Hall v. Armour & Co.

113 P.2d 145, 153 Kan. 656, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 10, 1941
DocketNo. 35,142
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 113 P.2d 145 (Hall v. Armour & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Armour & Co., 113 P.2d 145, 153 Kan. 656, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 186 (kan 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

DawsoN, C. J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment on an award of compensation for injuries sustained by a workman in his employer’s service.

It appears that on and prior to October 15, 1938, the claimant, Lee Hall, worked as a repair man on carrier tubes in the respondent’s packing plant in Kansas City. While standing on a ladder he slipped and fell astride a conveyor belt and received injuries in the region of his groins and also in his back. He was taken to a hospital and bandaged front and back and given some medicine. He remained in the hospital eight days and thereafter stayed at home for two or three weeks. He then reported for work, but was unable to perform any. His employer paid him his regular wages of $27 per week from the time of his injury until January 7, 1939— some twelve weeks. Thereafter for nine weeks he was paid at the statutory rate of 60 percent of his average wages, $16.20 per week, for temporary total disability. His alleged injuries had no objective [657]*657symptoms discernible by the doctors who examined him from time to time, so the respondent urged him to go to Chicago to consult a specialist, one Doctor Solomon, and offered to pay his expenses. Claimant declined to do so, and in consequence, on March 11, 1939, respondent quit paying him compensation.

Then followed the usual formal proceedings before the compensation commissioner. Witnesses testified pro- and con touching his injuries, the extent of his incapacity, and its probable duration. On August 25,1939, the commissioner made findings, the material parts of which read:

“The preponderance of the medical testimony is to the effect that the claim-' ant herein is disabled at the present time and that such disability is the result, directly or indirectly, of the accidental injury of October 15, 1938. The consensus of opinion is that the claimant will be disabled for a period of from six months to one year from the date of the hearing.
“The respondent herein paid claimant his regular wages from the date of the injury, October 15, 1938, to January 7, 1939, and thereafter paid claimant S16.20 per week until March 11, 1939. For the period of time during which the respondent paid claimant his regular wages, although claimant had not returned to work, the respondent is entitled to credit at the weekly compensation rate of S16.20. Any amount paid to claimant weeldy over and above the regular weekly compensation rate must be considered as a gratuity and not to be credited to the respondent on the compensation due to claimant.”

Accordingly an award of compensation for 77 weeks was made, together with an allowance not to exceed $500 for medical and hospital expenses. The usual administrative costs were charged against the respondent.

Both parties appealed to the district court, which set aside the commissioner’s award of compensation for 77 weeks, and in lieu thereof made an award at the same rate for 152% weeks. It did, however, set aside the $500 allowance made by the commissioner of compensation.

The respondent now brings the cause here for further review, contending chiefly that there was no evidence in the record to justify an award for 152% weeks or for any length of time in excess of the 77 weeks’ award made by the compensation commissioner.

The expert testimony was that there was an almost complete dearth of objective symptoms of injury. Doctor Bresette, called as a witness by claimant, testified that claimant complained of pain down the inside of his left leg up into the groin, that the muscles in [658]*658that region would go into spasm when manipulated, that claimant walked with a slight limp as if favoring his left side; that such was an abnormal condition and was possibly due to trauma. Claimant was highly nervous, talkative and flighty. He further testified:

Cross-examination:
“Q. Did you find any objective symptoms? A. Nothing objective except . . . the spasm of the left adductor muscles when you attempt to manipulate his leg, that is he complained of tenderness on manipulation.
“Q. If this fall caused any injury to those muscles would you expect to have the fall followed by some external evidence of injury? A. Yes. Normally a fall of that severity should cause ecchymosis in the tissues and swelling. There should be swelling and it should turn black and blue ... an accident severe enough to cause what he has should leave external evidence. If it did not, an accident was probably not the cause. There was nothing about his condition that wouldn’t be present in a neurastheniac. Everything he complained of might have been caused by neurasthenia.
“The difference between a malingerer and a neurastheniac is that a malingerer builds up symptoms and says he has pain when he doesn’t, and a neuras-theniac has pain. There is no way "to tell whether a person is lying. It is entirely possible that a person can have litigation neurosis.”

Elsewhere this witness testified :

“It would seem that this condition in his leg muscles should improve . . . I believe he is still unable to do heavy work at this time. Just how long that would be I would be guessing to state, but it would seem that wouldn’t be permanent.
“Q. And you have no notion how long it would be before he could if at all? A. Well, it’s entirely a conjecture on my part, but I would think it would be in the neighborhood of another year anyway.”

Doctor Neas, another witness for claimant, testified:

Cross-examination:
“Q. In the ordinary course of time you think he would probably be recovered, that he would not be incapacitated any longer than six months? A. I couldn’t say as to time.
“Q. In your best judgment. A. I think he will eventually get well, but I wouldn’t set a definite time.
“Q. What is your best judgment on it? A. Six months to a year, or it might even be longer.”

Doctor Angle, called as a witness for respondent;'testified:

“He ' (claimant) is a neurastheniac.- It is difficult to differentiate between that and malingering. ...
[659]*659“Q. Do you feel that he has a permanent inability to work? A. No. X think that Mr. Hall will straighten out. He isn’t so old but what he can straighten out. I think with the element of time and good advice he should get well.
“Q. Within what time? A. And it may take six months or a year. And some of these people do remarkably well in even a shorter time than that sometimes.
“Q. In a person in Mr. Hall’s condition, how long would you think such an aggravation would tend to exist? A. Well, I think I would be in agreement with what I heard his other doctors testify to, that a few months, and not longer than a year, he should be all right.”

The common law rules as to the competency and sufficiency of evidence are not strictly applied in workmen’s compensation cases (Parker v. Farmers Union Mut. Ins. Co., 146 Kan. 832, 73 P. 2d 1032), but an award of compensation for future disability must be based on some substantial evidence (Fair v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 P.2d 145, 153 Kan. 656, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-armour-co-kan-1941.