Giere v. Aase Haugen Homes, Inc.

146 N.W.2d 911, 259 Iowa 1065, 1966 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 912
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1966
Docket52325
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 146 N.W.2d 911 (Giere v. Aase Haugen Homes, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giere v. Aase Haugen Homes, Inc., 146 N.W.2d 911, 259 Iowa 1065, 1966 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 912 (iowa 1966).

Opinion

Becker, J.

Tbis is an appeal from judgment by the district court affirming the industrial commissioner’s review decision that claimant did not sustain a personal injury arising out of and in the course of her employment. We affirm.

*1067 At the initial hearing the deputy industrial commissioner found for claimant, determined the disability to be 10 percent and made an award accordingly. Defendants appealed to the commissioner and produced additional testimony. The' commissioner reversed the deputy’s award, finding that claimant had not met her burden to prove causal connection between the acts of lifting occasioned by her employment and the diaphragmatic hernia from which she was suffering. Upon appeal the district court held:

“Since the Commissioner’s finding was that the claimant failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the diaphragmatic hernia she was found to be suffering was causally connected to acts of lifting in the employ of Aase Haugen Homes, Inc., and since that finding is sustained by substantial evidence and reasonable inference drawn therefrom, this Court feels that the Commissioner’s decision denying benefits must be and is hereby affirmed.”

The validity of this judgment is now before us.

Claimant testified that she worked as a supervisor at the' Sunset Lutheran Home, a custodial home for the elderly, operated by defendant Aase Haugen Homes, Inc. She alleged that on August 29, 1961, while lifting a patient, she suffered a diaphragmatic hernia. She told of lifting or helping to lift a 195-pound patient at least twice on that date. After the lifting incidents she felt a stinging in her chest which persisted and kept her awake after she retired. She then experienced almost constant pain for three weeks to a month. Before August 29th she had not had such pains that she could recall. She contacted a Doctor Miller concerning the pains and he treated her until January 2, 1962. He did not testify.

In January Mrs. Giere had a week long examination by Doctor Sivertson at Gunderson Clinic, LaCrosse, Wisconsin. After taking a very detailed history and performing certain tests he diagnosed several ailments including diaphragmatic hernia. The history is too extensive for detailed repetition here but some significant statements will be noted. The clinical record shows the following: “Admits to all classical symptoms of diaphragmatic hernia-nocturnal coughing, choking, dysphagia *1068 and easy regurgitation for long time hut worse last 5 months.” (Emphasis in history).

The history also shows that claimant, then age 63 was 5 feet 6 inches tall, weighed 200 pounds and had weighed 10 pounds more the week before, had been relatively constipated all of her life, had heartburn of five years’ duration, hiccups on the average of once a week at the dinner table since October 1961, wheezing in respiration during the past five years following pneumonia which she had twice in the same winter five years before. She had given normal birth to three children. She had previous surgery including removal of the gallbladder.

Doctor Sivertson described an esophageal hernia as a rupture of the diaphragm. The stomach passes up through the opening where the food pipe normally passes through the diaphragm and into the chest cavity. The valve which prevents food from leaving the stomach then does not function properly. He indicated that generally speaking this type of hernia is classified as a traumatic hernia. It may be congenital. There is also a possible connection between vomiting and hernia, between constipation and hernia. Doctor Sivertson did not think prior removal of the gallbladder, nervous tension or the irritable colon he found to be present in claimant, had anything to do with this hernia.

Doctor Sivertson testified that Mrs. Giere’s hernia was not congenital, that trauma may produce or aggravate this type of hernia, that it is possible that this esophageal or hiatus hernia occurred in August 1961 and it is possible this type of hernia could have been caused by lifting. In a letter, admitted without objection, Doctor Sivertson also said:

“I do not know the cause for the diaphragmatic hernia. It evidently was not present when the stomach was X-rayed five years previously at Wisconsin General Hospital. Therefore, it must have developed between then and the time of its discovery here. The symptoms referable to it indicated that it was very likely present for many months prior to January, 1962; I am unable to pinpoint the exact date the rupture developed. It is possible that it developed in the fall of 1961.
“I think it is reasonable to assume that her work at the *1069 nursing home may have brought the rupture on. I think we can state that the work at the nursing home definitely aggravated the condition, as bending, stooping, and lifting produced regurgitation of stomach contents into the throat and bronchial tree.”

Defendant’s medical testimony confirmed the existence of the hernia but contested causal connection. Dr. Richard A. Eckberg examined claimant for defendants. He agreed that she had a small hiatus hernia but stated that such hernias are very rarely due to trauma. He stated that such hernias are frequently found in women over 50; the predisposing cause is increased abdominal pressure; such pressure may come from pregnancies, bronchitis, constant coughing, constipation, and being overweight. It will be noted that most of the causative factors relating to pressure are present in Mrs. Giere’s history. Doctor Eckberg concluded that this lady’s hernia was the result of congenital weakness and had been present for a number of years as indicated by the five-year history of heartburn.

Based primarily on these facts the deputy industrial commissioner found for claimant on the grounds that while this claimant suffered from numerous complaints, the claimant’s doctor looked to the period of late summer and early fall of 1961 to explain the existence of the hernia. He felt he could not assume that the hernia existed prior to the events of August 1961. This, with the medical evidence that the hernia could have resulted from the strain and lifting of August 29, 1961, resulted in declaration of compensable injury.

On review plaintiff added to the foregoing evidence the deposition of Doctor Wilson who testified that: “There is a possibility that a lesion of this kind could be caused as a result of trauma.” Defendants added the testimony of Dr. Herman J. Smith. In the words of the court reporter, the shorthand notes of Doctor Smith’s testimony were lost, strayed or stolen. However, the commissioner’s notes were preserved. These notes indicate that in response to a hypothetical question Doctor Smith stated it is possible that a traumatic incident could be causative of a hernia but there was not enough evidence to say probable in this case.

*1070 Because the evidence is not transcribed Doctor Smith’s testimony cannot be reviewed in detail but claimant does not argue that the commissioner incorrectly restated that testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.W.2d 911, 259 Iowa 1065, 1966 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giere-v-aase-haugen-homes-inc-iowa-1966.