Owens v. Pako Corp.

386 N.W.2d 711, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 782
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 9, 1986
DocketC7-85-2167
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 386 N.W.2d 711 (Owens v. Pako Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owens v. Pako Corp., 386 N.W.2d 711, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 782 (Mich. 1986).

Opinion

AMDAHL, Chief Justice.

The employer-insurer challenge a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals which affirmed the compensation judge’s award of temporary total disability benefits to employee from August 1, 1983, to January 1, 1984, and of temporary partial disability benefits after January 1, 1984, as his condition warrants, but set aside the compensation judge’s finding that employee’s earning capacity since that date has been $180 a week and substituted a finding that his earning capacity has been $21.91 weekly. We affirm the determination that employee was entitled to disability compensation, except for the period following October 15, 1984, in which he was totally disabled because of surgery which was not proved to have been secondary to his work injury. We also affirm the WCCA’s vacation of the compensation judge’s finding concerning employee’s earning capacity and the substituted finding subject to modification to correct a computational error.

Relators’ contentions that the evidence does not support an award of benefits for temporary disability or the finding employee made a reasonably diligent effort to secure employment after August 1, 1984, require a summary of the evidence. The record shows that employee, now in his early forties, is functionally illiterate, of less than average intelligence, and has performed physical laboring jobs throughout his life. In February 1978, he was working for the employer as a spot welder, earning a weekly wage of $265.60. His work re *713 quired standing, bending, and lifting materials weighing up to 35 pounds. In the course of his work on February 21, 1978, he developed upper and lower back pain, and by the next morning the lower back pain had become so severe that he was disabled. He did not work for several days and when he returned to his job, he worked with continuing back discomfort. He was again disabled totally from October 1,1978, to February 2, 1979, and during that time was paid temporary total disability benefits. His chiropractor and Dr. Michael Davis, an orthopedic surgeon whom employee consulted on October 31, 1978, diagnosed back strain. Dr. Davis released employee for light work again in February 1979, but hospitalized him for 9 days of conservative treatment on April 2, 1979, after employee experienced sudden sharp pain in his low back and legs when he rose from a couch at his home. Dr. Davis felt then that employee had a chronic strain but also probably had an emotional component in his condition and referred him to the Minneapolis Pain Clinic, where Dr. Loran Pilling concluded that employee’s condition was not due to his work injury but was a pain response to some stresses in his life. On June 15, 1979, Dr. Davis felt that employee could return to work but subject to restrictions against bending or lifting more than 20 pounds.

Employee then returned to lighter work, but from October 1, 1979, to April 11,1980, underwent physical therapy which did not appreciably relieve his pain. He received disability compensation during this time. In January 1980 Dr. Lowell Baker, a neurologist, examined employee and did not obtain objective positive neurological findings but found that employee had tenderness and spasm in his low back and tenderness in the cervical area which Dr. Baker thought was due to strain. In March 1980 employee sought consultation concerning emotional difficulties at the Golden Valley Health Center. He was advised there to return to work, and he did so in April 1980. Upon his return he was placed in various light tasks and performed them in spite of continuing back pain until November 1, 1982, when he was laid off. 1

Employee received unemployment compensation benefits from December 1982 until November 26, 1983. He also received general assistance from September 1, 1983, to July 31, 1984. 2 He began to look for work in August 1983. He testified that he spent up to 6 hours a day and between August 1983 and the end of September 1984 contacted at least 200 employers, and a record kept by him during that time corroborates his testimony. The employer-insurer offered him no assistance in seeking work. Between January 1 and April 30, 1984, employee performed maintenance work for the owner of two apartment buildings, earning a total of $503. He said that he did not work a set number of hours weekly, but worked when needed and was paid by the job. Although he felt that his work was worth $4.50 an hour, he thought he had received an average of $2.50 an hour. Employee said also that this work was usually light, but he had found that painting caused his back to become more painful.

In April 1984 employee was assaulted by several men, following which he became more symptomatic although he denied that his back was injured in the assault. In May 1984 he consulted Dr. Robert Wen-gler, also an orthopedic surgeon, who diag *714 nosed degenerative disc disease and, after obtaining a CT scan in June 1984, a disc herniation. On October 15, 1984, Dr. Wen-gler performed chemonucleolysis and at the time of the hearing on January 8, 1985, employee was still totally disabled due to this surgery. The compensation judge found, however, that employee did not establish that the surgery was secondary to his 1978 injury.

In challenging the award of compensation the employer-insurer argue that no temporary disability should have been awarded because employee sustained other back injuries subsequent to the 1978 work injury which, they claim, could account for his ongoing symptoms. They refer to onsets of increased back pain in June 1980, when employee bent over at a restaurant; in October 1981 when he helped friends lift an air conditioner; in September and October 1983, when medical records indicate that he had low back pain after falling down stairs; in April 1984, when he pulled a spare tire from the trunk of his car; and in the same month, when he had increased symptoms after the assault. However, there is no evidence that any of these incidents had caused a new injury or serious exacerbation of the strain diagnosed following the 1978 injury. Employee testified that he has had back pain ever since that time and is unable to do spot welding or other work requiring lifting or bending. Dr. Davis imposed restrictions against bending and lifting when he released employee for work in February 1978 and has never modified those restrictions. We agree with the WCCA that there was substantial evidence of ongoing physical disability and physical limitations caused by the work injury. Thus, if employee has made a reasonably diligent effort to find work he could perform in his partially disabled condition, he is entitled to temporary total disability benefits during the periods in which he has been unable because of the work injury to obtain sustained gainful employment. Henry v. Sears Roebuck and Co., 286 N.W.2d 720 (Minn.1979); Minn. Stat. § 176.101, subd. 2 (1982). He was also entitled to temporary partial disability benefits during the 4-month period in which he performed the maintenance work. Minn.Stat. § 176.101, subd. 2 (1982).

Although the employer-insurer urge also that there is insufficient evidence to support the finding that employee made a reasonably diligent job search, this claim is unconvincing. Employee’s testimony and his records of his efforts furnish substantial support for the finding.

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Bluebook (online)
386 N.W.2d 711, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-pako-corp-minn-1986.