Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. v. State Industrial Court

1961 OK 281, 366 P.2d 609, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 28, 1961
Docket39510
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1961 OK 281 (Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. v. State Industrial Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. v. State Industrial Court, 1961 OK 281, 366 P.2d 609, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 458 (Okla. 1961).

Opinion

JACKSON, Justice.

Under challenge, as contrary to law and unsupported by any competent evidence, is the trial tribunal’s finding that claimant’s condition had undergone a change for the worse since the entry of the last prior award. A detailed chronological outline of the entire record appears necessary to a proper consideration of the issue presented.

The accident which gave rise to the original claim took place on February 9, 1956. While on the job at employers’ Riverside Plant claimant was helping several other coworkers to carry a heavy steel beam (weighing approximately 500-600 pounds), when one of the men stepped over or upon an obstruction. As this occurred, the beam tilted and a considerable portion of its weight shifted to the claimant, who, bending forward and flexing the knees, twisted his body toward the left. He immediately felt a “sharp pain” in the lower back. On the following morning he was referred by the employer to Dr. F., who initially applied adhesive strapping to the lower back region. This was removed four or five days later. Claimant also received heat therapy every day for about a week and, at less frequent intervals, for another two weeks. Active treatment by Dr. F. ended on February 28th. About March 1, claimant resumed construction work in the employ of another company. Though he continued on duty for 29 days, he actually worked only 17 days. Because of severe and constant pain in the back he quit this employment before the job was completed.

While engaged in the construction work he was seen almost daily by Dr. H., a neuro-surgeon, whom he had first consulted on his own initiative about February 21, 1956. Unable any longer to do manual labor, claimant secured on April 2, sedentary type of work as a salesman for a local automobile dealer. Remaining continuously under the care of Dr. H. claimant was hospitalized for eight days on April 20. During his confinement he lay in traction on a (hard) board placed under the mattress and received hot packs to the lower back region. Muscle relaxant drugs were also administered. A myelogram then performed at the direction of Dr. H. failed to disclose “any marked abnormal boney pathology” or evidence of a ruptured disc. Although claimant appeared to respond favorably to the treatment so received, the pain recurred almost immediately on his discharge. He was unable to do any work which necessitated “being on his feet for any length of time”. About once a week following his release from the hospital, Dr. H. has injected his back with novocain and hydrocortisone. Upon a re-examination of claimant on May 14, Dr. F. reported to the employer:

“In the beginning, he had discomfort across the lumbo-sacral region; later, in the region of the right sacro-iliac joint. At the present time he does not have any discomfort in either of these areas, but his discomfort is in the lower portion of the left sacro-iliac joint * * * Examination on this date does not disclose any objective symptoms of any kind; his symptoms are entirely subjective. * * * The variability of his symptoms as to location makes one suspect the possibility of an inflammatory situation; this may have been aggravated by the type of (construction) work he was doing.” (Emphasis ours.)

On May 7, claimant returned to his employment as a car salesman, but had to quit *611 this job on July 15, because he was no longer able to do any work. Dr. N., another physician engaged by the employer, examined claimant on August 15 and found “no evidence of an injury to the lower back” and no need for further treatment. From September 15 to November 13, claimant was engaged in selling cars. As the pain in the back persisted with increased intensity, he was again hospitalized from November 14 to November 21. This time he underwent a laminectomy in course of which “an intervertebral disc was removed from the left side between L-4 and L-5.” The surgery was performed by Dr. H. with the assistance of Dr. F. In the report of December 12, 1956, Dr. H. stated:

“In view of the atypical nature of this man’s subjective and objective findings, I am inclined to think that he should obtain an excellent result from this procedure. Post-operative diagnosis: herniated disc, L-4 and 5, that had not torn through the anterior spinal ligament. It was both my opinion and that of Dr. F. that it was reasonable to assiwne that patient’s symptoms were a result of these findings.” (Emphasis ours.)

Upon his discharge from the hospital, claimant returned, on November 24th, to his work as a car salesman, but he continued under the out-patient care of Dr. H. About December 31, 1956, he was seized with a sudden episode of lumbago with extremely severe pain. He had to walk with his body flexed forward and to the left. It took about a month before he could straighten up. Shortly prior to this episode he was seen on December 28, by Dr. D., an orthopedic surgeon. According to the opinion of this physician, claimant “had received (a) moderately severe injury to the lumbar spine and complained of symptoms (with) reference to those simulating a herniated mucleus pulposus”.

Following three hearings upon the claim, the trial commissioner appointed, on March 20, 1957, a neutral examiner, Dr. M. This physician evaluated claimant’s permanent (partial) disability at 13 per centum to the body as a whole “because he will always have some pain and soreness in the lower back” as a result of his accidental injury. On April 15, 1957, an award was entered granting claimant compensation for the degree of permanent (partial) disability found by Dr. M. Neither party appealed from this award and it became final.

The present proceeding to reopen on the ground of a changed condition was instituted by claimant on August 16, 1960. It culminated in an award entered on November 23, 1960, which granted him additional compensation for an increase of 37 per cen-tum in the permanent (partial) disability to the body as a whole.

The pivotal issue formed before the trial tribunal in the proceeding under review was whether, as a result of his compensa-ble injury, claimant has a herniated disc in the lumbo-sacral spine between L-5 and S — 1, which condition has produced increased disability; and if so, whether this pathology prevailed in its present stage of development at the date of the original award on April 15, 1957.

The medical evidence consists of two letter-reports. For the claimant, Dr. J., an orthopedic surgeon, related that (a) “(T)he x-rays show no evidence of attempted or spontaneous fusion at the lower lumbar levels”; (b) claimant “has a herniation of the lumbo-sacral intervertebral disc to the left”; (c) “(T)he surgical indications are for the excision of the lumbo-sacral inter-vertebral disc and fusion of this level”; (d) the present condition is “static unless further surgery is undertaken”; (e) “a fair estimate of his (claimant’s) present condition would be a 50% loss of total bodily (function) as regards ordinary manual labor”. In the opinion of Dr. R., who submitted a report for the employer, claimant “does not show any evidence of nerve root irritation” at the lumbo-sacral level and requires no treatment or surgery. Claimant’s complaints were attributed by Dr. R. to “a common post-operative finding followed (from an) operation for a ruptured disc”. *612

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Bluebook (online)
1961 OK 281, 366 P.2d 609, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-gas-electric-co-v-state-industrial-court-okla-1961.