Hatcher v. Charcoal

776 S.W.2d 891, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1324, 1989 WL 105612
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 13, 1989
DocketNo. 16240
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 776 S.W.2d 891 (Hatcher v. Charcoal) 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
Hatcher v. Charcoal, 776 S.W.2d 891, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1324, 1989 WL 105612 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

CROW, Presiding Judge.

William Ace Hatcher (“claimant”) appeals from a final award denying compen sation by the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (“Commission”) in a proceeding under The Workers' Compensation Law, chapter 287, RSMo 1978, as amended. The Commission, by a two-to-one vote, affirmed an award of an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) of the Division of Workers’ Compensation, which denied benefits on the ground that claimant had not sustained an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment.

Claimant’s sole assignment of error is that the Commission’s decision was not supported by sufficient competent evidence as, in claimant’s words, “there was no evidence of probative force to support the Commission’s conclusions of no work related injury and a pre-existing injury by [claimant] and the Commission ignored competent, substantial and undisputed testimony of employer’s expert witness.” We synopsize only the evidence pertinent to that issue.

Claimant, a 19-year employee of Floyd Charcoal Company, testified he was working alone preparing to unhook wiring on a “heat sealer” conveyor in the “instant lite building” on his employer’s premises between 11:30 a.m., and 12:00, May 31, 1985. Claimant explained he climbed onto the conveyor belt to reach a box where the wiring was. In doing so, said claimant, he “slipped and fell backwards” to the floor, some two and a half to three feet below, landing on his back. Asked whether he felt pain, claimant responded: “I just hurt. I gathered up my tools ... and went back up to the front of the warehouse.” On cross-examination claimant acknowledged the fall occurred just after he had returned from lunch.

The first fellow employee claimant encountered after the alleged accident was Dennis Halbrook. Claimant testified he told Halbrook he (claimant) had hurt his back and that Halbrook might have to take him to the doctor.

Halbrook, a witness for claimant, recalled claimant was walking “in a bent over position” when claimant approached him. Halbrook remembered claimant saying he had hurt his back on “a ladder or a convey- or” and needed to go to the hospital.

About that time, according to claimant, Jack Land, a supervisor, “was coming along there.” Claimant reported the injury to Land. Land testified, “I called the office on the radio to call the doctor, that [claimant] had fell and hurt himself.” Asked what time this was, Land replied, “Approximately quarter after 12:00.” Land directed Halbrook to take claimant to the doctor.

Halbrook took claimant to a hospital; en route Halbrook heard claimant complain of pain in his back.

Eleanor Dixon, a friend of claimant, testified she was with him the evening before he was hurt. According to Eleanor, claimant was walking fine and had no pain. She had known claimant about a year before the accident, during which time claimant never said anything about back pain. Eleanor saw claimant leave for work about 6:30 a.m., May 31,1985. He did not appear hurt and had no complaint about his back. Eleanor took claimant’s lunch to his place of employment about 11:15 a.m., meeting claimant in the parking lot. Claimant walked “normally” to Eleanor’s vehicle, entered, and ate lunch. Eleanor testified, “I was there till about five till 12:00 before he had to go back.” Eleanor avowed claimant uttered no complaint about back pain during lunch.

Larry Whitaker, a friend of claimant, testified that claimant came to Whitaker’s home to borrow a tool the night before claimant got hurt. Whitaker recalled claimant walking “normal.” Two weeks earlier, according to Whitaker, claimant had hauled manure for Whitaker’s garden and had unloaded it with a pitchfork. On [893]*893that occasion, said Whitaker, claimant had mentioned nothing about back pain or any back problem.

Garth Samuel Russell, an orthopedic surgeon specializing in injuries to the spine, examined claimant October 2, 1985, some four months after the alleged accident. Russell testified: “[Ejxamination ... revealed a rigid back. It had severe muscle spasm, almost no movement in his back at all.” Russell’s diagnosis was a herniated disc. Russell performed surgery on claimant October 14,1985, characterized by Russell as “a partial laminectomy at the L-5/S-l area on the right side ... with a fusion from L-5 to the sacrum.”

Asked to assume claimant’s version of his fall was true, Russell testified: “It’s my medical opinion, based upon reasonable medical certainty, based on [claimant’s] history, based upon his physical examination and his clinical course that his injury to his back did [occur] as a result of the fall which he stated occurred on May the 31st of 1985.” Russell assessed claimant’s injury as “a permanent partial impairment of 35 percent as rated at the lumbar spine or whole body.”

Maintenance foreman Jerry Enke, a 16-year employee of Floyd Charcoal, testified he walked with claimant to the instant lite building prior to 10:30 a.m., May 31, 1985, “to check the voltage on the heat sealer to take it out and install another sewing machine.” As they walked, said Enke, claimant remarked that “his back was hurting him.” Enke’s testimony:

“Q ... Did he mention ... anything that he wanted done as far as his back?
A No. Just had to do something, it was hurting him.
[[Image here]]
Q ... when you were with [claimant] that morning, was he walking bent over in pain?
A Somewhat, kind of walking slow.
Q Walking slow. But he wasn’t doubled over in pain, was he?
A No.
[[Image here]]
Q Are you familiar with disconnecting the voltage from the heat seal?
A Mm-hmm.
Q Your opinion, would it be necessary to climb on the conveyor to disconnect the wiring?
[[Image here]]
A No.
[[Image here]]
Q You said it’s not necessary to climb on the conveyor to get to the box?
A No. You can get reach it from standing on the floor.
Q Okay. You could get on it, though, to get to the box?
A You could, yeah.
[[Image here]]
Q Would it be difficult if you climbed on the conveyor?
A Well, it would be inconvenient. You’d have to squat down after you got up on the conveyor; you’d be too tall.
[[Image here]]
Q That depends on how tall you are?
A Right.
Q Might be more convenient for a short man to get on the belt, wouldn’t it?
A Yeah.”

Don Cochran, another foreman, testified he was working with claimant in the maintenance shop “[r]ight before noon” May 31, 1985. Cochran recounted, “[Claimant] said when we got up ... to go to dinner ... he thought he was going to have to go to the doctor because his back was bothering him.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
776 S.W.2d 891, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1324, 1989 WL 105612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatcher-v-charcoal-moctapp-1989.