McDonald v. Treasurer of State of Idaho

16 P.2d 988, 52 Idaho 535, 1932 Ida. LEXIS 81
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1932
DocketNo. 5912.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 16 P.2d 988 (McDonald v. Treasurer of State of Idaho) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Treasurer of State of Idaho, 16 P.2d 988, 52 Idaho 535, 1932 Ida. LEXIS 81 (Idaho 1932).

Opinion

*537 BUDGE, J. —

In this proceeding appellant seeks to recover indemnity for total disability out of the Industrial Special Indemnity Fund provided by C. S., secs. 6234 (a) and 6234 (b) (chap. 106, 1927 Sess. Laws). In his petition filed with the Industrial Accident Board appellant alleges that on June 22, 1929, by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by Clearwater Timber Company, he sustained injuries which necessitated and resulted in the enucleation of his left eye, for which injuries he was allowed and paid compensation, also:

“That prior to said injury by accident, said J. A. McDonald was industrially blind in the right eye. That on or about the time of said accident, he had a visual acuity of not to exceed twelve two-hundredths, which amounts to approximately a ten per cent (10%) vision, and that for all practical purposes, said J. A. McDonald has been unable and will be unable to perform work of any kind whatsoever; that said inability to work has existed ever since his injury by accident as above set forth, and is due to the fact that since the loss of his left eye he has a total and permanent loss of sight of both eyes, as far as ability to work is concerned, and that he had and has a condition in his right eye equivalent to his ‘having lost one eye’ as outlined in Section 6234 (b), Idaho Compiled Statutes.”

Each allegation of the petition was denied by respondent for lack of knowledge or information. Upon such issues a hearing was had before the Industrial Accident Board, which found the accident of June 22, 1929, the injury to appellant’s left eye, allowance of compensation and payment thereof to be as alleged in the petition, and

“IV. That in the year 1918, the claimant had a visual acuity or vision in his right eye, without glasses, of *538 20/300ths or 8.2%, and with glasses that he was then wearing he had a vision of 20/7Oths in each eye; that on June 29, 1929, claimant had a visual acuity or vision in his right eye, with glasses, of 20/40ths or 83.6%; that on July 29, 1929, claimant had a visual acuity or vision in his right eye, without glasses, of approximately 12/200ths or 7.4%, and with glasses that he was then wearing he had a vision of 20/40ths in his right eye; that on October 11, 1930, claimant had a visual acuity or vision in his right eye, without glasses, of 10/200ths or 6%; that in the month of July, 1931, claimant had a visual acuity or vision in his right eye, without glasses, of approximately 5/20Oths or 3%; that in the year 1918 claimant had defective vision in both eyes and that the vision in both eyes gradually grew less until the time of his said injury by accident on June 22, 1929; that at the time of said injury on June 22, 1929, the vision in both of claimant’s eyes was defective in about the same degree.
“V. That at the time of said accident and injury on June 22, 1929, claimant had' not lost his right eye. ’ ’

The board, upon such findings of fact, made its ruling of law that appellant was not entitled to an award out of said Industrial Special Indemnity Fund and made its order denying and dismissing the petition.

An appeal was taken by appellant to the district court, which reviewed the proceedings before and the decision of the Industrial Accident Board and made findings of fact practically identical with those of said board; concluded therefrom as a matter of law that on June 22, 1929, appellant “had not ‘lost his right eye’ and is not entitled to an award of indemnity out of the Special Indemnity Fund”; and entered judgment affirming the order of the board, from ■which judgment this appeal is taken.

Appellant specifies ten assignments of error which involve the construction of C. S., secs. 6234 (a) and 6234 (b) (1927 Sess. Laws, chap. 106). C. S., sec. 6234 (a), provides for the creation of the Industrial Special Indemnity Fund and the manner of its disbursement. C. S., sec. 6234 (b) pro^vides inter alia, that:

*539 “If an employee .... having lost one eye, received such injury which results in the total and permanent loss of the sight of the other eye, the employer shall only be liable for the permanent partial disability caused by the subsequent injury: Provided, however, that in addition to compensation for permanent partial disability and after the cessation of payments for the periods of weeks prescribed by Section 6234, the disabled employee shall be paid by the Industrial Accident Board, out of the funds in the Industrial Special Indemnity Fund, the remainder of the compensation that would be due the injured employee for permanent total disability if the subsequent injury itself had been the cause of his permanent total disability, such payments to be made by the Industrial Accident Board monthly by orders drawn on the State Treasurer to be charged against the Industrial Special Indemnity Fund.....”

It seems to be established that prior to the accident on June 22, 1929, resulting in the loss of his left eye, appellant was following and able to follow his usual and ordinary occupation as a woodsman, without glasses, although at times he wore glasses. Shortly after the accident his visual acuity or vision in the right eye was not greater than 7.4 per cent without glasses and 20/40ths with glasses he was then wearing, and was unable thereafter to pursue his former occupation or other remunerative employment, and testified, among other things, that it was with great difficulty that he was able to find his way about or to feed himself.

In McNeil v. Panhandle Lumber Co., 34 Ida. 773, 203 Pac. 1068, 1074, decided December 31, 1921, prior to the enactment of the section above quoted, the court quotes from In re Branconnier, In re Travelers’ Ins. Co., 223 Mass. 273, 111 N. E. 792, with reference to workmen’s compensation laws, and an employee who had previously lost one eye and who met with an injury depriving him of the other, as follows:

“The employee, .when he entered the service of the subscriber, had that degree of capacity which enabled him to do the work for which he was hired. That was his capacity. *540 It. was an impaired capacity as compared with the normal capacity of a healthy man in the possession of all his faculties. But, nevertheless, it was the employee’s capacity. It enabled him to earn the wages which he received. He became an ‘employee’ under the act and thereby entitled to all the benefits conferred upon those coming within that description. The act affords a fixed compensation for a limited time ‘while the incapacity for the work resulting from the injury is total.’ It establishes no other standard. It fixes no method for dividing the effect of the injury and attributing a part of it to the employment and another part to some pre-existing condition, and it gives no indication that the legislature intended any such division. The total capacity of this employee was not so great as it would have been if he had had two sound eyes. His total capacity was thus only a part of that of the normal man. But that capacity, which was all he had, had been transformed into a total incapacity by reason of the injury. That result has come to him entirely through the injury.”

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Bluebook (online)
16 P.2d 988, 52 Idaho 535, 1932 Ida. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-treasurer-of-state-of-idaho-idaho-1932.