Hindes v. Industrial Accident Commission

239 P. 339, 73 Cal. App. 726, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 412
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 25, 1925
DocketDocket No. 5227.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 239 P. 339 (Hindes v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hindes v. Industrial Accident Commission, 239 P. 339, 73 Cal. App. 726, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 412 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

TYLER, P. J.

Certiorari by which petitioners seek to have set aside and annulled an award of the Industrial Accident Commission, upon the ground that the Commission in entering the same acted without and in excess of its powers and that the findings and award are unreasonable; that the evidence does not sustain the findings of fact and that such findings do not support the award.

It is admitted that petitioners’ statement of the facts are in all material essentials correct. It appears therefrom, in substance, that by an application dated July 10, 1922, the respondent Emil Nasta applied for a hearing before the Industrial Accident Commission upon a claim wherein he asserted that on the fifth day of May, 1922, he was injured in a task arising out of and in the course of his employment for petitioner S. C. Hindes. Thereafter hearings were regularly had before the Commission from which the following facts appeared: That on or about May 5, 1922, Nasta, while working for Hindes, sustained a strain of the sacroiliac joint in the sacrum; that he was under the care of doctors for a period of sixteen days; that he awoke one morning and found his lower limbs paralyzed. Nasta had previously, in 1920, suffered from an illness extending from the lumbar region of the spine to the lower extremities which caused him pain and numbness with consequent disability for a period of six months. X-rays taken at that time showed *728 a vertebral anomaly in the nature of a wedge-shaped vertebra. Subsequently Nasta had recovered the function of his legs and had been working up to the time of the strain of the sacroiliac joint on May 5, 1922. The medical evidence upon the original hearing herein, relating to the paralysis suffered by Nasta, was conflicting. There was, however, evidence to show that it was in nowise connected with nor caused by the strain of the sacroiliac joint on May 5, 1922; that it was of spinal cord origin caused by disease affecting that member, the exact nature of which could not be determined without an operation exposing the same, but it probably was related to and caused by the same disease originating in the illness of 1920.

In accordance with this medical evidence the Industrial Accident Commission made and filed its findings of fact and award under date of October 16, 1922, wherein it was held that the disability caused by the strain of May 5, 1922, was a temporary one only and entitled the applicant to compensation for four weeks of disability amounting to three weeks of indemnity at $20.83 a week, a total of $62.49. This temporary disability ended on June 2, 1922. The Commission further found that about two weeks after the injury the employee developed a paralysis of the legs caused by some obscure spinal trouble. It also found that such spinal disease was not caused by the injury and no compensation was allowed for the paralysis, but only for the period the employee was presumably disabled as a result of the back strain directly.

Within twenty days after this conclusion by the Commission, Nasta filed a petition for rehearing. On December 18, 1922, his petition was granted.

Thereafter, upon proceedings regularly had, further medical testimony was taken upon the question of paralysis. There was a sharp conflict in this evidence. Some of the experts were of the opinion that the suffered strain could have caused a hemorrhage into the spinal cord which would account for the paralysis. Others were of a contrary opinion, as they testified that the condition of Nasta showed that his ailment was strictly of systematic origin not arising from injury.

With this evidence before it the Commission subsequently and on the twenty-sixth day of February, 1924, made and *729 filed its findings of fact and decision. It found as upon the first hearing, that the applicant had sustained an injury in the course of and arising out of his employment consisting of a strain of the right sacroiliac joint; that about two weeks after this injury he developed paralysis of the legs caused by some obscure spinal trouble. The Commission accordingly determined that such spinal disease and the paralysis of the legs was not caused by the injury and that no compensation was due for such paralysis, but only for the period the employee would presumably have been disabled as a result of the back and sacroiliac strain, which was fixed at three months from the date of the injury. An award was accordingly made for the sum of $252.94 to cover this period of temporary disability due to the strain. This amount was paid to the applicant by the defendant insurance carrier.

No petition for a rehearing was made to this decision within the twenty days prescribed by the Workmen’s Compensation Act, nor was any petition for writ of review made to an appellate court therefrom within thirty days and the decision became final March 28, 1924.

Seven months thereafter, on the thirty-first day of October, 1924, Nasta filed with the Commission a petition for reopening of his case under section 20(d) [Stats. 1917, p. 850], wherein it was set forth that the injury suffered by him had become permanent and should be treated as a “permanent disability.”

Defendants appeared and contested the jurisdiction of the Commission, setting forth that no appeal or other proceedings had been initiated by the applicant within the time allowed by law and that the matter had therefore become res judicata; that the condition from which the applicant suffered having been held to be noncompensable it was immaterial whether it was “permanent” or “temporary” in character and that the decision was final.

Thereafter hearings were held before the Commission upon the application where it appeared, according to evidence produced by the applicant, that about January, 1924, Nasta had burned his left foot and that he had been confined to his home by reason thereof until the latter part of May, 1924. That, although still totally disabled from work due *730 to Ms paralysis, he became ambulatory about the latter period and visited the office of the Commission, at which time he discussed the case with its medical director. That by reason of this use of his leg, he broke a blister on his left foot and was again confined to his home until approximately September 7, 1924, when he began to get around. That previously, by the use of a foot-brace stabilizing his lower extremities, he had been able to shuffle about, notwithstanding his paralysis. That the brace which he used to correct his right “foot drop” had worn out and that he had discarded it. That on or about September 15, 1924, he visited the University of California Hospital Clinic to consult doctors as to what might be done for the pain and weakness of his right leg, and while going down a stairway, using a cane to aid him in his progress, he fell and strained and wrenched his right side.

The applicant further testified that he had been troubled with this pain and weakness in his back and leg ever since the original accident and that while his condition was improved and he was getting better while he remained in bed, when he had commenced to walk around and visit the clinic the pain and weakness again returned and at the time of his fall he had not slipped, but his leg had buckled up or given way under him.

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Bluebook (online)
239 P. 339, 73 Cal. App. 726, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hindes-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1925.