Heiliger v. Walters & Heiliger Electric, Inc.

461 N.W.2d 565, 236 Neb. 459, 1990 Neb. LEXIS 323
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1990
Docket90-013
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 461 N.W.2d 565 (Heiliger v. Walters & Heiliger Electric, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heiliger v. Walters & Heiliger Electric, Inc., 461 N.W.2d 565, 236 Neb. 459, 1990 Neb. LEXIS 323 (Neb. 1990).

Opinion

Shanahan, J.

Walters and Heiliger Electric, Inc. (W & H Electric), appeals from an award on rehearing by the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court in favor of Duane P. Heiliger (Heiliger). We affirm.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Findings of fact made by the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court after rehearing have the same force and effect as a jury verdict in a civil case. [Citations omitted.] In testing the sufficiency of evidence to support findings of fact made by the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court after rehearing, the evidence must be considered in the light most favorable to the successful party. [Citations omitted.] Factual determinations by the Workers’ Compensation Court will not be set aside on *461 appeal unless such determinations are clearly erroneous. Regarding facts determined and findings made after rehearing in the Workers’ Compensation Court, § 48-185 precludes the Supreme Court’s substitution of its view of facts for that of the Workers’ Compensation Court if the record contains evidence to substantiate the factual conclusions reached by the Workers’ Compensation Court. [Citations omitted.] As the trier of fact, the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court is the sole judge of the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given testimony.

Fees v. Rivett Lumber Co., 228 Neb. 617, 620, 423 N.W.2d 483, 486 (1988); Mendoza v. Omaha Meat Processors, 225 Neb. 771, 408 N.W.2d 280 (1987); Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-185 (Reissue 1988).

BACKGROUND FOR CLAIM

Heiliger’s Injury.

As a shareholder and president of W & H Electric, a corporate electrical contractor, Heiliger was also employed as an electrician for W & H Electric and was frequently involved in its electrical work. In his duties as an electrician, Heiliger lifted heavy objects such as spools of copper wire. Before March 16, 1988, Heiliger was also responsible for onsite management of W & H Electric’s projects, work which required that he drive to each of the company’s projects and help individual workers. Heiliger’s only office work involved W & H Electric’s occasional bidding on new projects.

On March 16, 1988, Heiliger and a fellow worker, Eugene Walters, who was also the vice president and office manager of W & H Electric, were transferring “[t]housand foot reels of copper wire” from a pickup to a storage trailer at one of W & H Electric’s jobsites. Each spool, weighing slightly more than 100 pounds, had to be moved from the pickup into the trailer’s doorway, which was about 2 feet above the bed of the pickup. Heiliger, facing generally toward the spools in the pickup and with his feet stationary on the pickup’s bed, lifted a spool and, in a “twisting motion,” placed the spool in the trailer’s elevated entry. During the process of lifting and twisting with a spool of *462 wire, Heiliger “felt a sensation in his back,” and experienced “back and leg pain, mainly leg pain.” According to Heiliger, “I knew that I’d — I’d injured myself.” At that point, Heiliger told Walters that Heiliger had sustained “this [back] injury.” A year earlier, Heiliger had a back malady of undetermined origin and had undergone disk surgery in March 1987, but had experienced no back problem for the “eight to nine” months immediately preceding March 1988. When Walters and Heiliger returned to W & H Electric’s shop on March 16, Heiliger told other W & H Electric employees that he had injured his back earlier that day.

Heiliger’s Medical Treatment and Surgery.

On account of persistent back pain, on March 30, 1988, Heiliger went to the office of Dr. Ramon R. Salumbides, the surgeon who had performed a hemilaminectomy on Heiliger in March 1987. Regarding Heiliger’s previous hemilaminectomy, Dr. Salumbides had noted in 1987:

Patient approximately three weeks now post lumbar laminectomy and disc excision of L5-S1 on the left side. He does not complain of any severe pain in his back or leg. ... He occasionally has some tightness which is experienced in the lumbar area. Upon certain turning he will experience some achiness also in the posterior aspect of the left thigh but rather mild.
EXAMINATION: The wound is healing well. No tenderness over the operative site. Straight leg raising test is bilaterally negative. His gait is normal. Patient is able to flex his back 90 degrees but would experience some discomfort in the back of the left thigh.
Post-operative course is quite satisfactory.

At the time of Heiliger’s March 1988 visit, Dr. Salumbides recorded the following:

MAR 30 1988 [Heiliger] is returning for a consult because of recurrence of back pain. He states that two weeks ago he did some heavy lifting involving weights of up to about 100 pounds. He was lifting wires weighing that much and was transferring and twisting his back in the process. He then experienced sudden and severe pain in his *463 lumbar area with radiation towards the left buttock. Much of the pain is mostly concentrated over his lumbar are[a]. He feels that he describes a funny sensation in the posterior aspect of the left thigh but no actual pain. He has not had any treatment in the form of medications or physical therapy since that time. Over the last two days he feels much better. Sitting and walking is well tolerated. Turning from side to side while in bed on occasion causes some discomfort. Getting out of bed in the morning is also most difficult for him.

When Heiliger’s back pain persisted, Dr. Salumbides, on April 28, 1988, reexamined Heiliger and later recommended another hemilaminectomy, which Dr. Salumbides performed on May 3, 1988, at the same general site as the previous hemilaminectomy, the fifth lumbar and first sacral vertebras.

Immediately after his 1988 hemilaminectomy, Heiliger recuperated at home. Dr. Salumbides initially recommended that Heiliger neither drive a vehicle nor lift heavy objects and, 30 days after the hemilaminectomy, placed Heiliger on a 20-pound limit in lifting. At that point, Heiliger returned to work, but was unable to tolerate the pain generated from standing for any significant time and was unable to perform manual labor for W & H Electric. During this postoperative employment with W & H Electric, Heiliger reviewed electrical plans and gave advice concerning the company’s projects. When it became evident that Heiliger could not work the same as he had done before the injury in 1988, Heiliger sold his W & H Electric shares to Walters and left the company’s employment on July 12, 1988, because W & H Electric needed only one office manager — Walters.

Subsequently, on January 10,1989, Dr. Salumbides made the following notation in his records concerning Heiliger:

RECOMMENDATION: 1. Patient has been advised still to refrain from heavy lifting if at all possible.
2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
461 N.W.2d 565, 236 Neb. 459, 1990 Neb. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heiliger-v-walters-heiliger-electric-inc-neb-1990.