Midland-Ross Corporation v. Industrial Commission

486 P.2d 793, 107 Ariz. 311, 1971 Ariz. LEXIS 299
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1971
Docket10268-PR
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 486 P.2d 793 (Midland-Ross Corporation v. Industrial Commission) 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
Midland-Ross Corporation v. Industrial Commission, 486 P.2d 793, 107 Ariz. 311, 1971 Ariz. LEXIS 299 (Ark. 1971).

Opinion

STRUCKMEYER, Chief Justice.

This case is before us on a petition to review a decision of the Court of Appeals, 13 Ariz.App. 237, 475 P.2d 527. Opinion of the Court of Appeals vacated; award of the Industrial Commission affirmed.

An employee of the Midland-Ross Corporation, Leonard Fimbres, suffered a compensable injury on December 2, 1965. Later he underwent surgery for a spinal fusion and the removal of a herniated disc. After his condition stabilized, the Commission found that he had a 10% physical functional disability, and ordered him to try to find and keep a job. He returned to his former job as a production welder at his former wage, and performed his duties satisfactorily for several months. During that time he endured a great deal of pain, and a fellow worker did much of the lifting for him. But when he attempted to lift a casting on which he was working, he became totally disabled again for a short period of time.

A hearing was held by the Commission for the purpose of making “inquiry concerning applicant’s earning capacity as affected, if any, by his accepted industrial injury of December 2, 1965.” Due notice was given to the self-insured employer, whose counsel attended the hearing and subjected the employee and each of his witnesses to vigorous cross-examination.

The doctor testified that lifting castings weighing from 15 to 50 pounds, and repeated bending to pick them up from the floor, made the job unsuitable and improper in view of the operation the employee had undergone. He suggested lighter work or an assistant to do the lifting. He also thought that the problem might be solved by vocational rehabilitation of the employee so that he could qualify for work that required no lifting or bending. Claimant, acting under his doctor’s advice, had enrolled in a TV repair course at Maricopa Technical College prior to the hearing. While attending school there, he did part-time bartending on weekends, and drove a light delivery truck for an electronic parts distributor.

At the hearing, the employer, although fully advised of its purpose, introduced no evidence regarding possible jobs available to the employee. At the conclusion of the hearing, when the referee announced that the case would be considered submitted, the employer still offered no evidence of job opportunities, and did not ask for addition *313 al time to submit evidence contradicting Fimbres’ testimony.

This last hearing was held on August 20, 1969. The Commission made its findings and award on September 26, 1969, which were that the employee had a 52.8% loss of earnings and that he should receive $185.40 per month compensation until further order of the Commission. The award also ordered the employer to pay the back compensation due, but unpaid, since September, 1967.

The employer filed a Petition for Hearing on the grounds that the employee was able to earn more than the earnings used by the Commission to determine loss of earning power because he had not actively sought full-time employment in the open labor market, and that evidence should be introduced regarding the actual earning power of the employee. Meanwhile, both parties agreed on a lump sum settlement of $6,500. This was acceptable to the employer, since it was much less than the award. The Commission, however, refused to sanction the settlement.

In response to the employer’s Petition for Hearing, the referee wrote to counsel on January 14, 1970, as follows:

“It is not my desire to foreclose the presentation of further evidence if justified under all of the circumstances. However, I do not feel that it would be fair to applicant to prolong final action if further hearing would result only in rehashing matters already brought out in evidence. * * * I would appreciate your advising me of the witnesses you wish to subpoena indicating what they will testify to, in order that I may decide course of action that would be appropriate. * * * Since it appears that applicant is capable of doing light welding work, perhaps counsel might ascertain what a reasonable wage would be in this employment with limited bending and stooping and weight lifting.”

Instead of accepting the referee’s suggestion, counsel wrote the referee a three-page letter arguing the legal aspects of the case. The only responsive part is the following :

“However, the carrier feels that it would be better for the commission to consider evidence of the availability of work in the open labor market and the potential earnings therefrom in this case, rather than to calculate an earning capacity loss based upon income from a job which does not represent claimant’s employability in the open market. * * * It is the desire of the carrier to present expert testimony in that regard. I would anticipate that this testimony * * * would be presented by Mr. Beeman, or by some person having similar qualification in the Maricopa County area in the field of job analysis and opportunities.”

The referee considered the reply to be too vague to comply with the Commission’s Rule 38(C) requiring an application for a rehearing to set out in detail the nature of the evidence, the names and addresses of the witnesses to be called, the exhibits to be offered, and a full statement why such material could not have been introduced prior to the award. He therefore recommended that the petition be denied, and the Commission denied it. This appeal followed.

The employer first contends there is a presumption from the employee’s return to, and satisfactory performance of, his job, that there was no loss of earning capacity. He also contends that there is insufficient evidence to overcome that presumption. As to this, in Maness v. Industrial Commission, 102 Ariz. 557, 434 P.2d 643, we indicated that there is such a presumption where the return to work is under normal conditions. However, in the instant case, the return to work was accompanied by almost constant pain and a co-employee did much of the lifting. Moreover, the employee’s doctor advised against a continuance of these conditions of labor. The presumption must retire in the face of positive evidence. In Maness, the Commission specifically found that the pain *314 ánd suffering of the employee, upon return to work, was not severe enough to reduce his earning capacity. In the instant case, there is no such finding. All evidence in the record supports the opposite conclusion.

It is argued that the Workmen’s Compensation laws are not designed to pay for pain and suffering. This, of course, is true, in the sense that one who returns to work after an accident,' and is able to work without pain, will not receive compensation for the pain he underwent while lie was disabled. But that principle does not mean that a man is bound to his job under circumstances that his work becomes intolerable. The evidence in this case is more than adequate to prove that- a continuance in the employee’s job was both painful and might involve further injury.

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Bluebook (online)
486 P.2d 793, 107 Ariz. 311, 1971 Ariz. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midland-ross-corporation-v-industrial-commission-ariz-1971.