McGee v. Bechtel Corp.

595 P.2d 1156, 182 Mont. 149, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 700
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1979
Docket14248
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 595 P.2d 1156 (McGee v. Bechtel Corp.) 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
McGee v. Bechtel Corp., 595 P.2d 1156, 182 Mont. 149, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 700 (Mo. 1979).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Charles E. McGee, claimant, appeals from the amended findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment dated March 6, 1978, entered by the Workers’ Compensation Court, sitting in the Butte area, county of Deer Lodge. McGee’s employer at the time of the *150 industrial accident was Bechtel Corporation, and Industrial Indemnity Company was the industrial accident insurer for Bechtel.

The Workers’ Compensation Court by its judgment decided that McGee was not entitled to permanent total disability benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Law and limited his recovery to the benefits recoverable under the specific injury statute (section 92-709, R.C.M.1947) and to such temporary total disability compesnation benefits as he had received while convalescing.

We sustain the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Court.

McGee, then 35 years old, married and the father of four minor children, was employed as a pipefitter-plumber foreman in 1974 by Bechtel Corporation in the construction of the Arbiter Plant in Anaconda. About June 26, 1974, McGee’s vision became blurred at work, not the result of any traumatic injury. That evening he consulted Dr. Burton, a Butte eye specialist, who diagnosed a detached retina in the right eye.

On arrangements made by Dr. Burton, McGee was examined by Dr. F. Tempel Riekhof, a Salt Lake City ophthalmologist, who specialized in ophthalmologic surgery. Dr. Riekhof found a giant tear in the retina of the right eye (a “giant tear” is one which extends more than 90 degrees around the peripheral part of the retina, in this case a tear extending 150 to 160 degrees). He also found two areas of retinal degeneration and beginning detachment in the left eye, resulting from a genetic condition. The condition in the left eye was described as “lattice degeneration”. The patient had no complaints regarding his left eye at the time of his initial examination.

On July 2, 1974, Dr. Reikhof performed surgery to reattach the retina of the claimant’s right eye and during the same procedure also performed surgery on the left eye which he termed a “cryopexy”, a procedure consisting of spot welding the two small areas where holes appeared in the lattice degeneration of the left eye.

Following his surgery, McGee returned home to recover. Sometime in July 1974, his vision had improved and he was released to work in a supervisory capacity. He returned to work as foreman on *151 July 27, 1974. The apparent return to normality of the claimant’s vision was an encouraging indication of the successful reattachment of the retina, according to Dr. Reikhof.

On July 27, 1974, while at work reading a blueprint, claimant was soundly slapped on the back by a well-wishing fellow employee. McGee immediately noticed the deterioration of the sight in his right eye and again sought medical treatment in Butte, Salt Lake City (Dr. Reikhof was not available), and finally in San Francisco, where Dr. Roger E. Atkins, attempted in surgical procedure to reattach the retina of the right eye. The attempt was unsuccessful. Dr. Atkins contemplated a second operation once the vitreous fluids cleared and the optic nerve became visible and meanwhile advised McGee to return to Butte and consult his local eye specialist, Dr. Francis P. Nicholson, a Butte ophthalmologist.

In August 1974, McGee returned to San Francisco, where Dr. Atkins concluded the right eye retina could not be reattached. A vitreous fluid transplant was performed to avoid encleating the right eye. However, vision in the eye was completely and permanently lost.

Before the Workers’ Compensation Court, the employer-insurer contested whether an industrial accident had occurred here. The Workers’ Compensation Court found that the injury did arise out of and in the course of his employment and was compensable. No appeal is taken by the employer-insurer on that point.

The main thrust of the proceedings before the Workers’ Compensation Court was to determine whether McGee was permanently and totally disabled as a result of the loss of vision in his right eye, under the particular circumstances of this case. McGee was advised by Dr. Atkins, Dr. Nicholson, and also by Dr. George Sale, a Missoula ophthalmologist, that he should never return to work as a plumber, or any other work requiring rapid movement and physical strain because of the danger of a further detachment of the retina of his left eye with resulting total blindness, this being considered by the doctors a risk too great to take.

The letter from Dr. Atkins, dated March 31, 1976, states he did *152 not feel that McGee was “in any way qualified from a physical standpoint to continue with this sort of heavy physical labor he had previously done. The only way in which he could become employable would be through a deep rehabilitative process which took him into a sedentary occupation requiring rather little in the way of reliance of good vision.”

Dr. Nicholson’s letter of March 23, 1976, stated:

“. . . It is reasonable to expect further visual deterioration in Mr. McGee’s left eye in the future, and with this in mind, — regardless of visual efficiency charts or complex computative formulae, — in my opinion, Mr. McGee has sustained almost 100% visual disability.
“There is no question in my mind that he should be proscribed from working for the rest of his life.”

Dr. Sale’s letter of March 22, 1976, stated:

“Mr. McGee’s occupation is that of a pipefitter, which is entirely unsuitable for a person who has had bilateral retinal detachments ...”

The condition of McGee at the time of the hearing was that he had total and permanent loss of vision of his right eye, and his left eye was correctable to 20/25, which according to the A.M.A. evaluation of permanent visual impairment comes to five percent loss of central vision in his left eye. His visual field in the left eye is normal.

Dr. Reikhof’s opinion is completely contradictory to that of the other doctors. Dr. Reikhof testified, in essence, that assuming that the retina in the left eye were successfully repaired by the cryosurgery which he performed, he would have no objection to Mr. McGee “going back to any type of employment which did not carry a significance of a direct blow to his head. I believe that the reading of the morning paper, if you will, is as potentially as traumatic to the vitreous and the retina inside the eye, as anything he will do on the job, any job ...” Dr. Reikhof would have no objection to McGee picking up a 150 pound bale of hay, or straining to have a bowel movement or any such thing that might involve physical strain. His opinion was that there was no way. that those *153 kinds of things could result in a retinal tear or a retinal detachment of the left eye. He further discounted the possibility of an adverse influence on the good eye from a physiological interference arising out of the loss of the right eye.

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Bluebook (online)
595 P.2d 1156, 182 Mont. 149, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgee-v-bechtel-corp-mont-1979.