Fuytinck v. Burton W. Duenke Building Co.

280 S.W.2d 449, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 135
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1955
DocketNo. 29153
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 S.W.2d 449 (Fuytinck v. Burton W. Duenke Building Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuytinck v. Burton W. Duenke Building Co., 280 S.W.2d 449, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 135 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

WALTER E. BAILEY, Special Judge.

This is an appeal by the employer and insurer from a judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County reversing and remanding a final award of the Industrial Commission, which had affirmed on review by appellants an award of the Referee. The Referee had awarded compensation to the claimant in the sum of $1,245. The Circuit Court remanded the. cause to the Industrial Commission for further proceedings on the ground that, “there is not sufficient competent evidence in the record to warrant the deduction of any amount from the. award to the employee by reason of the prior 1947 injury.”

Appellants assign error in remanding the cause to the Industrial Commission on the grounds that (1) the final award of the Industrial Commission- should have been reversed outright and (2) that should this court hold that the formula used by the Referee and the Commission was correct, the calculation was incorrect. The respondent claimant did not appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court remanding the cause to the Commission, but now contends that the award of. - the Referee and Commission should be affirmed, or,- if not so affirmed, the remanding of the cause by the Circuit -Court for further hearing should be held proper.

It is undisputed that the employee, Aloysious Fuytinck, was involved in an accident which occurred on February 20, 1952, while he was employed as a carpenter by Burton W. Duenke Building Company-six days. It is further admitted that his average weekly wage was in excess of $45 per week; that he has been paid compensation from February 23, 1952 to September 19, 1952, in the sum of $900 for thirty weeks and has been furnished medical aid. At the time of the hearing before the Referee, January 9, 1953, claimant was forty-four years of age. He had pursued the occupation of carpenter for about thirty years and had been continuously employed at his trade- for two or three months immediately before the time of his accident. His work at that time consisted in helping erect what is termed “prefab” houses, constructed of ready made sections. While employed with two other workmen in removing one of the sections from a motor truck, the.driver of the truck in some manner shoved the 400 pound section, causing it -to slip and thereby cast additional weight on claimant. As a result, he himself, slipped into a 10 inch depression and immediately felt a sharp pain in his back. He remained on the job the balance of that day doing work he could'perform while sitting. Two days later he was sent to Dr. Gaunt by the ' employer’s superintendent. ■ The doctor .applied diathermy for what he diagnosed as a strained ligament. Later he was examined by Dr. Costa, the insurance company doctor, who ordered .him hospitalized and placed under traction. He was then examined by Dr. E. C. Funsch who prescribed “shots” for relief of pain. Dr. R. D. Woolsey was called in about five days after claimant’s admission to the hospital and did what he terms a myelogram. The following day, March 18, 1952, Dr. Woolsey performed an operation on claim[452]*452ant’s' back' (termed a laminectomy) at which time an intervertebral disc was removed at L-5 and S-l on the right side. He remained in the hospital 10 days after the accident, then returned to his home. He entered the hospital again in June and August for short periods under the care of Dr. Funsch.

Appellants’ statement of facts contains the following which respondent accepts and we adopt:

“Claimant testified the condition of his back, at the time of the hearing (January 9th) was very poor; that he had discomfort, dull pain, all of the time, at the;site of the operation, and that twisting his body a certain way caused sharp pain in that area; that there was considerable soreness in his legs, the left more than the right. He had not been employed by anyone and had, not worked since September 20, 1952. He received payments, under the Missouri Workmen’s Compensation Act, from February 23 to September 19, 1952, a period of thirty weeks, at the rate of $30.00 per week (T. 27-29). ‘'
“Being" questioned with respect to the condition' of his back prior to February 20, 1952, claimant testified: ‘Well, I don’t think there was anything wrong with it at ail the way I was getting around and doing my work; ’ that he did not have any pain or disability about his back or any restricted movements of that part ‘that I could take and see or feel; ’ that he had full use of his back in doing the work of a carpenter and was able to do all of the tasks he was asked to perform. He was not under the care of a doctor during the three months just prior to that period, he had seen a doctor for a condition not related to his back. He said he did not recall whether he had seen a doctor, for any condition of his back, for a period of a year prior to February 20th (T. 32, 33).
“On cross-examination, claimant admitted that on September 9, 1947, while in the employ of Klaverkamp, he sustained an injury to his back while engaged in lifting an ‘I’ beam; that he was under the care of Drs. Crecelius, William Demlco, John Patrick Murphy and Reynolds, and that he was a patient in Alexian Bros. Hospital twice, for periods of five days and two weeks, because of that injury. And he was examined by Dr. E. C. Funsch. He was off work ‘a little over three years,’ as a result of that injury. He then spent nine or ten weeks building a house for a friend, following which he returned to the employ of Klaverkamp, where he remained until the latter part of 1951 (T. 30, 31, 37-39).
“By reason of the injury of September 9, 1947, claimant was paid compensation benefits, at the rate of $20.00 per week, for 135 weeks ($2,700.00), and on Máy 9, 1950, he entered into a compromise settlement, at the same rate (T. 79a-82a), for an additional sum of $2,150.00, making a total settlement of $4,850.00. The dispute between claimant 'and Klaverkamp and the latter’s insurer was ‘as to the nature and extent of disability resulting from the injury’ (T. 80a) (T. 40). ‘Q‘. All of this money was received to compensate you for the injury sustained in 1947? A. Well, the way I look at it, it was paid to me for what happened, but I wasn’t able to work.’ Claimant said that he built the house for his friend a month or so after that settlement was effected (T. 41, 42).”

On the medical side of this case Dr. Dean Woolsey, who was the operating surgeon, testified that he had been specializing as a neurosurgeon since 1940; that claimant came under his care in March, 1952 at St. Mary’s Hospital and after examination he finally removed the disc, as hereinbefore stated; that he was given a history at the time, but no history [453]*453of a previous back injury; claimant did give a history of low back pains at different times; as to the recent accident he had a history that he had been injured helping unload something from a truck and lost his balance and was bent over backwards; that the injury caused his difficulty; that he saw him a half dozen times after the operation; that most patients with ruptured intervertebral disc lesions have a moderate amount of unrelieved pain following an operation; that he gave claimant a rating of twenty-five percent of a man as a whole.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W.2d 449, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuytinck-v-burton-w-duenke-building-co-moctapp-1955.