Lunardello v. Republic Coal Co.

53 P.2d 87, 101 Mont. 94, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 133
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1935
DocketNo. 7,449.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 53 P.2d 87 (Lunardello v. Republic Coal Co.) 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
Lunardello v. Republic Coal Co., 53 P.2d 87, 101 Mont. 94, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 133 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE STEWART

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, Ed Lunardello, was employed by the Republic Coal Company, defendant herein. Ou August 29, 1929, he was injured in an industrial accident. For a period of seven weeks and three days immediately following the accident he was unable to work. He received $112.50 as compensation for that period. On October 16, 1929, he returned to work and did work of a lighter nature than that at which he had formerly been engaged. Thereafter he was employed almost continuously until May 10, 1930. On June 17, 1930, he filed with the Industrial Accident Board a petition to reopen his case and to determine his disability. In this petition he stated that about two months after the accident he had “attempted to return Lo work”; that from then on he had suffered pain in his leg and arm continuously, and that the pain, had steadily increased to the extent that he was una’, le to continue longer with his work. At the hearing before the board on December 2, 1930, plaintiff adduced evidence tending to show that the injury and pain ensuing therefrom had grown constantly worse; that on returning to work on October 16, 1929, he had engaged in lighter work than he had previously done; and that it had been very difficult and painful for him to do even that work.

Dr. Garberson, a witness on behalf of defendant, described plaintiff’s condition as disclosed by the examination he made of him on November 27, 1930. The doctor stated that in his opinion plaintiff required an operation for the purpose of removing a piece of bone from his leg, and another operation on the head of the biceps. He said that following those operations plaintiff’s disability should decrease to zero, or nearly so.

*97 The board denied and dismissed the claim for continuance of compensation, but ordered that if he should elect to submit to an operation, as suggested by Dr. Garberson, defendant company should pay him compensation during the period he was confined to the hospital as a result of such operation, and during the time he was receiving treatment.

Plaintiff filed a motion for rehearing, which was denied. Subsequently, on April 20, 1931, he appealed to the district court. A record of the proceedings of the board was certified to the district court, and additional evidence was submitted at the hearing therein. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law to the effect that plaintiff had sustained an industrial accident; that as a direct result thereof he was “now disabled to some extent”; that the exact percentage of disability had not yet been determined or fixed; that plaintiff was entitled to an operation without expense to himself; that if defendant should elect to furnish this necessary surgical treatment for the purpose of restoring him to normal, then during the time of confinement to the hospital and until his status should become fixed, he should receive compensation as and for the healing period at the maximum rate of $15 a week, commencing at the time of his entry for the operation; and that in the event defendant failed to furnish this hospitalization and treatment within thirty days, plaintiff should be entitled to nominal disability indemnity from June 7, 1930, at the rate of $7 a week and continuing until his full status of disability was determined, not to extend beyond the period provided by law in such cases.

Subsequently, and after considerable correspondence between the parties, arrangements were made whereby plaintiff submitted to an operation. This operation was performed at defendant’s expense. Plaintiff entered the hospital on April 25, 1932, and remained therein for forty-two days. The operation did not prove as beneficial as had been anticipated, with the result that plaintiff continued in a condition of at least partial disability. Thereafter, on April 27, 1933, plaintiff, claiming total permanent disability, again filed a petition for determination of disability, and the matter again came on for hearing be *98 fore the board. As a result of that hearing the board awarded plaintiff compensation for fifty-two weeks at $15 a week from August 13, 1933, stating that the only disability suffered by plaintiff which could be charged to his injury was that of neurosis.

On appeal to the district court, and after a hearing therein, the court in its findings of fact and conclusions of law found that the order of the board was erroneous in holding that the only disability suffered by plaintiff as a result of his injury was that of neurosis, and accordingly set aside that order. The court further found that as a result of the accidental injury, plaintiff was suffering a partial disability on October 13, 1933, “to the extent of'sixty weeks compensation at the rate of $15 per week, which payments of compensation have been made to the date of the hearing on appeal to this court and which payments shall be continued until the full sixty weeks compensation at the rate of $15 per week shall have been paid by the defendant.” The court rendered judgment accordingly. (Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was denied. He then prosecuted this appeal.

It will thus be observed that the board awarded plaintiff additional compensation for fifty-two weeks, and that on appeal the district court ordered the payment extended for eight weeks longer — a total of sixty weeks. Apparently it was the intention of both the board and the district court to establish allowance of the respective number of weeks in each instance as the total and final allowance, and thereby to end the matter and make it res judicata.

Plaintiff contends that the proof on the hearing before the board showed that he not only had not recovered and was still unable to work, but was growing progressively worse. He contends that under our Compensation Law (Rev. Codes 1921, sec. 2924 et seq., as amended), which provides for compensation during the full term of disability not to exceed a specified number of weeks, the award should have been made for the full period of disability, not exceeding the maximum, and should not have been limited to the purely conjectural period in which the *99 injury might have healed, citing and relying on 71 C. J. 827, and Sykes v. Republic Coal Co., 94 Mont. 239, 22 Pac. (2d) 157. He insists that both the board and the court erred in attempting to limit the time over which the period of compensation should be paid, and that they had no right to conjecture as to the time when he might have sufficiently recovered to justify the discontinuance of compensation. He takes the position that the award should have been made for the period of the disability and that the continuing jurisdiction of the board could have been invoked if the disability ceased or otherwise changed.

The question of continuing jurisdiction was involved in the recent case of Meznarich v. Republic Coal Co., ante, p. 78, 53 Pac. (2d) 82. There the matter was discussed at considerable length, and the construction of this court placed upon that feature of the law. What was said there is applicable here, and we need not repeat it. It is sufficient to say, however, that in accordance with the views expressed in that ease, we must here hold that it' was error to make a final order limiting payment of compensation either to fifty-two weeks or to sixty weeks.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P.2d 87, 101 Mont. 94, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunardello-v-republic-coal-co-mont-1935.