Graphenreed v. Ford Motor Co.

482 S.W.2d 68, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 813
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 1972
DocketNo. 34330
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 482 S.W.2d 68 (Graphenreed v. Ford Motor 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
Graphenreed v. Ford Motor Co., 482 S.W.2d 68, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 813 (Mo. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

BRADY, Chief Judge.

This case involves an appeal from judgment of the circuit court affirming an award of the Industrial Commission for the claimant in the amount of $5,740.00. Ford Motor Company, hereafter referred to as employer, appeals. We affirm.

The employer attacks the judgment of the trial court on two grounds: (1) there was not sufficient competent evidence in the record to warrant the making of the award, § 287.490, 1(4), RSMo., V.A.M.S., and (2) the Commission acted without or in excess of its powers, § 287.490, 1(1), RSMo., V.A.M.S. Since the latter allegation concerns matters outside the actual hearing before the Referee, we will consider it first.

After review, the Industrial Commission issued a final award dated September 2, 1969, affirming the award of the Referee. The final award was signed by Commissioners Presley and Brown with Chairman Butler dissenting in a separate opinion. Thereafter, employer filed a motion to vacate the final award alleging in part that after the award it received an undated order signed by Commissioner Presley purporting to set aside the final award. On September 23, 1969 the Commission entered an order denying the motion to vacate. This order was signed by Chairman Butler (the original dissenter) and Commissioner Brown. Commissioner Presley dissented in a separate opinion.

The parties have not cited, nor were we able to find, any law from this or any other jurisdiction dealing with this unique situation. Employer argues the two dissenting opinions demonstrate that in fact the majority opinion was to reverse the Referee’s decision. Thus, employer argues, the final award does not reflect the actual decision and is in excess of the Commission’s powers. We cannot agree.

We decline the invitation to speculate as to who changed whose mind. While employer urges that Commissioner Presley by his dissent to the order indicated his opinion was consistent with Chairman Butler’s dissent, it is equally plausible to assume that Chairman Butler by denying the motion changed his mind to be consistent with the final award. The final award was properly signed by two commissioners thus constituting a quorum or majority as required by § 286.010, RSMo., V.A.M.S. Similarly the order denying the motion to vacate was properly signed by two members thus constituting a majority. The award and order were therefore acts of the Commission and were totally within its powers.

We pass now to the merits of this appeal. The evidence was that while claimant was working for the employer on November 28, 1966, he was pushing a gate on a skid and it hung up. When it did so his feet slipped in some sealer compound on the floor and he felt tremendous pain in his back. The same day he went to the employer’s medical department where he told the nurse about the injury and she gave him heat therapy. He visited the company doctor for heat treatments every day from the accident until hospitalized. Claimant was placed in the hospital by Dr. Holbrook, the company doctor, sometime in December and spent a week in traction. After his release claimant learned he was discharged by employer for falsifying his employment application by denying he had received compensation from previous employers for injuries when claimant had in [71]*71fact received $88.24 for an injury to his finger which occurred while working for a previous employer and by omitting to mention three other employers for whom he had worked. After his discharge by employer he testified he applied for several jobs, each time acknowledging his back injury and being denied employment. One of these applications was to Fisher Body but the records of that plant show that his application was in fact made before his alleged accident at Ford, not after as he testified.

Subsequently claimant went to work for Emerson where he was still employed at the time of the hearing. Claimant testified that he falsified his employment application at Emerson by omitting any reference to his back injury. He also stated that he was given a pre-employment physical examination which he passed. The medical director at Emerson did not testify. The only evidence as to the pre-employment physical examination conducted by that company was that given by a nurse and the physical examination record. The latter contained claimant’s denial of an existing back injury and the statements he had no physical defects at that time (January 11, 1967) and had suffered no accidents or illnesses in the previous year. The testimony of the nurse was that pre-employment physical examinations conducted at Emerson normally include an examination of the back and any abnormality would be noted on the examination report. She further testified that such examinations normally include back movements, forward, lateral, and knee bends, and that this is done in her opinion on every examination. However, the same witness testified that she could not state whether such an examination was given claimant because she does not remember being present and normally would not be as such examinations are usually conducted by the doctor in a closed room without the nurse’s presence. Her further testimony was that the doctor conducting the examination makes his own notes on the physical examination which he conducts, that back examinations are among those portions of the examination which are left entirely to the doctor, and that the medical records did not show the tests described as to certain back injuries were in fact performed upon claimant. She also testified that the doctor spends four hours a day at the plant and sees fifteen to twenty job applicants each day. The claimant went to work for Emerson on January 11, 1967.

His back continued to give him trouble and in May of 1967 he went to a hospital emergency room where he was seen by Dr. Morgan who testified that claimant gave a history of twisting his back while working at Ford and claimed it had continued to hurt him until that time. Dr. Morgan testified that when he first saw claimant in May of 1967 it was his opinion at that time that claimant suffered an acute soft tissue injury of his lower back, ligamentus or myofascial in origin. He did find splinting of the spine upon bending. He continued to treat him until May 31 when he thought he was improved sufficiently to go back to work. On August 23, 1967 Dr. Morgan stated in his report: “There were no signs of nerve root pressure.” He did not then diagnose a protruding disc. He did not see claimant again until sometime in October. At that time claimant had essentially the same kind of symptoms he was having in May. The neurological examination was again within normal limits. Based upon claimant’s failure to respond to conservative treatment and the presence of bilateral pain in the gluteal regions with some splinting over the lower lumbar segments he recommended claimant have a myelo-gram. In December of 1967 claimant experienced pain in his left leg for the first time. The medical expert’s testimony was that claimant in his opinion had a “midline bulging or protruding disc which slowly and gradually enlarged and most of this enlargement occurred to the left side until eventually it cut the L-5 nerve root.”

The hypothetical question asked of Dr. Morgan by claimant’s attorney in order to [72]

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Bluebook (online)
482 S.W.2d 68, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graphenreed-v-ford-motor-co-moctapp-1972.