O'Neil v. Industrial Accident Board

81 P.2d 688, 107 Mont. 176, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 69
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 1938
DocketNo. 7,802.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 81 P.2d 688 (O'Neil v. Industrial Accident Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Neil v. Industrial Accident Board, 81 P.2d 688, 107 Mont. 176, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 69 (Mo. 1938).

Opinion

*178 MB. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

Claimant 0 ’Neil presented his claim to the Industrial Accident Board for compensation for injuries alleged to have been sustained on December 15, 1934, while employed by the Federal Emergency Belief Administration (F. E. B. A.) in Billings, which at the time was operating under Plan 3 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. After hearing before the board his claim was denied. He applied for and was granted a rehearing, after which his claim was again denied. He appealed to the district court. On his application the court granted leave to submit testimony in addition to that in the transcript of the proceedings before the board. The court awarded compensation for total disability, permanent in character, and this appeal followed.

Four points are urged as grounds for reversal. One contention is that claimant did not suffer an industrial accident arising out of and during the course of his employment. It is contended that claimant made such contradictory statements relative to an accident resulting in his disability that his testimony is unworthy of belief.

In his written claim to the board, claimant described the accident as follows: “Setting 12" x 12" x 14' post. Post dropped causing injured to take full weight on left shoulder. Felt pain over left kidney. Later, while erecting 8" x 8" x 22' brace, felt additional pain and tear over left kidney. ’ ’ At the hearing before the board, claimant in explaining how the accident happened testified: “Well, when I went over and helped unload the timbers I helped the truck driver unload them and then we went down and unloaded some gravel down below, I was all right. I came back and took hold of the post and threw it into the hole and I got that jerk when the post went into the hole. I did not notice it very much but soon a pain went just before noon. Just after noon when I put the brace up is when the tearing came and I grabbed my side and went over and sat down on a can, did not think I was hurt like I was. We had *179 water there — we were fixing the brace on the fence and this fence — the other one was square and it had to be sawed in an angle like that to make it fit on the post square and we had to get it up high enough to measure it and the timber was 22 feet long and I got on my tip toes and reached it with my hands so that this man could get the rail under it.”

On rehearing before the board he testified: “In the morning I went over there to the grandstand and Mr. Thurber came out and told me to pick my men and go ahead over there. And I picked Mr. Boggs, and Mr. Boggess and Drewniak, and I went across; and I went over to put the braces in on those corner posts and concrete them in. The timbers came afterwards. Mr. A. L. Bacon brought the timbers about eleven o’clock. And I helped unload the timbers and then I got a jar just after the timbers was unloaded in the morning, off of that big post. * * * Yes, I got a jar there that morning just before noon; but I did not pay any attention to it, much. It hurt, but yet I went ahead and worked.” He then explained how he and Drewniak were putting in the brace post, and said: “He [meaning Drewniak] says, ‘Just a little higher,’ as he went to drive that nail in there. He had a sixty-penny nail to drive under it. And I pushed it up and down came me, post and all, with a hard tear in me right here (indicating) and I grabbed my side, like this.”

At the hearing before the district court, the substance of claimant’s testimony as to how the accident happened was that he was unloading the post from the truck when he received the first jolt or jar; that he had his shoulder against the post to steady it until “someone could take it down to the hole,” and as he was doing so, the opposite end fell to the ground, causing him to be jarred. Mr. Drewniak, Mr. Boggs and Mr. Boggess were present when this happened; it happened in the forenoon. At about 12:50, while assisting Drewniak in putting up the brace, he received the second jar.

These several statements, while not wholly consistent in details, are not so contradictory as to deny all claim to belief. At most the statements varied one from the other with reference *180 to the exact manner in which the first jolt was received, but there was no difference in the statements as to how the second one was received, and which is the one that finally rendered him unable to continue working.

On the second occurrence he was corroborated by Mr. Drewniak, who was assisting him in putting up the brace post. Boggs, Boggess and Drewniak corroborated claimant on some of the material points relating the first jar.

Appellant, to show the inconsistent statements of claimant as to how the accident occurred, relies upon a statement made by Dr. Farr, his attending physician, who stated that claimant told him the accident happened as follows: “Three men were carrying 12" by 12" timber 14 ft. long — they dropped front end leaving me holding timber, later lifting 6 by 8 brace pole 22 feet long, noticed tearing in side & back. ’ ’ Since claimant and three others were working together at the time the accident occurred, it is entirely possible that Dr. Farr might have misunderstood claimant’s explanation of the manner in which the accident happened so far as all participants in the work were concerned; in fact, he testified before the court that, “I don’t remember much about what story he did tell me in that connection. ’ ’

Appellant contends that claimant’s version of the accident is refuted by the records or time slips signed by claimant, which show that he started working on Thursday morning, December 13, and continued working all day Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Monday, December 17. Claimant explained, however, that he signed the time slips in blank before the work was done. He admits that he was paid for the four days, but steadfastly refused to admit that he worked after receiving the second jolt, on Saturday, and in this he was corroborated by many of his neighbors who visited him Saturday afternoon, Sunday and Monday, and found him in bed suffering great pain. Additionally he produced a record from the Emergency Relief Administration assigning him to work, which directed him to report for work at 12:30 on December 13, thus corroborating claimant’s statement that he did not work Thursday morning, though *181 the time slip indicates the contrary. He was also corroborated in this respect by fellow workmen and by others who testified that they knew that on Thursday forenoon he was employed by Frank Swem in doing carpenter work, unconnected with the F. E. R. A.

On the record before the court, which contained evidence not before the board, the court was warranted in finding that claimant suffered an industrial accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. It should be remembered that our province here is to review the action of the court, it having received substantial evidence not before the board. In other words, even though the board, on the evidence before it, might have been fully warranted in denying compensation, yet when, as here, the additional evidence explained away matters on which the board might have been justified in denying compensation, we must sustain the action of the court if it is supported by substantial evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
81 P.2d 688, 107 Mont. 176, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneil-v-industrial-accident-board-mont-1938.