury of August 10, 1944, was tempor[71]*71ary, and that in time he would fully recover from the effects of such injury. One of them testified further that because of the congenital weakness of claimant’s back he would always be disabled. Claimant produced one witness, Dr. Phil E. White, who had also examined claimant after he received the injury of January 5, 1940. This witness testified that at all times after he received the injury of January 5, 1940, claimant was permanently and totally disabled, and that while claimant’s physical condition had changed a little for the worse since the first injury, his disability remained the same. Asked if the injury sustained on August 10, 1944, was a separate and distinct injury from the one he received in 1940, he said, “Well, I think this is another injury all right on top of the one he received in 1940,” and in response to a similar question, “Oh yes, he had another injury at that time. I think he reinjured his back”. Asked if he thought claimant could have recovered more than the witness thought he would when the witness examined him in 1940, he said:

“I don’t think so. He had a marked anterior displacement of the fifth lumbar vertebra there, and the rule is that once they are displaced they can never be replaced, and any minor stooping and bending will aggravate that condition more. That is my opinion in this case, when he was lifting that heavy box he aggravated that condition.”

He testified that claimant had no business trying to do that kind of work, and that he was sure claimant had been warned about it, but that he went ahead and did it anyway until he was injured; that in 1940 witness and other doctors advised claimant that he should not try to do any heavy lifting, but that apparently claimant disregarded that advice, arid that the injury of August 10, 1944, caused “the acute condition”.

Analysis of the testimony of Dr. White clearly discloses that in his opinion the disability of claimant resulting from the injury of August 10, 1944, was only temporary. He negatives the existence of ádditional permanent disability resulting from such injury, but states that it was a “reinjury” of claimant’s back, and rendered the condition “acute”. He nowhere indicates that he considers the acute condition caused by the reinjury permanent, but from his testimony it is fair to conclude that if claimant abstains from manual labor, and gives his back proper care, the acute condition will abate. His testimony clearly shows that claimant’s back had not healed, and that there had been no improvement in the condition which rendered him totally and permanently disabled since the injury of 1940.

The testimony of claimant also supports the conclusion of the physicians that the disability resulting from the injury of August 10, 1944, is only temporary. Referring to the injury of 1940, he testified that after that injury he “took it easy” for awhile, and his back got all right, and that he thought he had fully recovered from the injury. There is nothing in the record indicating that a similar course of conduct on his part will not have the same effect on the acute condition caused by the injury of 1944.

It is apparent from the evidence above set forth that the injury of August 10, 1944, while in a sense a new and additional injury, was simply a reinjury or recurrence of the original injury of 1940, and that it did not result in any additional permanent disability to claimant over and above that which he already had as a result of the injury in 1940. The fact that he was able for some time to do the work he did without pain or discomfort in no way contradicts or conflicts with the testimony of the medical experts that his back was in the same condition as it was after the injury in 1940, and that it was such as to wholly disable him from performing such services. From their testimony the danger of a recurrence of the old injury, or a reinjury to his back, was always present.

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Bluebook (online)
1946 OK 342, 175 P.2d 342, 198 Okla. 69, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-aircraft-co-inc-v-bounds-okla-1946.