Mousel v. Bituminous Material & Supply Co.

169 N.W.2d 763, 1969 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 867
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 24, 1969
Docket53531
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 169 N.W.2d 763 (Mousel v. Bituminous Material & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mousel v. Bituminous Material & Supply Co., 169 N.W.2d 763, 1969 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 867 (iowa 1969).

Opinion

GARFIELD, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff, claimant for benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, chapters 85, 86, Code 1966, has appealed from an order of the district court affirming the industrial commissioner’s dismissal of his claim as not “commenced within two years from the date of the injury causing * * * disability for which compensation is claimed”, as required by Code 1966, section 85.26.

The proceedings were commenced by claimant’s filing with the commissioner on September 26, 1966 his application for arbitration. The matter was first heard by the deputy commissioner as sole arbitrator, who awarded compensation. On petition for review filed by defendants, employer and its insurance carrier, under section 86.-24, the commissioner reversed the arbitra *764 tion decision of his deputy and, as stated, dismissed the claim as not timely filed. Upon claimant’s appeal, the district court affirmed the commissioner and this appeal followed.

I. Claimant was employed by defendant Bituminous Material & Supply Co., from April to November 1958 in blacktopping gravel roads. While heating oil used in the operation, he received thermal burns about his face, neck, wrists and arms which eventually resulted in malignancies forming. He told his foreman about the burns but kept on working and saw no physician, nor was he asked to, until sometime between March, 1964 and January, 1965 under the following circumstances.

Claimant stopped working for Bituminous in October or November, 1958 and since then has driven trucks for other employers where he was required to take a physical examination every three years. He testified twice the last such examination before June 20, 1966 was about three years before the arbitration hearing in March, 1967. At one point, however, he said the examination was “something like in January, 1965.” The examination was made by Dr. Wiedemeier of Sioux City, who was evidently selected by claimant.

Dr. Wiedemeier advised claimant “to see a skin doctor for these spots” (caused by the burns). Claimant further testified: “I didn’t do anything at that time. I just overlooked it. I knew I was having trouble.” He did not follow Dr. Wiedemeier’s advice until June 20, 1966 when he saw Dr. Leiter, a dermatologist in Sioux City, at the urging of his wife who was getting tired of looking at him.

Dr. Leiter was the only other witness for claimant whose testimony is relevant to this appeal. He said that on June 20 “he found claimant afflicted with numerous malignancies of the skin on the face, eyelids, chest and neck.” Asked how he made this diagnosis, the doctor answered “Outer appearance of the lesions was such there was no doubt in my mind what I was dealing with. However, the diagnosis was confirmed later by pathological examination of the removed tissues.” On July 14 claimant underwent surgery by Dr. Leiter for removal of the affected tissue. No diagnosis of the spots on claimant’s skin as malignant was made until June 20, 1966.

The worst lesion claimant had was in the center of his forehead. It was ulcerated when he saw Dr. Leiter and had been developing over a long period. Originally it was the size of a match head, grew to the size of a dime and was as large as a quarter when Dr. Wiedemeier examined him in 1964. The scar on his forehead left by the surgery in 1966 was nearly as large as a silver dollar.

Scabs formed on the various burned spots, over the years, claimant would rub them to relieve the itching, they would start “mattering”, the scabs would come off, and after a while the spots would reappear, larger than before. In the spring of 1966 the spots would not heal any more but would just stay. From 1958 to 1966 claimant noticed additional spots developing on his face. The one on the forehead never disappeared during that eight-year period. Claimant “figured something was wrong. It wouldn’t heal.”

On cross-examination claimant admitted the spots caused him difficulty from the fall of 1958 until Dr. Leiter removed them. When Dr. Wiedemeier told claimant to see a skin doctor he knew everything was not all right with the spots and that they kept coming back but, as indicated, he did not know they were malignant until Dr. Leiter so informed him.

Unlike some cases of this general kind, claimant knew all along the spots on his skin were caused by the burns sustained in the course of his employment by Bituminous in 1958.

Claimant assigns two errors on this appeal. That the trial court erred in holding: first, claimant’s action was barred by section 85.26 and, second, that it was not nec *765 essary for defendants to plead such bar as a special defense.

II. In support of the first of these assignments it is argued that for purposes of notice to the employer and commencement of compensation proceedings the injury causing the disability for which compensation is claimed did not occur until Dr. Leiter’s diagnosis revealed to claimant the nature of his disability. The only authority claimant cites is Jacques v. Farmers Lumber & Supply Co., 242 Iowa 548, 47 N.W.2d 236. The commissioner’s decision, affirmed by the district court, is largely based on Otis v. Parrott, 233 Iowa 1039,, 8 N.W.2d 708. Both the Jacques and Otis opinions were written by Justice Mulroney.

Otis v. Parrott involved a claim for death on July 21, 1939, from tuberculosis which was lighted up, thus causing the death by injury from an accident which occurred January 4, 1939. The widow’s petition for arbitration was filed February 5, 1941, more than two years (by one month) after the accident. Claimant contended the two-year limitation period under what is now section 85.26 did not commence to run until March, 1939, when the tuberculosis was lighted up and continued to worsen until death of the workman resulted. The deputy commissioner, the commissioner, the district court and this court rejected the contention, holding the period commenced to run on January 4, 1939, largely because of the wording of the statute.

Although much of the applicable language of 85.26 is quoted at the outset hereof, we set it out more fully here. “No original proceedings for compensation shall be maintained in any case unless * * * commenced within two years from the date of the injury causing such death or disability for which compensation is claimed.”

Otis v. Parrott, supra, at page 1043 of 233 Iowa, at page 711 of 8 N.W.2d, contains this : “In all compensation cases there may be two injuries. The first injury, without which there can be no compensation case, is synonymous with accident. This may be serious or it may be trivial. It may result in immediate disability or death, or it may not result in disability or death for a long time. If this first injury or accident is trivial, then there may be a second injury which occurs when the disability arises. This is the resultant injury. It is caused by the first injury. If the legislature, by using the single word ‘injury’, allows the courts to speculate on which injury was intended, the courts can, upon reason and authority, arrive at a conclusion that the second or resultant injury was meant. When, however, the legislature specifies that the causal injury will control, then the court is bound by the words of the statute.

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169 N.W.2d 763, 1969 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mousel-v-bituminous-material-supply-co-iowa-1969.