Lowman v. Industrial Com. of Arizona

96 P.2d 405, 54 Ariz. 413, 1939 Ariz. LEXIS 165
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1939
DocketCivil No. 4142.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 96 P.2d 405 (Lowman v. Industrial Com. of Arizona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowman v. Industrial Com. of Arizona, 96 P.2d 405, 54 Ariz. 413, 1939 Ariz. LEXIS 165 (Ark. 1939).

Opinion

ROSS, C. J.

— On November 16, 1938, and for some time prior thereto, Prances Lowman was employed as a teacher in Amphitheatre School District No. 10, of Pima County. The board of trustees of such public school carried insurance for its teachers in the state compensation fund. On that day petitioner slipped, while crossing a polished floor in the schoolroom, and fell against a library table striking her chest and shoulder, and it is claimed as a result thereof she sus *415 tamed “a strained back and neck and severe nervous shock,” which had the effect of lighting up and aggravating injuries suffered by her in an accident about a year before, or on November 8, 1937.

On January 27, 1939 the Industrial Commission passed on her application for compensation and made the following findings and award:

“4. That the above named applicant sustained an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his (her) said employment on or about the 16th day of November, 1938.
“5. That the evidence is insufficient to establish that said injury caused any temporary or permanent disability.
“AWARD
“NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the applicant take nothing from the defendants, or either of them, by reason of said claim.
“IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that any party aggrieved by this, award may apply for rehearing of the same, by filing application therefor at the office of this Commission within twenty days after the service of this award, as provided by the rules and regulations of this Commission.”

The applicant was dissatisfied with the disposition of her claim by the Industrial Commission and in due time applied for a rehearing, which was granted and held in Tucson on April 29, 1939. On May 17th the commission rendered its decision affirming the findings and award of January 27th.

The applicant has brought the matter to this court for review.

At the hearing the petitioner testified about her illnesses, all of which were subjective. The various reports of doctors who had examined and treated her were submitted. On request of the Industrial Commission, petitioner on December 17, 1938 underwent an examination by the following well-known physi *416 cians: E. Payne Palmer, Louis J. Saxe, E. F. Palmer (the commission’s medical advisor), John W. Pennington and A. O. Kingsley. The report of these physicians is as follows:

“Examination was held primarily to determine whether there is any disability or residual effects resulting from the injury reported to have been sustained on November 16, 1938. The accident is reported to have been a slip on a polished floor of some five or six feet, colliding with a table, striking the right chest and wrenching the back in the posterior axillary line when falling.
“Present Complaint: The symptoms complained of are pain in the chest and back and of digestive disturbance, particularly a diarrhea the past few days. Also, of frequency of urination and a bearing down sensation over the bladder and in the groin. She states that she is unable to carry on her work.
“Physical Examination: The breath sounds are clear in both lungs. Movements of the chest during respiration are normal, equal and regular. The heart sounds are normal. No irregularity is found on palpating the ribs at or around the site of the alleged injury. The tonsils have been removed and the throat is clean. On abdominal examination, tenderness was complained of both on palpation and when the walls were picked up between thumb and index finger. There is a postoperative scar in the lower abdomen. Vaginal examination shows the lower portion of the vagina to be normal and the absence of the uterus. Neither kidney was palpable and no tenderness was complained of when attempt was made to palpate the kidneys. Á specimen of urine was removed from the bladder. She complains of tenderness on palpation in the posterior axillary region of the back. There is an irregular distribution of rash over the lateral portion of the back which is a hyperemia without any papula or vesicles, such as are characteristic of dermatitis, and is not of traumatic origin, either due to a local irritation or to some systemic disturbance. Neurological examination was made by Drs. Kingsley and Saxe. There are no objective neurological findings.
*417 “Conclusion: As a result of our examination, we are unable to find any indications of a recent injury, nor of any objective signs resultant from such an injury. The subjective complaint of pain in the right lower chest region is not substantiated by physical findings. We do not find her many associated subjective complaints essentially different that when last examined about a year ago. ’ ’

The reports of the following well-known physicians of Tucson, who had examined and treated the petitioner, indicated they were unable to say, or did not say, at the time they made the reports whether petitioner’s illnesses were due to the accident of November 16th or not: Donald F. Hill, who examined petitioner January 16, 1939; Franklin H. Maury, who examined her March 3, 1939, and Charles S. Kibler, who examined her April 20,1939. The reports of these physicians on the question as to whether the accident of November 16th activated the one of November 8, 1937, were negative in their nature.

R. E. Hastings and W. Gr. Shultz, well-known and reputable physicians of Tucson, who were the petitioner’s physicians in that city and perhaps saw her oftener and treated her more than these other doctors, in communications to the petitioner’s attorneys and which were accepted by the commission as evidence, expressed the opinion that the injury of November 16, 1938, aggravated the earlier one. Doctor Shultz, in a letter dated March 10, 1939, says:

“ ... I am very certain that her present disability is largely the result of her first accident to which has been added the second one, which I think was the proverbial straw.”

Doctor Hastings, in a letter dated May 5,1939, says:

“ . . . Whether or not these present symptoms can be traced to her injury separately, I very much doubt. I feel that the first injury precipitated this affair, but *418 that she was better until the second injury which led to a re-exacerbation. ...”

As before stated, the petitioner’s illnesses are all subjective. None of them is visible to the eye; they are of the kind that only experts in the medical profession are qualified to diagnose and explain. If the doctors had agreed as to the origin and extent of such illnesses, it would have been easy for the Industrial Commission to decide whether or not they or any of them were compensable. But where the doctors disagree as to their origin and extent, the commission, however difficult it is to decide the question, must weigh the evidence pro and con and make its decision therefrom, and when the commission has done so we have uniformly adopted its conclusion as final and binding. Hunter

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Bluebook (online)
96 P.2d 405, 54 Ariz. 413, 1939 Ariz. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowman-v-industrial-com-of-arizona-ariz-1939.