Hammett v. Nooter Corp

264 S.W.2d 915, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 220
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1954
Docket28784
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 264 S.W.2d 915 (Hammett v. Nooter Corp) 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
Hammett v. Nooter Corp, 264 S.W.2d 915, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 220 (Mo. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

BE'NNICK, Judge.

This is a proceeding under the workmen’s ■compensation law. Sections 287.010 to .287.800 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. The appeal is by the employer and self-insurer, the Nooter Corporation, from the judgment of the circuit court affirming an award of the industrial commission in favor of Charles Hammett, the employee.

The employee was injured on July -23, 1951, at the employer’s plant in the City of St. Louis, and there is no question in this ■court but that his injury was by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment.

The referee found that the employee had ■suffered a sprain of the lower back with no permanent injury, and awarded compensation for temporary disability only at the rate of $25 a week for a period of 5 weeks.

The employee thereupon made application for' review by the full commission, which found that he had sustained a 15% permanent partial disability of the .body as a whole, and awarded him -compensation for permanent partial disability, at the rate of $25 a week for 60 weeks.

The commission made a further allowance of $12.24 for medical aid, such allowance constituting reimbursement for the cost of a sacro belt which the employee had purchased on the recommendation of one of his physicians, and which the commission found was necessary to cure and relieve from the effects of his injury.

The basic contention on this appeal is that the circuit court ' erred in affirming such award for the alleged reason that the award was not supported -by competent and substantial on the whole record, but instead was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

The principal attack upon the sufficiency of the evidence to support the award is directed at the finding that the employee had sustained a 15% permanent partial disability of the body as a whole.

The employee had worked for the employer for something over 4 years before the accident, and during all of that time had been assigned to what was known as the metalizing department, where he operated a lathe which was used in spraying metal.

The lathe itself is a little better than 3 feet in height, and has an overhead exhaust hood attached to the back of the lathe which lifts up to a point about 6 feet above the floor. In the ordinary operation of the lathe it is necessary at the beginning of each job to raise the hood in order to insert the pieces of metal which are to be sprayed; and when making such adjustments it had been the employee’s practice in getting in a position where he could reach the hood to step upon the handle of a wheel which he turned by hand in the course of his work so as to cause the lathe carriage, to move up and down. The wheel was about a foot in diameter, and the handle which the employee grasped to turn the wheel extended out from the wheel about 4 inches. On the occasion in question the employee’s right foot slipped off-of the handle as- he was stepping down upon ;it *917 after completing an adjustment of the hood; and as he lost his position he fell a distance of 2 feet to the concrete floor below, where his right leg collapsed under him when his foot struck the floor, causing him to topple over upon the right side of his body.

Some 10 or IS minutes after his fall the employee experienced a sharp pain in his back, which persisted for the remainder of .the day. Upon feeling the pain he reported the occurrence to his foreman, and was advised to consult the company nurse, who in turn sent him on to the personnel manar ger. What the employee apparently had in mind was to obtain permission to go to a certain osteopath to whom the company had sent him on several prior occasions; and when it was ascertained that the particular osteopath had moved his office to a point quite distant from where he had formerly 'been located, the employee was told by the manager of his department that he might call upon an osteopath with an office in his own immediate neighborhood. As a matter of fact he went for treatment to such an osteopath that very night, and was given a letter in which the osteopath recommended to the company officials that he be hospitalized. Although the employee presented the letter to the manager of his department, nothing whatever came of it, and on the fourth day after the accident, at the suggestion of his attorney, he consulted Dr. R. A. Mezera, a specialist in industrial and internal medicine.

Dr. Mezera first saw the employee in his office, and after taking his history and making a cursory examination, he recommended that the employee enter a hospital for a thorough diagnostic examination. He arranged for the employee’s admittance into St. Anthony’s Hospital; and inasmuch as the injury involved a tipping of the vertebral column, he called in Dr. Frank Palazzo, a neuro-surgeon, as consultant. The employee remained in the hospital for 2 days, and next visited Dr. Mezera in the ■following September. His last examination by Dr. Mezera was on January 8, 1952, just 2 days prior to the hearing before the referee. He saw Dr. Palazzo on several occasions after’ leaving the ' hospital, ■ the last time being January 9, 1952, the day •immediately preceding the hearing before the referee.

After leaving the hospital the employee remained at home for 5 weeks before attempting work of any kind, and then obtained employment from a company referred to as Chevrolet-Shell at the same general type of work as that which he had been doing for his former employer. I-Ie was still in the employ of Chevrolet-Shell at the time of the hearing before the referee. Upon his discharge from the hospital he had been given a letter by Dr. Palazzo recommending that his employer put him back to work on light duty, but after some dispute with the manager of his department, he gave up the idea of going back on his old j ob and instead secured the new employment.

Much of the controversy at the' present time grows out of the fact that the employee had had other injuries to his back before the one which has given rise to this proceeding. As a matter of fact, the employee stated at one point in his testimony that he had sustained 4 or 5 previous injuries to his back while in the service of the employer. It appears, however, that only one of such injuries was of any particular significance, this being an injury sustained about 3 years previously when the employee’s foot slipped while he was engaged with another workman in carrying an acetylene tank. The employee testified that after such injury the employer had supplied him with a brace which he had worn until it was destroyed by fire a year or more before the hearing in the present case.

The employer argues in this court that the employee’s condition now is exactly the same as it was before the accident of July 23, 1951; that the only change in his condition as the result of the- accident was the 5 weeks’ temporary disability for which the "referee undertook to limit his compensation ; and that in, any event his evidence failed to show with, reasonable- certainty that his alleged disability was permanent. Tied in with all these'matters' is .the further contention that under "the employee’s own *918 evidence his disability may have been due to one of two or even several accidents; and that he failed in his proof that his disability was due to an accident for which the employer would now be liable to pay compensation.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W.2d 915, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammett-v-nooter-corp-moctapp-1954.