Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York v. Treadwell

367 S.W.2d 470, 212 Tenn. 1, 16 McCanless 1, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 393
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 367 S.W.2d 470 (Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York v. Treadwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York v. Treadwell, 367 S.W.2d 470, 212 Tenn. 1, 16 McCanless 1, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 393 (Tenn. 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case. The trial judge found that the injured employee sustained permanent partial disability as provided by sec. 50-1007(c), T.C.A., in the amount of seventy-five (75%) per cent, to the body as a whole. He also found that the employee *4 was entitled to recover $167.78 expended for drugs and medicine purchased to relieve himself of his injuries. The employer has seasonably appealed to this Court.

The employee, fifty-six (56) years old, uneducated, and a laborer, was injured in a fall in July, 1960, while employed by the Public Utilities Department of the City of Milan, Tennessee. He was paid temporary total disability for a period of forty-seven weeks at the rate of $26.00 a week (based on an average weekly wage of $40.00). All medical expenses up to the time of the trial had been paid by the employer, or its insurance carrier, except the sum of $167.78.

The employee claimed in his petition, and so testified at the hearing, that he was totally and permanently disabled from doing work as a laborer. The principal question involved in this lawsuit is the extent of the disability. As a result of this fall of ten or fifteen feet from a scaffold he suffered a broken nose, a fracture of the foot, multiple abrasions and contusions, and injured his lower back. Prior to this accident and injury the man had some amount of arthritis in his dorsal and lumbar spine and as to whether or not this fall aggravated this preexisting condition resulting in an inability to perform heavy manual labor, which he did for a living, is the determinative question here.

The case of Gulch Lumber Co. v. Fields, 193 Tenn. 365, 246 S.W.2d 47, is factually, as to recovery for a condition of this kind, almost-identical with the case here involved.

As said above the employee testified that he couldn’t do anything now as a result of this fall and that he had tried to get work to do to make a living but couldn’t find anything. A local physician, a Dr. Jones, at Milan testi *5 fied very positively that in his opinion this fall aggravated this arthritic condition, and that in his opinion the man was one hundred (100%) per cent disabled as a result of this fall aggravating this arthritic condition. This doctor though in an effort to either back up his conclusion or to see whether or not he was, as he expressed it, wrong in it, had various and sundry pathological examinations, x-rays, etc., made by others in the Milan hospital and in the hospital at Jackson and statements sent to him either by letter or over the phone which, he says, supported his conclusion. One of the questions presented in this lawsuit is whether or not this doctor can base an opinion on these statements which were not introduced in evidence but merely were his statements that these examinations supported his conclusion. There will be more on this technical question hereinafter.

The trial judge primarily based his conclusion upon the testimony of a Dr. Smith, even though he did consider the testimony of Dr. Jones. The testimony of Dr. Smith is not in any way involved in the question of pathological or x-ray examinations made by others, but is arrived at from his own examination, considering the man, what he did, and his capacity to do other work than manual labor. Dr. Smith among other things said: “Yes, if it involves that type of labor, I think he is unable to do it. He has enough arthritis alone in his back that he should not do that, and then he has the added disability from the injuries. As I said earlier, it is the cup of water that makes the bucket run over.” This answer of the doctor is to a question, “* # * isn’t it a fact, for hard manual labor, he is totally unable to do that at this time where he has to do any bending or lifting or stooping?” This doctor *6 concludes that the man has approximately a fifteen (15%) per cent capacity of a comparable man and that he has another five (5%) per cent disability from an anatomical viewpoint. Anatomical, as thus used, is “pertaining to the structure of the body.” This testimony of Dr. Smith is somewhat explained in this way.

Q Is he able to do hard manual labor at this time, doctor?
“A Well, certain things, yes, and some things, no. Dow I am getting out in the field where laymen will have to decide this, and I would rather restrict my estimate of disability to the anatomic loss and let you gentlemen decide how that affects him from a work standpoint.”

Of course, other doctors, men very able in their field, contradict much of this testimony, and it is on this contradiction and the statement of this Dr. Smith that the man is only five (5%) per cent disabled anatomically that this appeal is primarily based. We have though the trial judge who sees the injured man before him, hears his testimony and has all of this evidence pro and con before him and then arrives at the conclusion which he did as set out in the outset of this opinion. Under such circumstances, that is the finding of this fact by the trial court, it will not and cannot be disturbed on appeal by us where it is supported by any material evidence as such a finding is supported here. For a list of fifty or more cases bearing out this proposition see sec. 50-1018, T.O.A., note 39, page 370 of Volume 9. There have been literally dozens and more such statements. By the very Act itself, and by judicial construction since the Act was passed in 1919, this is a well settled rule of law in this State.

*7 As to this testimony of the man himself he stated that he was totally disabled from doing manual labor (he was a big man of only a fourth grade education, had been a farmer and doing manual labor of digging ditches, etc., at the time of this accident). Let us go back thirty odd years to Black Diamond Collieries v. Gibbs, 161 Tenn. 413, 32 S.W.2d 1041, wherein this Court affirmed the trial court in finding a fifty per cent disability due to the loss of an eye which was based entirely upon the testimony of the man himself that he had fifty per cent disability on account of the loss of this eye. This Court in that case said this statement is a statement of fact peculiarly within the knowledge of the man, even though it may not be mathematically exact, just as one would testify that an automobile was running thirty (30) miles an hour or such a thing. Such testimony is for the trier of facts to determine as to the amount of this disability, and it is not for this Court to determine the weight to be given such testimony.

“The trial court, after'hearing all of the evidence, was of the opinion that Gibbs’ eye had been permanently impaired 50 per cent., and, finding some evidence to support his conclusion, it results that his decree will be affirmed.”

The degree of disability is purely a question of fact, and the findings of the trial judge is conclusive on appeal, where such finding is supported by any material testimony. Key v. Briar Hill Collieries, 167 Tenn.

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Bluebook (online)
367 S.W.2d 470, 212 Tenn. 1, 16 McCanless 1, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-and-casualty-co-of-new-york-v-treadwell-tenn-1963.