Miller Rasmussen Ice & Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission

57 N.W.2d 736, 263 Wis. 538, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 451
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 57 N.W.2d 736 (Miller Rasmussen Ice & Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller Rasmussen Ice & Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission, 57 N.W.2d 736, 263 Wis. 538, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 451 (Wis. 1953).

Opinions

Fairchild, J.

While this court has recognized that the members of the Industrial Commission are expert triers of [540]*540fact and has “deferred to this expertness in situations involving an appraisal of the convincing power of expert testimony, and has sustained the power of the commission to reject it when contrary to the commission’s expert knowledge on the subject,” it is not to be understood, however, that we can or should abdicate this court’s function of reviewing the record before the commission to ascertain whether there is evidence to support it. F. A. McDonald Co. v. Industrial Comm. 250 Wis. 134, 137, 26 N. W. (2d) 165. In the opinion in the case just cited, Mr. Justice Wickhem said: “Carried to its logical conclusion, the contention of the commission would require such an abdication in all cases involving expert knowledge and opinion.” The principles stated in the McDonald Case afford a guide to the solution of the problem now before us.

The following facts are before us: On September 18, 1945, Edwin A. Edwards was injured while in the employ of Miller Rasmussen Ice & Coal Company when he was squeezed between the fender of the truck he was working on and the back end of another truck pulling out of its parking place. The injury was minor, the only objective finding being abrasions on both hips. Edwards continued to work until October 6, 1945. Then followed intermittent periods of hospitalization, examination, treatment, and employment until December 5, 1946. Edwards did nothing by way of employment from December 5, 1946, until March 1, 1948, when the rehabilitation department set him up in a shoe-repair shop. He was fully examined by orthopedic specialists and psychiatrists. In addition, independent medical examinations were had'on two separate occasions at the request of the commission, by Dr. Herman Wirka, orthopedist at the State of Wisconsin General Hospital; and also on two separate occasions psychiatric examinations were made by Dr. Mabel Masten, physician and professor of neuropsychiatry at the Wisconsin General Hospital. Five hearings were held before three different exam[541]*541iners of the commission over a period of five years. The fifth and final hearing was held June 5, 1951. The commission made its own findings and issued its order of July, 1951, referred to in the statement of facts.

If the commission’s finding of total disability is to be sustained, the reports of the psychiatrist, on which it is based, must show to a reasonable probability 'or certainty that the trauma of 1945 so upset Edwards’ basic psychoneurotic personality that since September 18, 1945, he has been unable to perform any useful employment except for intermittent periods in 1945 and 1946.

The pertinent portions of Dr. Masten’s report of 1947 in relation to her psychiatric examination of Edwards read as follows:

“His early years were marked by insecurity and lead to a conduct disorder. He has been in several penal institutions in the state of Illinois. He went on probation for his last offense in 1929. He was released from probation in 1932 and denies that there has been any subsequent misconduct. Two automobile thefts resulted in prison terms. Part of his early life was spent with grandparents, and for a time he was in an institution for dependent children, and from the age of fifteen years on he was on his own. He married at nineteen years and now has eight children. He had had many jobs and has always had trouble making an income adequate for his growing family.
. . His attitude toward his disability and his future employability is not healthy. He accepts his condition as irre-medial and is ready to allow his wife to take over the responsibilities for wage earning while he plans to take her place in the home. He is an immature person. These factors will make rehabilitation difficult. With no objective medical and social history, I cannot make a definitive psychiatric diagnosis•, though I have no hesitation in saying that he .is not psychotic and that, he is a neurotic type, but without objective data I cannot call him a constitutional psychopath as the history of misconduct suggests. The negative X-ray studies do not confirm my original clinical impression of arthritis and [542]*542disc disease; however, the negative findings do not entirely rule out the disc disease for it is difficult to demonstrate a niidline herniation which the bilateral radiation of pain in his legs suggests. I must admit, however, that the negative X-ray findings and the poor personality structure favors a diagnosis of a psychoneurotic reaction to trauma. I think we can say with safety that he is not malingering, though I know you appreciate that on a scientific basis, the latter is a hard diagnosis to make either in the negative or in the positive.’'

Dr. Masten’s report dated January 29, 1951, contains the following opinion:

“Psychologic examination gave no evidence of psychotic disorder nor was there anything to explain his behavior on an organic basis. The Wechsler Bellevue intelligence test indicates an intelligence quotient of 122, which indicates superior intelligence. It became obvious that he is not making use of his native endowment and that he is operating under a severe handicap of psychoneurosis. His early social history suggests constitutional inadequacy. Emotional immaturity and dependency appear to have rendered him unfit to face the responsibility of his growing family consisting of wife and nine children. The accident has provided a defense against facing the demands of reality. There may be some degree of malingering. This commonly exists in many psychoneu-rotic traumatic reactions, but primarily his condition is the result of personality disorder and neurotic behavior. . . .”

Analyzing the 1947 report, we find that Dr. Masten was “unable to make a definitive psychiatric diagnosis,” although in broad terms the report states that applicant is a “neurotic type.” Later she says that she can say “with safety that he is not malingering,” but she immediately adds that “on a scientific basis, the latter is a hard diagnosis to make either in the negative or in the positive.” The statement that claimant’s poor personality structure “favors a diagnosis of psy-choneurotic reaction to trauma” points merely to a possibility, and there is no statement in the report which with reasonable [543]*543certainty or probability states that Edwards was suffering from traumatic psychoneurosis.

In the report of 1951 Dr. Masten emphasizes applicant’s psychoneurosis, emotional immaturity and dependency, and his early social history suggesting constitutional inadequacy. The only mention made of psychoneurotic traumatic reactions is in a general statement that malingering commonly exists in such cases. She does not associate Mr. Edwards with traumatic psychoneurosis, but says that “his condition is the result of personality disorder and neurotic behavior beyond his understanding.” She does not say that such neurotic behavior was due to trauma. The report shows and the record shows that applicant had trouble facing the demands of reality long before the accident occurred, and there is nothing to show to a reasonable certainty or probability that malingering was not behind the claimant’s using the accident as a “defense against facing the demands of reality,” and it is admitted in this report that “there may be some degree of malingering.”

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Related

Johnson v. Industrial Commission
93 N.W.2d 439 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1958)
California Packing Co. v. Industrial Commission
70 N.W.2d 200 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.W.2d 736, 263 Wis. 538, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-rasmussen-ice-coal-co-v-industrial-commission-wis-1953.