Hamilton v. Johnson & Sons

276 N.W. 841, 224 Iowa 1097
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1937
DocketNo. 44037.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 276 N.W. 841 (Hamilton v. Johnson & Sons) 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
Hamilton v. Johnson & Sons, 276 N.W. 841, 224 Iowa 1097 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

StigeR, J.

This action arises ont of the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, Code 1935, §1361 et seq.

On December 5, 1933, the claimant, Glenn Hamilton, while an employee of the defendants, was engaged in mixing lime. A piece of the lime lodged in his right eye causing an injury which resulted in its removal about a month later. Plaintiff sought compensation for permanent, partial disability under Code section 1396, subsection 16, which reads as follows:

“16. For the loss of an eye, weekly compensation during one hundréd weeks. ’ ’

In November, 1922, the claimant, while employed by the C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., received an injury to his right eye (the one for which compensation is now sought) by being struck by a flying nail. Hamilton filed a claim under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, Compiled Code, 1919, §807 et seq., and in 1924, the railroad company paid him $1,000 as a compromise settlement. Full compensation under the act would have been $1,500. After said injury, Hamilton continued to be industrially employed until he received the injury on December 5, 1933. Claimant’s left eye is normal.

Hamilton filed his petition for compensation for the injury occurring December 5, 1933. Arbitrators were waived and the case was submitted to the deputy industrial commissioner as sole arbiter, who held that claimant was not entitled to recover because the right eye was industrially blind at the time of the injury; all practical vision having been previously, permanently lost. Claimant filed a petition for review by the industrial commissioner and additional testimony was taken. The commissioner sustained the arbitration decision. Claimant then appealed to the district court which reversed the finding and decision of the industrial commissioner and awarded weekly compensation for one hundred weeks to the claimant against the defendants under Code section 1396, subsection 16.

One of the positions taken by appellants is that the claimant’s eye was injured in November, 1922, while an employee of the Burlington Railroad Company, to the extent that no useful, industrial vision remained; that such injury constituted a loss *1100 of the eye tinder Code section 1396; that when the injury occurred December 5, 1933, the claimant did not receive a compen-satable injury because he had lost his eye in the first accident.

The commissioner in his decision on review held:

(1) As a result of his injury on July 5, 1933, claimant sustained no loss of useful vision.

(2) If necessary to hold that in such injury useful vision was lost, it must necessarily follow that payment required be based upon the measure of loss actually resulting therefrom.

He made the following statement in his review decision:

‘ ‘ Six doctors testify in this proceeding, all to the effect that only limited vision remained in the right eye after the first injury. In order to accept the testimony of the claimant and the brother-in-law or to give credence to the Ford card it is necessary to decide that all these doctors are wrong — radically wrong. This choice must be made in reaching conclusion.”

The district court found that:

‘ ‘ The evidence does show without dispute that the claimant prior to the last injury had considerable vision in this eye and that he used it in his daily labor in driving a truck and other work. In my judgment the finding of the Commissioner that the claimant did not sustain any loss of useful vision as the result of the injury complained of is not only contrary to the great weight of the evidence but is without any support in the evidence. ’ ’

The trial court reversed the finding of- the commissioner and entered judgment for claimant for compensation for the loss of the right eye for one hundred weeks under Code section 1396, subsection 16.

Code section 1453, subsection 4 reads as follows:

“1453. Decision on appeal. Any order or decision of the industrial commissioner may be modified, reversed, or set aside on one or more of the following grounds and on no other: * * *

“4. If there is not sufficient competent evidence in the record to warrant the making of the order or decision.”

The question is whether there is sufficient, competent evidence in the record to warrant the decision made by the commissioner. If there are not sufficient facts in the record to sup *1101 port the finding and decision of the industrial commissioner, it will be set aside. Enfield v. Certain-Teed Products Co. et al., 211 Iowa 1004, 233 N. W. 141; Butz v. Hahn P. & V. Co., 220 Iowa 995, 263 N. W. 257.

If there is any support in the evidence for the decision of the commissioner that the right eye had no useful vision at the time of the last injury, it must be found in the medical testimony. Several lay witnesses testified to facts showing claimant had substantial industrial vision.

Dr. Sells, a witness for claimant, testified that he came to him in 1924, after the accident in the Burlington shops and after claimant had been to Dr. La Force, who had performed an iridectomy, or a cutting out of a portion of the iris of the right eye. The witness testified that the pupil was oval, that there was a beginning cardom (curtain) or form of cataract coming in the right eye; that Hamilton had about one-fifteenth vision but with glasses had one-third vision; that he could have an operation for the cardom but Hamilton was helped with the glasses prescribed for him. The last time the witness saw Hamilton he had one-third vision.

Dr. La Force, oculist for the Burlington Railroad Company, testified for appellants that in November, 1922, he treated the wound in the eyeball resulting from the injury to claimant received in the Burlington shops. The witness stated that at that time it would be impossible to tell the result of the injury and whether or not the vision in the right eye was seriously impaired until later. Dr. La Force saw claimant again in 1924. The witness testified that at the time, the pupil was more or less elongated; that there was a cyst of the iris or ciliary body as a result of the injury; that a cyst has a tendency to enlarge; that if the cyst would increase in size, the formation of a cataract or glaucoma would be a natural development of the injury as he observed it in 1924. The witness further testified that claimant in 1924 had only one-tenth vision and that the tendency would be for the vision to gradually decrease.

Dr. Pearson examined Hamilton at the request of the industrial commissioner in July, 1924. After testifying to the nature and extent of the wound and condition of the eye the witness stated that there was one-sixth vision in the right eye which could not be improved with lens; that ten per cent vision is not practical vision; that if one eye was normal, the injured eye, *1102 with only ten per cent vision, would not be used at all, and a person would be for practical purposes blind as a workman; that degenerative changes are prone to develop. The witness further testified:

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Bluebook (online)
276 N.W. 841, 224 Iowa 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-johnson-sons-iowa-1937.