Endicott v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.

208 P.2d 803, 69 Idaho 450, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 257
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1949
DocketNo. 7486.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 208 P.2d 803 (Endicott v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Endicott v. Potlatch Forests, Inc., 208 P.2d 803, 69 Idaho 450, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 257 (Idaho 1949).

Opinion

GIVENS, Justice.

October 24, 1943, claimant was working as a millwright for respondent and cross-appellant, Potlatch Forests, Inc., on a scaffolding which gave way; attempting to save himself, he grasped at a window sill, pulling and straining his right arm and hand; such clutching was ineffective and he fell about twenty feet to the floor, injuring his back. He was hospitalized, placed in hyper-tension and later in a canvas sling in an attempt to reduce a compression fracture with nerve involvement, then in a plaster cast. After its removal, he was held under observation for suspected disturbance of the disc between the fourth and fifth vertebrae.

Claimant, discharged as substantially surgically healed, was paid compensation under three successive agreements with respondents and cross-appellants, Potlatch Forests, Inc., and Workmen’s Compensation Exchange, its surety, approved by the Board. The first, for total temporary disability from October 24, 1943, to September 2, 1944, forty-five weeks at $16 per week; the second, a specific indemnity agreement for permanent partial disability rated equal to loss of the arm at elbow, 99% of 220 weeks at $16 per week; subsequently, on change of condition, a third agreement March 10, 1947, for permanent partial disability equivalent to 75% loss of leg at the hip, 99% of 135 weeks at $16 per week; thus total awards of 400 weeks— the injury to the arm and back being at first separately considered.

Respondent, Western Hospital Association, having a hospital contract with the employer, thus originally joined as a de *452 fendant, was on its motion dismissed from the proceedings because the record showed claimant would not be materially benefitted by additional hospitalization or surgery, and claimant did not want further surgery if it would not do him any good. Such dismissal is not resisted and therefore, such respondent is no longer involved herein.

Claimant’s letter of October 7, 1947, was, over respondents’ criticism, correctly held to be sufficient to constitute an application for increased compensation on account of change in condition.

Fraud was neither pleaded nor proved, nor does any fraud appear in the record.

Claimant’s appeal presents his contention that the 400 weeks previously awarded under the approved agreements should not have been deducted from the present award of total permanent disability; thus making the identical contention rejected in McCall v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.,. Idaho, 208 P.2d 799, and on the authority of that case, the award in this particular is affirmed.

Section 72-310, I.C., specifically provides that:

“ * * * In case the total disability begins after a period of partial disability, the period of partial disability shall be deducted from such total period of 400 weeks.

This, statute requires no construction; it is clear, plain and explicit. The total temporary disability heretofore awarded under Sec. 72-310, I.C., and the permanent partial under Sec. 72-313, I.C., must therefore be deducted from the period of 400 weeks during which $16 per week was paid; therefore, only payments' of $8.00 per week now remain as awarded.

The Board indicates that prior to this case they had been deducting the pay-period and not the award-period, but becoming convinced this method was incorrect, they have herein changed. The pertinent Sections of the Statute, 72-310, 72-313. and 72-314 I.C., make the'award-period and not the pay-period the criterion, and we, therefore, approve the Board’s present method of computation.

Respondents’ cross-appeal asserts the evidence is insufficient to support the finding and conclusion that claimant is now totally and permanently disabled.

Claimant, 55 years old, with less than an eighth grade education, married, with three minor children, formerly working mostly as a carpenter and miner, testified as to the pain he suffers since the accident when he tries to engage in his former trades and his inability to secure such employment; that he has a small acreage, keeps three cows and some chickens and can do no work requiring physical exertion; that he is sore and stiff, had worked at. a light job some two years previous to the hearing; that he has several times applied for jobs, but has been rejected for work on building houses.

*453 Dr. Ayers, a general practitioner, appeared in person and testified before two members of the Board at a hearing in Moscow, March 19, 1948, introducing in evidence certain X-ray pictures taken of claimant by him. In Spokane, Washington, March 24, Dr. Lynch, a specialist in neuro-surgery and neurologic diagnosis, testified before the Board. Thereafter, by deposition, Dr. Ayers’ further testimony and claimant’s and Dr. Burton’s, an orthopedic specialist, together with certain reports made by the Doctors, were presented to the Board. All three physicians had examined claimant in person.

Dr. Lynch’s diagnosis of claimant’s present condition is: “ * * * healed fracture of the upper lumbar vertebra, injury to the nerve roots of the cauda equina going to the right leg, and as a result of the injury to the vertebra he has pain and stiffness and limitation of motion in his back; as a result of injury to- the nerve root going to the right leg, he has weakness, atrophy of the muscles of the calf of the right leg and disturbance in sensation in the skin to- the right leg. As a result of injury to the roots of the brachial plexus he has weakness and contracture deformity of the 4th and 5th fingers of the right hand.”

“His increased disability was due to increased stiffness of his back, and increased pain in his back because of the old injury to the 2nd lumbar vertebra.”

From claimant’s objective and subjective pain, and a spinogram, not conclusive as to nerve injury, Dr. Lynch concluded that claimant did not have a protruded interver-tebral disc, which had been suspected previously, and that his leg pain, numbness and weakness are due to injury to the nerve roots of -the cauda equina and not due to intervertebral disc.

Dr. Ayers testified claimant has limited forward flexion of the spine, mild kypho-sis; Dupuytren’s contracture of the third and fourth fingers on the right hand, not relevant to the spine; body of the second lumbar vertebra compressed anteriorly; wedged and almost complete destruction of the joint space, considerable calcification and spur formation on the anterior surface -of the vertebral bodies, due to hyperplastic osteoarthritis; that there is encroachment, on -the root (nerve) canals; the interverte-bral joints have become involved with an, over-growth of bone which has reduced the size of the normal foramina, causing pressure on the nerves of the right leg, and claimant’s condition will be slowly progressive through his life.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
208 P.2d 803, 69 Idaho 450, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/endicott-v-potlatch-forests-inc-idaho-1949.