House v. State Accident Insurance Fund

530 P.2d 872, 20 Or. App. 150, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 1574
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 20, 1975
Docket3657
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 530 P.2d 872 (House v. State Accident Insurance Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
House v. State Accident Insurance Fund, 530 P.2d 872, 20 Or. App. 150, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 1574 (Or. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

PORT, J.

Prank B. House, claimant herein, was a 41-year-old heavy equipment operator employed by Prank G. *152 Baulne, Inc., when he injured his hack in an on-the-job accident in 1966. On September 30, 1966, the State Compensation Department (now the State Accident Insurance Fund) denied his workman’s compensation claim. Subsequently, a referee of the Workmen’s Compensation Board Hearings Division remanded the claim to the department and ordered its acceptance. Pursuant thereto, the department issued a second determination order awarding claimant 25 per cent of the maximum available for unscheduled low back disability. On appeal to a referee, claimant was granted permanent total disability status. The Workmen’s Compensation Board subsequently reduced this award to 50 per cent of the maximum available for unscheduled low back disability. On appeal to the circuit court, the award was again revised, this time to 75 per cent of such maximum. The case comes before us on claimant’s contention that he is entitled to a permanent, total disability rating.

Claimant’s medical history prior to the accident herein includes a long-term problem with a bizarre form of seizure, characterized by a sudden feeling that the head is exploding and an uncontrollable flailing of the arms and legs. These seizures have been diagnosed as hysterical rather than epileptic in nature. Nevertheless, medication prevents the attacks.

Claimant suffered his first lower back injury in 1963 when a large rock fell on the cab of the truck he was driving, causing the vehicle to bounce two feet off the ground. While he was able to return to work within three to four weeks, lower back and left leg pains continued to trouble him. As a result, he was thereafter forced to miss work occasionally.

*153 Mr. House’s injury which is the subject of this claim occurred on May 12, 1966, while he was lifting a heavy spare tire into the back of a pickup truck. Severe pains in his lower back and left leg resulted. He consulted a chiropractor who, four days after the injury, allowed him to return to work with the restriction that he was to do no heavy lifting.

For the next two years, claimant worked off and on as a truck driver to the extent his condition allowed. He testified that he could only tolerate driving trucks with a sufficiently soft ride. He received no treatment during this period, except for chiropractic therapy which was completed in August 1966. Finally, in 1968, claimant was forced to give up his job when faced with the assignment of driving a truck with an uncomfortable ride. There is no evidence in the record that he has held a regular paying job since.

Beginning in 1968, claimant underwent a series of physical and psychological examinations and attempts at rehabilitation. In April 1968, orthopedic examinations were conducted by Dr. Howard E. Johnson of Pendleton. Dr. Johnson evaluated claimant as “a healthy appearing man in no acute distress.” The results of the physical examination were essentially normal, except for a weak Achilles response. X-rays revealed some abnormalities: slight irregularity involving the anterior superior border of IA; localized arthritic lipping involving the anterior superior border of L4; minimal narrowing of the disc space between L5-S1; pseudo-sacrilization of the left 5th transverse process with some schlerosis at the pseudo articulation and left sacroiliac joint; and arteriosclerosis involving the abdominal aorta. However, there was “essentially no change” when compared with X-rays taken in 1963, *154 with the exception of increased calcification in the abdominal aorta. Dr. Johnson concluded that claimant was “well enough that further treatment would not be indicated,” and recommended vocational rehabilitation toward a line of work more compatible with his back condition. After a subsequent examination in December 1968 revealed a total absence of Achilles response (although no other significant changes), Dr. Johnson recommended further diagnostic procedures.

During early 1969, an electromyogram, pantopaque myleogram, and conduction velocity studies were performed on claimant. All proved negative, and the possibility of a herniated intervertebral disc lesion was ruled out. On May 5,1969, Dr. Bobert Dow, a neurologist, stated that claimant’s condition was medically stationary.

On May 3,1971, Dr. Herman A. Dickel performed a psychiatric examination of claimant. Dr. Dickel diagnosed him as “profoundly, though not psychotically, depressed.” He was found to have “a long history of insecurity and immaturity, with a proneness to develop symptoms under stress.” The condition was considered to be non-permanent but requiring a carefully administered combination of treatment and retraining in order for recovery to take place. Dr. Dickel interpreted tests as “pretty much rule [sic—ruling] out any ‘malingering’ or ‘voluntary choice of symptoms’ * *

On January 31, 1972, the State Accident Insurance Fund referred claimant to the Disability Prevention Division for vocational rehabilitation plus psychiatric care. The Division diagnosed his physical condition as chronic lumbrosacral strain. Dr. Norman W. Hickman, a clinical psychologist, evaluated him as suffer *155 ing from “a moderately severe anxiety tension reaction with probable conversion symptoms and depression.” He was further characterized as a somewhat immature and unstable person with strong feelings of fear and inadequacy.

Claimant’s initial enrollment period at the Disability Prevention Division was unsuccessful, and he was discharged in April 1972. Psychological counseling continued, however, through the remainder of the year. On December 4, 1972, Dr. Hickman reported claimant as “thoroughly cooperative * # * [h]is level of self-confidence has consistently improved to the point * * * [where he] has made some positive steps to apply for a job.”

The improvement, however, proved to be short-lived. In January 1973, Dr. Diekel characterized claimant as a man who “probably has little desire, or motivation, to further correct his condition.” During the same period, Mr. Darrell Klampe, a vocational rehabilitation counselor assigned to the case, reported claimant to be a man with “little motivation in finding employment as long as he receives benefits from the state every two weeks * * * I do not feel that Mr. House really wants to work unless the job is right in the town of Moro. We have found several job opportunities for Mr. House but he has come up with an excuse which prevents him from taking the job.”

Claimant was reevaluated by the Disability Prevention Division in August 1973. The following recommendation was made with regard to his physical condition :

um # * # #
“* * * We believe that no surgical treatment is indicated. Physical condition is stationary. The *156 patient should not return to his former occupation, but could return to some occupation. He should be discharged from the DPD.

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Bluebook (online)
530 P.2d 872, 20 Or. App. 150, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 1574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/house-v-state-accident-insurance-fund-orctapp-1975.