Lewis v. Anaconda Company

543 P.2d 1339, 168 Mont. 463, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 512
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1975
Docket12852
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 543 P.2d 1339 (Lewis v. Anaconda Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Anaconda Company, 543 P.2d 1339, 168 Mont. 463, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 512 (Mo. 1975).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This appeal originates from an industrial accident which occurred on December 7, 1960. Plaintiff Rex K. Lewis was at that time an employee of defendant Anaconda Company. While performing his duties as a boilermaker, he was injured to the extent of a fractured left wrist and a fracture of both nasal bones. He was awarded $229.44 in temporary total disability benefits pursuant to section 92-701, R.C.M.1947. On March 27, 1961, a petition for lump sum settlement in the amount of $1,825 was approved by the Industrial Accident Board but Lewis received no part of this award. Over ten years later, an investigation revealed that this petition had been forged by a claims manager of the Anaconda Company.

An action on Lewis’ behalf was thereafter commenced contending that his injuries entitled him to that lump sum settlement, and that the allegedly fraudulent actions of the Anaconda Company’s agent had effectively deprived him of that award. The action was dismissed by the district court in Deer Lodge County for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. That decision was appealed to this *465 Court. "We affirmed the district court and ruled that the forged documents were not, by themselves, sufficient to establish a right to relief and this Court had no jurisdiction to make such a determination until the proper administrative procedures were exhausted in proceedings before the Industrial Accident Board. Lewis v. Anaconda Company, 160 Mont. 478, 503 P.2d 535.

Lewis then petitioned the Workmen’s Compensation Division for consideration of his case and hearing was held on April 17, 1973. Its decision was adverse to Lewis. He was granted a rehearing, which also resulted in an unfavorable ruling. An appeal was taken to the district court, Deer Lodge County. On August 12, 1974, judgment was entered specifically sustaining the findings and conclusions of the Workmen’s Compensation Division and denying the appeal in its entirety.

In the more than ten year interim between the time that Lewis’s industrial accident occurred and the time that his case was reopened before the Workmen’s Compensation Division, Lewis engaged in a number of different occupations. Approximately two months after the accident he returned to the Anaconda Company as a boilermaker, where he was on restrictive duty in the welding shop. This employment was voluntarily terminated by Lewis nine months later, allegedly because of the residual effects of his injuries. Lewis then leased a service station and was self-employed in the year 1962. This lease was terminated in the latter part of 1962, and for the next seven years Lewis held a number of different jobs in various states. On January 1, 1969, Lewis became a permanent member of the Anaconda police department. Two years later he suffered another industrial accident in the course of his employment as a police officer which resulted in the fracture of his right wrist. He was awarded a lump sum settlement for permanent partial disability in the amount of $3500.

*466 Lewis’ appeal to this Court is based primarily on the premise that the Workmen’s Compensation Division acted in total disregard of uncontradicted credible evidence in denying his claim for relief and the district court erred in sustaining such action.

Lewis points out that under Montana’s legislative scheme an injured workman may elect to proceed under either of two statutory sections in order to establish his right to compensation.

Under section 92-703, R.C.M.1947, the claimant’s right to recover depends upon his ability to demonstrate an actual loss of earnings and the number of persons dependent upon him. But, recovery under section 92-709, R.C.M.1947, is based on a specific statutory schedule, and proof of an actual loss of earnings is not required. Spieth v. Stuart, 130 Mont. 216, 299 P.2d 106. Thus, under one section the claimant is compensated for his actual loss of wages, while the other provides the claimant with an indemnity for the loss of possible future earnings in an amount determined by the legislature. Jones v. Glacier General Assurance Co., 145 Mont. 326, 400 P.2d 888.

The conclusion of the Workmen’s Compensation Division was that Lewis failed to demonstrate any permanent partial disability resulting from his I960 injury, and he was therefore not entitled to recover under either of the above provisions. With respect to section 92-703, R.C.M.1947, the Division placed particular emphasis on several of its numerous findings of fact: 1) that the claimant had voluntarily terminated his employment with the company in order to operate his service station; 2) that no evidence was offered regarding the amount of claimant’s earnings in the years between 1963 .and 1968; and 3) that claimant has been steadily employed .as a police officer since 1969. The Division specifically recognized the existence of some evidence tending to establish that Lewis had indeed suffered some loss of earning over the years. But, in the Division’s view, Lewis simply failed to *467 establish by a preponderance of credible evidence that this loss of earnings or earning capacity was a result of the industrial accident.

In support of its denial of relief under section 92-709, R.C.M. 1947, the Division offered these findings of fact as promulgated, by the hearings officer in the May 23, 1973, hearing:

“21. That there is no credible evidence in the file or the record that the claimant ever sought or received medical treatment for the injury to his left wrist from early 1961 untiL at the request of his attorney he saw Dr. George E. Trobóugh on March 11, 1972, more than eleven years after his accident, and further, there is no credible evidence in the record that the claimant ever complained of any permanent physical disablement resulting from that injury during the ten or eleven years following the injury.

“22. That Dr. George E. Trobough testified that when he saw the claimant more than eleven years after the injury, the claimant was suffering from a twenty-five percent permanent residual disability to the body as a whole.

“23. That the claimant was examined on March 26, 1973,. by Dr. Charles E. Buehler, Butte, Montana, who reported that he could ‘find no physical abnormalities with this man’s; left wrist to warrant any permanent disability from this accident.’ ”

Under these facts, the district court specifically found the •Workmen’s Compensation Division to have regularly pursued its authority, and its findings of fact were reasonable under the circumstances. It was therefore incumbent upon the district court to sustain those findings and the resulting conclusions of law. Section 92-834, R.C.M.1947; DeLeary v. Anaconda Aluminum Co., 168 Mont. 208, 541 P.2d 788, 32 St.Rep. 1041; Hurlbut v. Vollstedt Kerr Co., 167 Mont. 303, 538 P.2d. 344, 32 St.Rep. 752; Birnie v. U. S. Gypsum Co., 134 Mont.

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Bluebook (online)
543 P.2d 1339, 168 Mont. 463, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-anaconda-company-mont-1975.