J. G. Boswell Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission

154 P.2d 13, 67 Cal. App. 2d 347
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 1944
DocketCiv. 3168
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 13 (J. G. Boswell Co. 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
J. G. Boswell Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission, 154 P.2d 13, 67 Cal. App. 2d 347 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is a proceeding to review an award of the Industrial Accident Commission in favor of Jack Owings, holding that he sustained a 100 per cent permanent disability and awarding him $5,445.60, payable over 240 weeks, $13.96 a week thereafter for the duration of his life, and also medical and hospital care, including insulin, for the treatment and relief of diabetes, for the remainder of his life.

Owings, who was 33 years old, was employed as a caretaker and repair man in cotton gins operated by J. G. Boswell Company. In May, 1939, before any injury occurred, both of his ankles became swollen and diabetes was suspected. Hospital tests did not indicate the existence of excess sugar and the condition cleared up in a few weeks. On August 22, 1939, he was struck on the head by a pulley which had broken loose and suffered a fracture of the right cheek bone and concussion of the brain. He did not return to work until August 16, 1940, and then was usually given light work although occasionally doing some heavy lifting. He complained of nervousness and fatigue, and other troubles, when overheated or doing heavy work and occasionally laid off for a few days. On March 25, 1943, he carried some heavy sacks of sand in some emergency work, during which he collapsed. On April 1, 1943, he felt something wrong with-his left foot, and this seems to have developed into a partial paralysis of the left leg. He continued to work until April 10, 1943, and shortly thereafter was examined by Dr. Howard Brown, a brain specialist of San Francisco, who reported that the condition of the left leg was due to pressure on a nerve caused by a ruptured intervertebral disc, and that this condition was not related to the injury of 1939.

Thereafter, an application was filed with the Industrial Accident Commission and hearings were held over a consid *349 erable period, the applicant being represented by two able attorneys of Hanford. Finally, on April 10, 1944, an award was made as above indicated. A rehearing was asked for largely on the ground of bias on the part of the referee who had conducted the hearings and that a fair and impartial hearing had not been had. A rehearing was denied and this proceeding followed.

While the petitioners concede that there is some evidence in the record to sustain the findings made, it is earnestly contended that the award should be annulled and a rehearing ordered because the record clearly discloses such bias on the part of the referee as prevented them from having a fair and impartial trial, and that in certain respects they have never had their “day in court.” We think this contention must be sustained.

At the first hearing, the applicant testified and a report by Dr. Rosson was introduced which described the conditions found but did not express any opinion as to the relation between the disability and the injury of August 22, 1939. The report of Dr. Brown was also introduced. Before any other evidence was introduced the referee remarked that this last report was “a surprising report to me,” and criticized it “with all due respect to Dr. Brown’s eminence as a specialist in this line” because it failed to comment on the significance of the fact “that this man’s brain was injured on the right side and there is an affection of his left lower extremity.” In reply to counsel’s suggestion that he was not a doctor and a question as to what was his diagnosis the referee replied: “My diagnosis is that he got an injury to the right side of his brain, and that there is some involvment there in the brain that has affected the other side of his body, affected his leg.’’ The referee then stated: “I have just as much right to deal with conjectural language as Dr. Brown” and that when “you see a man that’s got an injury like that, and he claims symptoms that are reasonably attributable to that injury, and in the general nature of things, then, you don’t have to speculate and guess at three or four other things that could possibly be the cause of it, when the most reasonable cause of it is right before you.” When reminded that Dr. Brown stated that these were not the centers that were affected the referee remarked “I am simply not impressed by Dr. Brown’s report.” The referee then remarked that you don’t have to be a nerve specialist in a case like this but that “you are liable to get a better report from a general *350 practitioner than a specialist.” He then suggested that the applicant should be examined by Dr. Mathias of Tulare.

The applicant was examined by Dr. Mathias who filed a report stating that he had suffered a recent partial paralysis of the left leg and expressing the opinion that this was an after-result of his original head injury. At the next hearing Dr. Mathias was cross-examined. He expressed the opinion that specialists should be consulted. It then developed that the insurance carrier had arranged for the applicant to be again examined by Dr. Brown but that the applicant had refused because he was told by an office assistant that Dr. Brown intended to make another spinal test. The applicant had had three such tests previously, and the referee interrupted the proceedings several times to express himself very forcefully that the applicant did not have to subject himself to a spinal puncture. Dr. Mathias then testified as to why he thought the present leg condition was related to the old head injury and said that any use of alcohol was not advisable for a patient in this condition. The referee then attempted at some length, but without much success, to get him to confirm the fact that such a brain injury might later lead to diabetes. The doctor stated that he knew nothing about it. This is the first mention of diabetes in the record. At this hearing a report from Dr. Eidenmuller of San Francisco was introduced. He attributed the present condition of the left leg of the applicant to the accident of August 22, 1939. He attributed some of the applicant’s symptoms and complaints to diabetes, which he said became severe in January, 1943. He further stated that it would be natural to believe that the onset of the severe diabetes and the leg condition which developed some months later may have a common cause in the brain injury sustained in 1939; that, on the other hand, it is possible that the severe diabetes caused the leg condition; and that if the records of two hospitals failed to show the presence of diabetes at the times the applicant was in these hospitals then the connection of the diabetes with the accident would be more remote (it. was later shown that the records of these hospitals failed to show this situation).

It appears that some time before, when the applicant went to San Francisco at the request of the insurance carrier for further examination by Dr. Brown and refused to be so examined, he had gone to see the referee at his San Francisco office. The referee sent him to Dr. Eidenmuller and talked to that doctor before the report was made. This general *351 situation and the surrounding circumstances resulted in considerable controversy at the subsequent hearings.

At the next hearing, Dr. Eidenmuller was cross-examined.

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192 P.2d 1 (California Supreme Court, 1948)
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Bluebook (online)
154 P.2d 13, 67 Cal. App. 2d 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-g-boswell-co-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1944.