Hosking v. METROPOLITAN HOUSE MOVERS CORPORATION

138 N.W.2d 404, 272 Minn. 390, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 667
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 5, 1965
Docket39848
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 138 N.W.2d 404 (Hosking v. METROPOLITAN HOUSE MOVERS CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hosking v. METROPOLITAN HOUSE MOVERS CORPORATION, 138 N.W.2d 404, 272 Minn. 390, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 667 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

Certiorari to review a decision of the Industrial Commission awarding benefits against relator-employer to respondent-employee.

Dorothy Hosking, employee of Metropolitan House Movers Corporation, was injured while in such employ on October 18, 1961, through the collapse of the secretarial chair on which she was sitting. The record indicates that the steel posts in the back of the chair hit the floor and, as a result, struck her in the back. On the day following the accident she was admitted to Bethesda Hospital in St. Paul, where she remained for 2 days. During her stay at the hospital and for a period of 2 weeks thereafter, she was treated by Dr. Richard Johnson, an orthopedist. After this time she returned to her job for part-time work. In September 1962 she found it necessary to seek further treatment for her back and at that time consulted Dr. John Fee, an internist.

Dr. Fee testified that Mrs. Hosking had sustained a previous injury to her back in a toboggan accident which occurred some 28 years prior to suffering the present injury. (Mrs. Hosking testified that the toboggan injury had caused her no lasting pain or discomfort beyond that of a few days and that the only other back pains she had suffered in the intervening period were during her pregnancies.) Dr. Fee further testified that, in his opinion, the toboggan accident had no bearing on Mrs. Hosking’s present condition, and also stated that, in his opinion, the fall from the chair in the employer’s office caused her present ailment.

Dr. Fee, under cross-examination, explained that as an internist he treated nonsurgical diseases of adults and that relating to bone injuries treatment on his part would be only in reference to diagnosis and nonsurgical treatment. His diagnosis indicated that Mrs. Hosking was suffering from three conditions, namely, a wedge or compression fracture, *392 a narrowing of the lumbo-sacral disc, and mild osteoporosis. Dr. Fee explained his diagnosis by the following on cross-examination:

“Q. This disc disease, doctor have you diagnosed this disease or is this a possibility?
“A. No, she has disc disease. X-ray showed it and straight leg raising tests which she had when I first examined her. This would never be related to T12, never, but would have to be related to low lumbar injury where there is pressure on the nerve that supplies the leg. When you bring the leg up you pull the nerve up against either the iliac foramina or the disc.”

Dr. Fee explained the progression of Mrs. Hosking’s lumbar disc between the date of the accident and his own first X ray in September 1962, as follows:

“Q. Well, doctor, when a person aggravates a disc by an injury are you going to see narrowing on the day of the aggravation?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Or the day after?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Doesn’t it take a period of time?
“A. Yes.
“Q. For the narrowing to appear on X-ray?
“A. Yes.
“Q. And isn’t that exactly what happened here between October 1961 and your first X-ray of September 1962?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Is that consistent then with your opinion that the injury aggravated her disc condition?
“A. That is correct.”

Employer contends that Dr. Fee had relied on the X-ray interpretation of other experts for his opinion. While Dr. Fee testified that when he first made a complete examination of Mrs. Hosking’s back he himself took X rays and read his own X rays, he said that in such a matter as this “we have someone else interpret them because we are not radiologists.” He was asked, “Did the roentgenologist’s interpretation agree with your *393 own reading?” He answered, “Yes, except I felt she had narrowing in the lumbo-sacral junction and he didn’t mention this on his report.”

Dr. Fee expressed his own opinion in the following language:

“With the clinical history, and this is what we depend upon more than X-ray findings or anything else, we have a patient who has had an accident that wé know can producé the mechanics of a fracture, and they find a fracture, and there may be a disagreement as to its age, but it is our opinion that this was a recent fracture from reviewing the films, that this woman did at this time from falling off the swivel chair suffer a fracture of T-12.”

The following answer by Dr. Fee, when questioned on cross-examination, would hardly support the claim that he based that opinion on someone else’s expert opinion:

“Q. Is it possible, doctor, to be anywhere near specific as far as whether this is a new or old fracture?
“A. It is highly more probable and looking at the film that this is a new fracture than one occurring when she had the toboggan accident. A fracture twenty years ago, I would expect much more sclerosis, ebernation, and hypertrophic changes around the vertebrae with a fracture or injury that long ago.”

Dr. Fee disqualified himself from expressing a rating as to permanent partial disability, indicating that this evaluation would have to be done by an orthopedist. He made it clear that she had three conditions that are permanent — the narrowing of the lumbosacral joint, the disc degeneration, and a fracture.

The record shows that Mrs. Hosking was examined in May 1963 by Dr. Harry Hall, an orthopedic surgeon, at the employer’s request. She was also examined before the hearing by Dr. Meyer J. Goldner, an orthopedic surgeon, at her request. Both of these orthopedists testified. Their testimony was contradictory in many, if not in all, respects.

Dr. Goldner apparently agreed with Dr. Fee on diagnosis and causal relationship. He testified as follows:

“Q. Now, what is your diagnosis of her condition; aside from the compression fracture do you believe she has a disc problem?
*394 “A. Ido.
“Q. And that that is causally related to the industrial accident?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Would you explain what that disc problem is in your opinion, what the extent of the problem is?
“A. Well, the X-rays taken in my office on May 18, 1964, as compared to those films taken in October of 1961 show a considerable increase in the narrowing of the disc space between L5 and the sacrum. I think that this represents a severe degree of degeneration that was brought on or accelerated by the injury that she sustained at that time.
“Q. Is it true, doctor, that an injury can set off symptoms of disc degeneration but the narrowing noted on X-ray will take sometime to make itself known?
“A. Yes.

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Bluebook (online)
138 N.W.2d 404, 272 Minn. 390, 1965 Minn. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hosking-v-metropolitan-house-movers-corporation-minn-1965.