Egelston v. Industrial Com. of Arizona

80 P.2d 689, 52 Ariz. 276, 1938 Ariz. LEXIS 160
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1938
DocketCivil No. 3996.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 689 (Egelston v. Industrial Com. of Arizona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Egelston v. Industrial Com. of Arizona, 80 P.2d 689, 52 Ariz. 276, 1938 Ariz. LEXIS 160 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

Lura Egelston, hereinafter called petitioner, received an injury from an accident arising out of and in the course of her employment. She presented a claim to the Industrial Commission of Arizona, hereinafter called the commission, for compensation for such injury, and the commission on March 13, 1937 found she was temporarily disabled from September 20, 1936, to March 10, 1937, entitling her to compensation in the sum of $256.28, which was duly paid her but that the evidence was insufficient to establish that any disability which she might have suffered subsequent to March 10,1937, was proximately the result of a compensable accident, and denied her *278 further compensation. Petitioner asked for, and was granted, a rehearing, at which time the award of March 13th was affirmed, and the matter was brought before us for review.

The injury for which petitioner received compensation was a blow on the front part of the head, caused by the falling of a cash carrier from a height of some twenty feet in the store in which she was employed. It is her contention that ever since such time, and for long after the commission denied her compensation, she has been, and is, in such a condition, as a result of the injury, that she is totally disabled from carrying on any gainful occupation. The finding of the commission is that, if such a condition exists, it is not due to the accident and injury resulting therefrom.

The question then is, whether petitioner has sustained the burden placed upon her by law of establishing that her present condition is the result of the injury. She has been examined by at least seven or eight highly skilled and reputable physicians in the city of Phoenix. They all agree that her objective physical condition, with possibly one exception to which we shall refer hereafter, is practically normal so far as can be determined by any and all of the known medical tests. They also agree that if her statement of her subjective condition is a correct one, that she is totally disabled from work. With one exception, all of the physicians are of the opinion that her present condition, assuming it to exist as she states it is, is purely psychogenic in its origin. Some of them a.re of the opinion that it is entirely disassociated from the traumatic accident above referred to. Others are of the opinion that it is indirectly caused by the accident. As expressed by one of the physicians who holds this view:

“This woman suffered an injury and about the same time was in a highly nervous state due to family diffi *279 culties and in my opinion this has brought on what might he a nervous break-down, the injury being merely the fuse which set off the dynamite. In my opinion the entire symptoms complained of are psychogenic in origin. ’ ’

One alone of all the examining physicians, Dr. Saxe, found any objective physical condition which would indicate that her subjective symptoms were the result of the traumatic injury. He stated that he caused an encephalogram to be made of her brain, and that he was of the opinion therefrom,

“ . . . there was a slight deviation of the left ventricle toward the right side, with more encroachment of the roof or the vault on the left side than on the right, ’ ’

and stated in view of the history of the case he believed that her subjective symptoms were caused by the displacement above referred to, which in its turn was probably the result of the traumatic injury. He also stated that with the history of the trauma and her statements in regard to her symptoms before him, aside from the encephalogram, he would be inclined to think the trauma had some bearing at least on her condition and was sufficient to account for it. The encephalogram taken by the witness was submitted to Dr. Watkins of the medical rating board, who is one of the state’s leading specialists in roentgenology, and he made the following report:

“Following the removal of spinal fluid an introduction of 60 cc. of air. Air covers the surface of the brain, but not sufficiently to separate brain density from cranium, sulci are plainly shown. Ventricles are outlined by symmetrical shadows of normal appearance. Communicating pathways are evidently patent. No abnormal findings.”

Thereafter his attention was called to the encephalogram again in the following language:

*280 “Dr. Saxe would like to have Dr. Watkins look at the encephalogram again. He thinks there is a very slight but definite deviation of the left ventricle toward the right side, with more encroachment of the roof (vault) on the left side than on the right.”

To which he replied:

“Too slight for me to be definite about it, when ventricles are probably not fully distended with aid.”

Dr. Saxe thereafter suggested to the commission, in the following language, that another encephalogram be taken:

“Attached is a report of an x-ray reading on your former claimant, Mrs. Lura Egelston. One may infer that the present encephalogram is not satisfactory for definite conclusion to be reached; therefore, I request that the Commission authorize me to repeat the procedure at the expense of the Commission.”

But this offer was declined by the commission.

The legal proposition upon which petitioner claims that the award should be set aside is the same as that stated by the respondent in the case of Phelps Dodge Corp. v. Industrial Com., 46 Ariz. 162, 49 Pac. (2d) 391, in the following language (pages 165, 166):

“ ‘When as the approximate result of an accidental personal injury sustained by an employee, arising out of and in the course of his employment, such employee, after all objective and subjective symptoms of actual physical injury are removed, suffers from a nervous breakdown, and a neurasthenic condition ensues, attributable to such injury, which precludes the employee from resuming his work in his former occupation, such mental condition is an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment and is compensable under the provisions of the Arizona Workmen’s Compensation Law.’ ”

We approved this general proposition of law, but pointed out the qucmtum of proof necessary to sustain it in the following language (pp. 168, 169):

*281 “We are not questioning the correctness of respondent’s legal proposition but, on the contrary, think it states the law. The only difficulty in applying it here is that it does not fit the facts as found by the commission. If the commission had found that respondent’s neurosis was caused by an injury sustained in the accident of March 26th, or if the evidence had shown such to be the case, then the award would have been proper. The plain language of our statute makes it imperative that the disease be the result of an injury.

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Related

Kay v. Industrial Commission
496 P.2d 875 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1972)
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470 P.2d 720 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1970)
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Tooley v. Weisbarth
186 P.2d 638 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1947)
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152 P.2d 297 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 689, 52 Ariz. 276, 1938 Ariz. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/egelston-v-industrial-com-of-arizona-ariz-1938.