Gunnison Sugar Co. v. Industrial Commission

275 P. 777, 73 Utah 535, 1929 Utah LEXIS 69
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1929
DocketNo. 4744.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 275 P. 777 (Gunnison Sugar Co. v. Industrial Commission) 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
Gunnison Sugar Co. v. Industrial Commission, 275 P. 777, 73 Utah 535, 1929 Utah LEXIS 69 (Utah 1929).

Opinion

STRAUP, J.

This case involves a review of proceedings of the Industrial Commission, awarding compensation to an employee of the Gunnison Sugar Company for an injury sustained by him in the course of his employment. The United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company was the insurance carrier for the company. The award was made against both of them. The employee, in the course of his employment, was injured in his back, an injury to the lower vertebrae. No complaint is made as to the compensation awarded him for such disability. The commission, however, in addition to such compensation, also awarded the employee compensation for loss of his teeth. Complaint is made of that part of the award.

When the employee was injured in his back, the assistant superintendent of the sugar company immediately was informed of the injury and the circumstances thereof. Ap *537 parently neither he nor the employee at the time thought the injury of much consequence; that it was a mere wrenching of the back. The employee laid off for about three days, and then went back to work. Because of pain in his back and the injury thereto, he was not able to do his work as theretofore. About ten days after the injury he consulted a physician at Gunnison, where the factory of the sugar company was located, and where the employee was employed. To that physician the employee explained the nature of the accident, and how and where he was hurt. The physician examined the employee, bandaged his back, and gave him treatment. The employee shortly thereafter went back to work, but was unable to do his work without pain to his back, and at intervals was required to lay off. The physician who first treated the employee moved from Gunnison to other parts of the state.

The employee continued his employment, but gradually grew worse. He thereupon consulted another physician, and told him of his pain in the baek and described how he felt. That physician made no examination of him, except to inquire of the employee the nature of the pain and the extent of it. The employee did not say anything to that physician as to the injury to his back. That physician diagnosed the employee’s condition as that of rheumatism which he told the employee was due to his teeth, and advised him to have all of them extracted. In obedience to such advice the employee went to a dentist and had all of his teeth extracted. They were all in good and in a healthy condition. The pain suffered by him was in no manner due to any condition of his teeth, nor to rheumatism. It was entirely due to the injury to his back. He paid the dentist $115 to have his teeth extracted and for plates. Thereafter he went back to work, but found his condition had not improved, and that he was still unable to do his work because of pain suffered by him, especially when lifting heavy objects. He thereupon consulted a clinic, where on examination it was found that he was suffering from a partial dis *538 location of the sacro-iliac joint, and was there operated on and cured. He thereafter went back to work.

In addition to the compensation awarded the employee for the injury to his back and the disability occasioned thereby, the commission also awarded him $640‘ for loss of time, and for disfigurement on account of the extraction of his teeth, $115 paid the dentist and $22 for expenses necessarily incurred as an incident thereto, or a total of $777. It is that portion of the award of which complaint is made.

. No complaint is made that the employee was negligent in seeking or employing the physician, who wrongly diagnosed the employee’s condition as that of rheumatism. The employee testified that when he went to such physician he did not then know just what was the matter with him, just what was the cause of the pain in his back and from which he was then suffering. He was not informed by the first physician that there was an injury to the vertebrae or that his injury was serious. When he went to the second physician and described to him the nature of his pain and suffering, and was told that it was due to rheumatism occasioned by his teeth he then believed that to be true and did what he was told to do by such physician and had his teeth extracted. The second physician consulted by the employee was a regularly licensed physician and no claim is made that he was unskillful or not competent.

That in the course of his employment and through accidental means the employee sustained an injury causing a partial dislocation of the sacro-iliac joint, and that the nature and character thereof was not known or discovered by him until the examination at the clinic, is not disputed. The application for compensation and for an award was made within one year after the happening of the accident. The question thus is whether, under the circumstances, the loss sustained by the employee because of the extraction of his teeth may be attributable to the accident and injury *539 thereby sustained by him. Under our Compensation Act (Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 3138, as amended by Laws Utah 1919, c. 63), the commission was authorized to allow compensation for disability, disfigurement, and loss of bodily function. By section 3147 (as amended) an employer, or his insurance carrier, in addition to other compensation, is also required to pay a reasonable sum for medical, nursing and hospital service, and for medicines, etc. Such obligation is an affirmative one on the part of the employer or his insurance carrier to provide and furnish an injured employee with such service. When the employer neglects or fails to do so, the employee may procure such service, and the employer or insurance carrier becomes liable for the reasonable value thereof. Schneider, Workmen’s Comp. Law, p. 1231.

The assistant superintendent of the sugar company, under whose direction the employee worked, within a few minutes after the accident, was informed of it and the manner in which, it occurred. He also knew that the injury necessitated intermittent periods of loss of time by the employee for several months. On the record it is also in-ferable that he knew that the employee had sought medical treatment and was being treated for his injury. No offer was made by the employer to furnish or provide the employee with any treatment. Apparently the employer was content with the treatment which the employee had procured. It also is inferable that the emloyer, while not knowing the exact nature of the injury, yet knew, whatever its character was, that it was not readily yielding to treatment. Still, no effort was made by the employer to furnish or provide the employee with other or different treatment.

On the record we do not say, nor do we think it justifiable to say, that there was any willful refusal or failure, or even any neglect, on the part of the employer to furnish or provide the employee medical or surgical treatment. It *540 is more reasonable to say that the employer knew that the employee had been injured and was being treated, and that the employer was content with the treatment.

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Bluebook (online)
275 P. 777, 73 Utah 535, 1929 Utah LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunnison-sugar-co-v-industrial-commission-utah-1929.