Elliott v. Midlands Animal Products

428 N.W.2d 920, 229 Neb. 823, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 340
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1988
Docket87-867
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 428 N.W.2d 920 (Elliott v. Midlands Animal Products) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Midlands Animal Products, 428 N.W.2d 920, 229 Neb. 823, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 340 (Neb. 1988).

Opinion

Grant, J.

This is an appeal from a decision of a three-judge panel of the Workers’ Compensation Court. The panel modified the judgment rendered by a single judge of the court. In his petition, filed June 16,1986, plaintiff-appellant, Albert Wayne Elliott, alleged that “on or about the 23 day of April, 1982, the plaintiff sustained personal injury in an accident arising out of and in the course of the plaintiff’s employment by the defendant [Midlands Animal Products].” Plaintiff further alleged that the injury sustained was a “[r]ight hand injury” and that the “accident and injury occurred in the following manner: Strain to right hand while boning meat.” Defendant filed an answer in the compensation court admitting that plaintiff was its employee on the date in question and generally denying plaintiff’s other allegations.

After rehearing on February 6, 1987, the panel found that plaintiff was entitled to payments for 166 x/i weeks for temporary total disability and “in addition thereto the sum of $180.00 per week for 140 weeks for 80 per cent permanent partial disability to his right hand.” The court also found that defendant was entitled to credits for payments it had made to the date of the rehearing.

The panel further found that defendant should pay Saint Joseph Center for Mental Health, $12,914; Mercy Hospital, $897; Saint Joseph Hospital, $896; and two doctors. The panel specifically found, “The bill of Eppley Chemical Dependency Unit is disallowed along with the bills of Dr. Subhash Bhatia; the mileage for visits to Dr. Bhatia is likewise disallowed.” The panel ordered that the plaintiff was entitled to vocational *825 rehabilitation benefits, but did not make any permanent disability award to plaintiff for damages resulting from any “emotional disorder or depression.”

Plaintiff appeals to this court, setting out four assignments of error, in that the panel erred (1) in allowing hospital bills but disallowing doctor bills and mileage for the same treatment; (2) in allowing one hospital bill but disallowing a later hospital bill for treatment of the same condition; (3) “in failing to determine Plaintiff’s degree of impairment (disability) from his work related psychological problems and alcohol abuse where uncontradicted medical and vocational rehabilitation expert testimony established Plaintiff to be 80 to 90 percent disabled”; and (4) in making no allowance of benefits for loss of plaintiff’s earning capacity.

Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-185 (Cum. Supp. 1986) sets forth this court’s standard of review for workers’ compensation cases:

The findings of fact made by the compensation court after rehearing shall have the same force and effect as a jury verdict in a civil case. A judgment, order, or award of the compensation court may be modified, reversed, or set aside only upon the grounds that (1) the compensation court acted without or in excess of its powers, (2) the judgment, order, or award was procured by fraud, (3) there is not sufficient competent evidence in the record to warrant the making of the order, judgment, or award, or (4) the findings of fact by the compensation court do not support the order or award.

In Clifford v. Harchelroad Chevrolet, ante p. 78, 425 N.W.2d 331 (1988), we held that the findings of fact by the Workers’ Compensation Court after rehearing have the same force and effect as a jury verdict in a civil case and will not be set aside unless clearly wrong.

The record shows the following. Plaintiff first went to work for defendant in January 1979. His job at that time was “boning shanks.” Approximately 3 weeks after he began his employment, plaintiff was injured. Plaintiff testified that Dr. Cegielski “did surgery on my wrist and something down on my elbow here.” The wrist surgery was apparently a carped tunnel operation on plaintiff’s right hand. Plaintiff further testified *826 that a few weeks later, the same doctor performed elbow surgery and that plaintiff eventually returned to work at a different job. He was still in pain at that time.

Plaintiff continued to work. His hand continued to hurt, and he was sent to another doctor whose name plaintiff could not remember. This doctor ordered plaintiff off his job for 2 or 3 weeks, and then plaintiff returned to work. In March of 1980, plaintiff saw a Dr. Somsky, who took plaintiff off work for a short time, but performed no surgery. Plaintiff went back to work, but “the fingers started coming down on me, oh, about another three or four months or later.” Plaintiff described that his hand was “closing down, like making a fist.”

Plaintiff was then referred to Dr. Richard Murphy, who performed “an ulnar nerve reconstruction with microscopic surgery” in October 1981. Plaintiff was off work “a few months” and was in occupational therapy for much of that time. Plaintiff testified that he was off work from April 23 to June 23, 1982, and returned to work for a “couple of months” and then returned to Dr. Murphy’s care. It is difficult to determine, from plaintiff’s testimony alone, just what medical services were rendered to him and what time he was off work.

The panel determined that defendant suffered injuries to his right hand on April 22, 1982; that plaintiff was temporarily totally disabled from April 23 to June 23, 1982, and from May 20, 1983, to May 26, 1986; and that plaintiff “thereafter sustained 80 per cent loss of use of his right hand.” No party challenges those facts, and they are accepted as correct.

Dr. Murphy reported that prior to his treatment of plaintiff in October 1981, plaintiff had undergone three surgeries: “1) Right carpal tunnel release. 2) Right ulnar nerve transfer at the elbow. 3) Right ulnar nerve laceration at the wrist (age unknown).” Dr. Murphy described plaintiff’s operations under his care as: “4) Ulnar nerve reconstruction with microscopic nerve reconstruction. 5) Tendon transfer for ulnar nerve paralysis. 6) Index ray resection. 7) Palmer fasciectomy.” Dr. Murphy concluded that plaintiff had suffered an 80-percent impairment of his right hand. There is not any dispute as to that conclusion. Dr. Murphy also concluded that the pain that plaintiff suffered was a part of his disability.

*827 There is no specific evidence in the record as to the incident and resulting treatment of plaintiff’s injuries to his right hand in January of 1979. Those injuries were suffered at a time when plaintiff was employed by defendant, but there is nothing in the record to show whether the injury at that time was treated as a workers’ compensation injury. There is no dispute that plaintiff suffered a compensable injury in April of 1982.

The dispute arises out of the complications that plaintiff suffered. Plaintiff testified that “they wouldn’t give me any kind of pain medicine for pain, and I knew I could drink three or four beers and get it down to where I wouldn’t, you know, hurt too bad.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
428 N.W.2d 920, 229 Neb. 823, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-midlands-animal-products-neb-1988.