Gardner v. Edward Gardner Plumbing & Heating, Inc.

693 P.2d 678, 1984 Utah LEXIS 938
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1984
Docket19875
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 693 P.2d 678 (Gardner v. Edward Gardner Plumbing & Heating, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Edward Gardner Plumbing & Heating, Inc., 693 P.2d 678, 1984 Utah LEXIS 938 (Utah 1984).

Opinion

ZIMMERMAN, Justice.

Plaintiff appeals a ruling of the Industrial Commission denying his claim for workmen’s compensation benefits. The Commission affirmed the findings of fact, conclusions of law and order of the administrative law judge, which held that plaintiff suffered no permanent physical impairment attributable to the industrial injury. On appeal, plaintiff claims that the Commission arbitrarily ignored substantial, uncon-tradicted evidence of injury and that the administrative law judge improperly excluded evidence supporting plaintiff’s claim. We agree with plaintiff that the administrative law judge’s evidentiary ruling was incorrect and, therefore, find it unnecessary to reach the question of whether the Commission’s actions were contrary to the evidence. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

On December 1,1981, plaintiff, a 74-year-old plumber, and a co-worker were in the company van returning from a job when a motorist ran a red light and collided with the van. As a result, plaintiff was pinned between the engine-mount area and a water heater that was being transported in the van.

Plaintiff suffered fractured ribs and bruises and bumps on both legs, although the right leg was apparently injured more severely. A piece of skin peeled off the right leg, and both legs were bleeding. The right leg later became infected. After the accident, plaintiff also developed congestion in his lungs, requiring an operation to drain his pleural cavity. Plaintiff filed a claim for medical benefits and both temporary total and permanent partial disability benefits. The present appeal involves only his claim for permanent partial' disability benefits resulting from his leg injuries.

The Industrial Commission scheduled a hearing on plaintiff’s permanent disability claim based on his chest and leg injuries. At the hearing; plaintiff testified about the accident and its effect on his health. 1 *680 Plaintiff stated that his legs burned all the time, that they hurt when he stood or moved around, and that he could not stoop as he could before the accident. He said that he had pain when he was doing the things he would normally do as a plumber. No medical testimony was offered at this hearing.

Following the hearing, the administrative law judge appointed a medical panel to examine plaintiff. The panel concluded that plaintiff was not entitled to a permanent partial disability rating. With respect to the legs, the panel found that the pain complained of “is not felt to be sufficient to warrant a rating of impairment [and] it is anticipated it will continue to improve with time.... ” Plaintiff filed objections to the report, contending that the panel’s conclusion was not supported by the evidence. The Commission scheduled a second hearing to consider those objections.

Dr. Holbrook, the chairman of the medical panel, testified that as a general matter he considered subjective complaints of pain to be insufficient to support a finding of permanent impairment, absent objective manifestations of physical damage. 2 Applying that principle to plaintiff, Dr. Hol-brook stated that he found no permanent impairment precisely because of the absence of objective evidence to confirm plaintiffs subjective complaints of pain. He testified that during the medical examination that served as a basis for the panel’s report, plaintiff complained of pain in his lower legs, but he also told Dr. Holbrook that the pain did “not interfere with his function[ing].”

Plaintiff produced two doctors who disagreed with the findings of the medical panel. Both testified to objective factors indi-eating injury to the legs, such as shiny skin, loss of hair, and sensitivity to pressure in the injured area, as well as to the fact that plaintiff continued to complain about pain in the anterior tibial area of his legs 25 months after the accident. One doctor rated plaintiff with a five percent permanent partial impairment for each leg, or a total impairment of ten percent; the second rated plaintiff five to ten percent impaired in the left leg and ten to fifteen percent impaired in the right leg. Both of plaintiff’s doctors based their assessments in part on plaintiff’s statement that he suffered pain in both legs. In addition, a neurologist testified that plaintiff suffered a “mild injury” to the right peroneal nerve, although the neurologist expected the discomfort to improve with time.

On appeal, plaintiff contends: (i) that the Commission adopted an improper legal standard in ruling that subjective pain can never be a basis for a finding of partial disability, (ii) that the administrative law judge improperly excluded evidence at the second hearing that would have supported his claim of permanent partial disability, and (iii) that the Commission abused its discretion by accepting the medical panel’s findings and rejecting plaintiff’s doctors’ testimony.

We reject the first claim. The standard adopted by the Commission and relied upon by Dr. Holbrook in his testimony is incorrectly characterized by plaintiff; it followed a section of the Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment published by the American Medical Association that explicitly takes cognizance of pain when it is substantiated by independent evidence. 3 We find such a standard to be *681 reasonably calculated to distinguish between real impairment and malingering and to serve the purposes of the worker’s compensation scheme. Cf. Utah Copper Co. v. Industrial Commission, 57 Utah 118, 123-24, 193 P. 24, 26-27 (1920). Applying this standard, Dr. Holbrook simply found no such competent substantiating evidence, and the Commission accepted this finding.

We agree with the plaintiffs second claim. We find that at the second hearing the administrative law judge erred in limiting the evidence that could be presented by plaintiff to attack the panel’s finding.

During the second hearing, Dr. Holbrook admitted on cross-examination that he had not asked plaintiff detailed questions about whether the pain in his legs affected his ability to perform particular functions, such as standing up from a seated position, kneeling, sitting on his haunches, or crossing his legs. Plaintiff’s counsel propounded a hypothetical question, asking the doctor to assume plaintiff’s inability to perform those functions. Defendant’s counsel objected on the basis that the hypothetical assumed facts not in the record — plaintiff’s testimony at the first hearing had not been as detailed as the hypothetical regarding the specific functions he was unable to perform. The administrative law judge sustained the objection, even though plaintiff’s counsel stated that if the record provided an insufficient basis for the question, plaintiff would take the stand and give additional testimony of his specific physical impairments resulting from the pain. The administrative law judge ruled that by not introducing such evidence at the first hearing, plaintiff had waived any right to present such testimony at a later date.

Immediately after Dr. Holbrook’s testimony, plaintiff took the stand to testify. The administrative law judge refused to permit his testimony, stating that plaintiff was not a doctor, and his testimony was therefore outside the scope of the hearing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Thomas A. Paulsen Co. v. Industrial Commission
770 P.2d 125 (Utah Supreme Court, 1989)
Bunnell v. INDUSTRIAL COM'N OF UTAH
740 P.2d 1331 (Utah Supreme Court, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
693 P.2d 678, 1984 Utah LEXIS 938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-edward-gardner-plumbing-heating-inc-utah-1984.