Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Industrial Commission

263 P.2d 817, 128 Colo. 465, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 304
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 16, 1953
Docket17192
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 263 P.2d 817 (Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Industrial Commission, 263 P.2d 817, 128 Colo. 465, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 304 (Colo. 1953).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clark

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a workman’s compensation case wherein Ethel *467 Mae Nelson, to whom we hereinafter refer as claimant, procured an award for an injury sustained by her while employed by plaintiff in error, hereinafter designated as employer, which is self-insured.

The claim is based upon an injury allegedly sustained by claimant when she fell from a defective ladder on January 17, 1952, while employed as a saleslady in the store of Montgomery Ward and Company, located at Durango, Colorado. The first hearing was had before a referee of the Industrial Commission at Durango on June 10, 1952, when the testimony of claimant and several other witnesses, was-taken. At the conclusion of the Durango hearing, counsel for both claimant and employer, having stated that they wished an opportunity to present medical testimony, the referee announced a continuance of the case until further mqdical examination of claimant could be made. He also directed claimant to submit herself for examination to such doctors as the employer might request.

In compliance with the request of Mr. Sherman, a representative of the employer in charge of insurance, claimant came to Denver on June 17th and submitted herself to examination by Dr. Gunderson, Dr. Stanfield, and Dr. Freed, selected by the employer to examine claimant on its behalf.

July 18 Mr. Sherman transmitted to the Commission two copies each of the written reports of Dr. Freed and Dr. Stanfield, and on July 21, two copies of the written report of Dr. Gunderson. July 23 the referee requested the employer to notify him within ten days if it wished to bring any of the three doctors above named for direct testimony or, “if you wish the reports made a part of the file and an appropriate order entered.” The same day the referee notified claimant’s counsel that if he did not hear from him to the contrary within ten days the reports of the three doctors would be made a part of the file and an appropriate order entered thereon. In response to the letter of the referee, Mr. Sherman stated *468 that the employer wished to present the three doctors for direct testimony at a hearing to be held in Denver, while attorneys for claimant wrote that they would not desire to cross-examine said doctors.

After this exchange of correspondence the matter was set for further hearing before the referee at Denver on August 20th. The claimant did not appear at this hearing either in person or by counsel. Employer appeared by counsel. Dr. Freed was sworn as a witness, testified briefly, and his previous written report together with that of Dr. Stanfield were marked as exhibits and formally offered and received in evidence. Dr. Gunderson was not called, nor was his report formally offered in evidence.

The referee on September 2, 1952, filed his findings and order wherein he found “from the evidence that claimant did sustain an injury to her head in an accident rising out of and in the course of her employment” on January 17, 1952; that on account thereof she was forced to quit work on January 22nd; “that claimant is now suffering from a central nervous system lesion and that she is partially paralyzed. The referee further finds from the evidence that claimant had no such disorder prior to the accident of January 17, 1952 and that the evidence before the Referee is insufficient to find the claimant was suffering from a stroke or paralysis at the time of the accident or prior thereto.” He further found that claimant had sustained permanent partial disability equal to twenty-five per cent as a working unit, and thereupon ordered the payment of compensation, fixing the amount thereof.

November 16 the Commission, upon review, entered its order approving, affirming and adopting the order of the referee as the order of the Commission, and, upon further review, entered its supplemental order November 21 affirming its award of November 16. Thereupon, action was filed in the district court in and for the City and County of Denver and after hearing, the trial judge *469 entered an order and judgment on June 12, 1953, wherein he found that “there is evidence to support the findings and award of the commission,” and entered judgment dismissing plaintiff’s action. The matter now is before us by writ of error to review that judgment.

As specifications of grounds upon which it is contended the judgment of the trial court should be reversed, counsel for the employer reasserts practically the same contentions as theretofore made before the Commission and before the trial court, namely, (1) That there was no evidence before the Commission to show that claimant sustained a disabling injury; that the symptoms she detailed were attributable to any injury so sustained by her; that she was forced to quit work as a result of an accident; that she sustained any permanent partial disability or that she is entitled to any compensation benefits; (2) that the only competent evidence in the record showed the claimant to have sustained some temporary disability by reason of a stroke not connected with the alleged accident; (3) that the findings made by the referee and the Commission do not support their orders.

A study- of the foregoing specifications and supporting arguments, in conjunction with the record in this case, narrows the issue practically to the contention of employer’s counsel that there is no material, competent evidence in the record from which the resultant effects of claimant’s accident may be determined other than the testimony of employer’s witness, Dr. Freed. It is contended that this witness testified positively that whatever disability claimant sustained was due to her having suffered a stroke and that the stroke was not induced by the accident upon which she bases her claim. It is somewhat difficult to wholly reconcile Dr. Freed’s testimony under oral examination August 20 (without being cross-examined) wherein he stated that, in his opinion, the claimant had had a small stroke in the hind part of the brain, and that same had no causal connection with the accident *470 which befell her on January 17, 1952, with his written report appearing in the record as Exhibit No. 1. In this report Dr. Freed stated, under the heading entitled “conclusions,” that, “In my opinion, this claimant sustained a vascular lesion (stroke) in the hind part of the brain at the time of the accident of January 17, 1952, or shortly thereafter. It is impossible to state whether the injury caused this to develop or whether the stroke caused the fall.”

Did the injury resulting from the fall cause the lesion to develop or did the stroke occuring while claimant was on the ladder cause her to fall? Is the Commission bound by the oral testimony of Dr. Freed, or may it look elsewhere in this record in an attempt to reconcile the the apparent conflict in evidence? Dr. Gunderson’s report was not formally offered in evidence and it is contended that the Commission should not have considered it. With this we cannot agree. Dr. Gunderson was the employer’s witness. The reason that an order making his written report a part of the case was not entered, was that the employer’s representatives stated to the referee that they wished to present the doctor for oral examination at the hearing to be held in Denver. This they did not do.

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Bluebook (online)
263 P.2d 817, 128 Colo. 465, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-ward-co-v-industrial-commission-colo-1953.