Gluck Brothers, Inc. v. Coffey

431 S.W.2d 756, 222 Tenn. 6, 26 McCanless 6, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 406
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 431 S.W.2d 756 (Gluck Brothers, Inc. v. Coffey) 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
Gluck Brothers, Inc. v. Coffey, 431 S.W.2d 756, 222 Tenn. 6, 26 McCanless 6, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 406 (Tenn. 1968).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Humphreys

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*8 This is a Workmen’s Compensation appeal by Gluck Brothers, Inc., from a decree awarding Carson Coffey temporary total disability from April 20,1965 to August 1, 1967, and permanent partial disability benefits based on a thirty-five percent disability to the body as a whole. Gluck Brothers, Inc., has assigned several errors making two primary contentions. First, that the permanent, partial disability should have been fixed at no more than fifteen percent disability to the body as a whole; second, that the court should not have awarded temporary total disability benefits for the period from April 20,1965 until August 1, 1967.

There is material evidence to sustain the following fact finding. That on or about November 4,1964, while Coffey was working for Gluck Brothers, Inc., lumber that he had been stacking fell over on him, striking him along the area of a hip, thigh, leg and foot. That Coffey continued to work for approximately thirty days, during which he suffered pain and discomfort, even though he was doing lighter work. After the accident Coffey was sent by his employers to doctors in Morristown, Tennessee, and later was referred to Dr. Dennis Coughlin, of Knoxville. Following examinations and tests, in the latter part of January, 1965, Dr. Coughlin performed a laminectomy on Coffey, removing the nucleus pulposus from the inside portion of the disc between the third and fourth lumbar vertebrae. Following this operation Mr. Coffey remained in the hospital approximately two weeks, after which he was sent home. Dr. Coughlin examined Coffey on March 3,1965; on March 31,1965; and on April 14,1965. On this last examination, Dr. Coughlin found that Coffey had fully recovered from his injury to the extent that recovery was possible and told Coffey it *9 was safe for Mm to return to gainful employment, with the recommendation that he not lift in excess of fifty pounds. With respect to the extent of Coffey’s recovery, Dr. Coughlin testified:

“Q. Other than placing a limit of fifty pounds on Ms lifting, did you limit the type of employment that he might engage in in any way?
A. No, sir.
Q. In other words, he could do anytMng — any type activity that he desire other than lifting more than fifty pounds.
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And tMs was on April the 14th, 1965?
A. Yes, sir, that is correct.
Q. Subsequent to April the 14th, 1965, Dr. Coughlin, did you treat Mr. Coffey any more ?
A. No, actually I did not treat him specifically any after he left the hospital and certainly not after April 14th.
Q. I believe that you made some other examinations after April 14th. * * *
A. Yes, I did examine him.
Q. (Continuing) — but did you — you say you did not treat him anymore after that date?
A. That is correct.
Q. And I take it the reason you did not was, in your opirnon, he had reached maximum recovery, is that correct?
*10 A. That is correct.

. Dr. Coughlin next saw Mr. Coffey on May 12, 1965 when Mr. Coffey told him he had not returned to work because he was unable to drive some forty miles from his home to his place of employment. • Dr. Coughlin saw Mr. Coffey again on July 12,. 1965, and later, on October 12, 1965, and last, on December 7, 1965. He testified that .on the basis of his examinations of Mr. Coffey on.these occasions following his discharge of him as' a patient in April, it was his opinion that Coffey was able to return to work in April, 1965 as he had advised him, and that his physical condition had improved from that time until the time of the last examination. With respect to the December 1965 examination, he said:

“* * * in the final analysis, I found no objective evidence of any abnormality except for the healed opera- . tive incision and the minimal arthritic changes which I felt were consistent with his age which is 51. ’ ’

He also testified:

“Q. Here again I will ask you if on the last' time you examined him on December 12,1965, he was essentially in-the-same condition that you found him oil April 12, 1965, when you felt he had reached- maximum recovery and allowed him to return to,work or told him he could return to work?
A. Yes, sir, he was the same.”

Dr. Coughlin then testified that in his professional opinion Coffey had a fifteen percent partial disability to the body as a whole ref err able to his November 1964 injury and subsequent laminectomy. He testified that this evaluation was made on the basis of physical impairment and *11 reduction of stamina, or ability to work; this opinion being arrived at from a medical point of view.

The record also contains evidence that Dr. Thomas Stevens, a bone specialist at Knoxville Orthopedic Clinic, rated Coffey’s disability at twenty percent.

In addition, there is Coffey’s testimony that even as of the time of the trial he was still totally disabled, which has very little, but possibly some support from the testimony of lay witnesses to the effect that he did not appear to be able to work as he had in the past. The record indicates that prior to his injury, Coffey did heavy manual labor such as hauling fertilizer, cutting timber and general farm work. That Coffey is an uneducated, almost illiterate man, fifty-one years of age and unable to do any other type of work than manual labor, and on this basis, and on the basis of the whole testimony, the trial court awarded permanent, partial disability to the extent of thirty-five percent to the body as a whole, attributable to the November 1964 accident.

Bearing in mind the material evidence rule, together with the trial court’s .opportunity to see and examine and evaluate Coffey, and the trial court’s evident reliance on this in addition to the medical proof, we are. not inclined to sustain the assignment of error going to the permanent, partial disability. We think our holding in Quick Lumber Co. v. Fields, 193 Tenn. 365, 246 S.W.2d 47, an opinion based on considerable prior authority to the same effect, requires us, in view of the entire record to sustain this finding of the trial judge and overrule this assignment of error.

However, although we have examined this record from the point of view the final decree of the trial court was *12 correct, and from the point of view favoring sustaining the total award if possible, consistent with the law and the record, we have concluded the assignments going to the award of temporary total disability are good, and that the employer’s contention with respect to this must be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
431 S.W.2d 756, 222 Tenn. 6, 26 McCanless 6, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gluck-brothers-inc-v-coffey-tenn-1968.