Ernest Quick v. George C. Martin, William L. Massey v. George C. Martin, Inc.

397 F.2d 644, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 83, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7945
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 27, 1968
Docket20925, 21003
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 397 F.2d 644 (Ernest Quick v. George C. Martin, William L. Massey v. George C. Martin, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ernest Quick v. George C. Martin, William L. Massey v. George C. Martin, Inc., 397 F.2d 644, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 83, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7945 (D.C. Cir. 1968).

Opinion

LEVENTHAL, Circuit Judge:

Appellant Quick, a construction worker, was 'injured when a form for concrete weighing thirty-five pounds dropped from some five feet above him, striking him on the head. Appellees, his employer and its insurance company, voluntarily paid him temporary disability benefits through June of 1964. Payments were discontinued thereafter on the ground that Quick was no longer disabled. Alleging “permanent brain damage” and a “conversion neurosis,” Quick filed a claim for permanent total disability benefits under the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Act. 1 Appellant Deputy Commissioner Massey, after holding a hearing, awarded temporary total disability payments, but this award was challenged by appellees, who brought an action in the District Court to set it aside. That court accepted appellees’ contentions, ruling that while there was evidence to support a finding of partial disability, there was none that would support a finding of total disability. The case was remanded for consideration by the Deputy Commissioner of whether an award should be made for partial disability. These consolidated appeals follow.

We rule that the District Court erred in setting aside the award. We begin with the settled doctrines that findings of the Deputy Commissioner are entitled to great deference by the courts and must stand if supported by substantial evidence. Appellees do not challenge these fundamentals, but reiterate here the contention accepted by the District Court — that no evidence supports the *646 finding of total rather than partial disability.

The difference between total and partial disability is important for the employer and its insurance carrier, even to the point where, as here, the employer is contesting the total disability finding though it would apparently acquiesce in a determination of, say, 90% disability.

Section 14(m) of the Act 2 limits the employer’s liability to $24,000 for any one “injury,” but that limit is inapplicable to an injury resulting in permanent total disability. Although the Deputy Commissioner awarded only temporary total disability benefits, appellees fear from past experience that once the finding of total disability is made even with a “temporary” modifier it is likely to be ultimately converted to one of permanent total disability.

The Deputy Commissioner urges that appellees did not raise before him the issue of the extent of claimant’s disability, and hence it was error for the District Court to permit that question to be raised on appeal. Thus appellees’ counsel at the outset of the hearing stated that the ground for controversion of Quick’s claim was that “the claimant is not disabled as a result of the injury of September 7, 1962, and that he is not in need of medical care as a result of this injury * * The Deputy Commissioner nailed the point down more specifically. “I take it that the issues will be a question of casually related disability, that will be the sole issue * * *?” Counsel replied, “Yes, sir.” Appellees’ subsequent case was built on a theory that claimant was no longer suffering an injury from his accident, and that he was faking insofar as he claimed that he was unable to work. The Commission’s counsel protests that at the hearing the employer’s point was that claimant was malingering, and he should not be permitted to complain of procedural inadequacies of the record in regard to the extent of injury.

Appellees respond that they had been paying claimant for a while but discontinued the payments when their doctor concluded he had erred in his diagnosis of conversion hysteria. We are told on argument that when the employer filed its Valid Basis to Controvert, a Bureau form, in order to justify discontinuance of payment, 2 3 it stated as its reason that the claimant was no longer disabled, and it is contended that this included, without need for further particularity, the defense that if the claimant was disabled at all, he was only partially disabled, and put the claimant to his proof that he was disabled and if so to what extent.

Certainly an employer may not complain to the court of paucity of evidence on a point that, either expressly or by fair implication, he did not maintain as an issue in the administrative stage. 4 But we are reluctant, at least without better understanding of the practice in the Bureau, to accept the Commissioner’s argument put to us as a jurisdictional bar. When the employer asserts a valid basis to controvert, the Commissioner has the duty of making necessary determinations. Often the only proceeding is an informal conference. Hearings are held in a minority of cases. Otherwise the administrative system might well collapse. We do not choose to consider whether and to what extent the claimant has the duty to introduce evidence, or may invoke statutory presumptions at this stage. Under Bureau practice, we are told, the fact is that the claimant does put on evidence in some if not most cases. There is apparently not so much attention as in court cases to the order of putting on evidence. The Commissioner strives for expedition and informality, and there is no telling from one case to another just *647 who will put on evidence first. Furthermore, the Commissioner typically holds the record open for supplementary evidence.

Assuming, however, that the extent of disability was technically preserved at the hearing as a basis to challenge the award, the reality is that appellees’ case at the hearing was that Quick was not suffering from any work-related injury whatever. Appellees’ witnesses did not address themselves to whether, if valid, the conversion reaction claimed was less than totally disabling. In that setting the Deputy Commissioner’s finding of temporary total disability was supported by substantial evidence. That an issue is not seriously contested has implications for the quantity of evidence that must be adduced to support a finding. Evidence that might seem too skimpy to count in support of a finding on a hotly contested issue looms larger when the factual dispute in question is but dimly alluded to at hearing. This is application as a matter of substantive rather than procedural doctrine of the policy that administrative determinations will not be upset by the courts for reasons not fairly presented at the administrative level. Had the dispute as to these issues been focused, “It is likely that * * * abundant evidence would have been forthcoming.” Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Co. v. Hoage, 67 App.D.C. 54, 56, 89 F.2d 798, 800 (1937). 5

Appellant Quick had an enviable work record prior to the accident, and was characterized as a “hardworking” man with “a lot of get-up-and-go, and a lot of drive and a lot of initiative.” Since the accident, if his testimony is believed, he suffers from numbness in his left side, spells, headaches, and a ringing in his ears. He wants to return to work, but feels completely unable to do anything. He held two jobs since the accident, but both briefly, because his nervousness and “spells” made him an unsatisfactory worker.

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Bluebook (online)
397 F.2d 644, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 83, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernest-quick-v-george-c-martin-william-l-massey-v-george-c-martin-cadc-1968.