Pavel v. Hughes Brothers, Inc.

94 N.W.2d 492, 167 Neb. 727, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 97
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1959
Docket34502
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 94 N.W.2d 492 (Pavel v. Hughes Brothers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pavel v. Hughes Brothers, Inc., 94 N.W.2d 492, 167 Neb. 727, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 97 (Neb. 1959).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

This is a workmen’s compensation case which plaintiff brings here for trial de novo under the established rules.

The trial court allowed compensation for temporary total disability up to March 20, 1957; it held that plaintiff had a 50 percent permanent partial disability to the body as a whole entitling him to compensation for a period of 239 weeks; it allowed certain medical expenses and denied others, and denied an attorney’s fee; and it held that plaintiff’s election to forego further surgery was reasonable.

On appeal here the defendant presents the contention that the original award of the compensation court was permanent and final, and subject only to a modification finding whether plaintiff’s incapacity had decreased since the original award and, if so, then a determination of the extent of the disability due to the admitted accident and liability arising therefrom. We determine that contention adversely to the defendant.

Plaintiff contends here that the trial court erred in not finding that plaintiff was totally and permanently disabled; in disallowing certain medical expenses; and in disallowing the recovery of an attorney’s fee.

*729 We sustain these contentions, except as to the allowance of attorney’s fee.

By the pleadings in the district court the defendant admitted the employment; the weekly wage; that plaintiff suffered an accident in the course of and arising out of the employment on January 10, 1956; and that it furnished medical and surgical services for two operations.

We take up first the contention advanced by the defendant. The transcript contains two awards of the compensation court. The first is the award of August 15, 1956. It, so far as important here, provided that if plaintiff desired surgery it should be performed within a period of 90 days from the date of the award; that defendant should pay the costs thereof; and that defendant should pay compensation at the rate of $30 per week until the plaintiff had recovered from such surgery, but in any event not to exceed the aggregate of 300 weeks. It further provided that if plaintiff should not have surgery performed within the 90-day period that then plaintiff should recover compensation at the rate of $6.37 a week, based on a 15 percent permanent partial disability for the balance of the 300 week period. In accord with section 48-141, R. R. S. 1943, it further provided that the award could be modified upon a showing of an increase or decrease of plaintiff’s disability due solely to the injury.

The transcript also' contains a modification of award order of the compensation court dated March 22, 1957. It recites that the matter came on for a modification of the award “on application of the defendant” filed March 2, 1957. The decree awarded the plaintiff $30 for one week temporary total disability from March 13, 1957 (the date of the hearing), and thereafter the sum of $8.49 per week for 239 weeks for a 20 percent permanent partial disability. It was further decreed that the award of August 15, 1956, was modified to conform to the award of March 22, 1957.

*730 Defendant pleaded in the district court that it had tendered payments in accord with the modification award ánd at the trial offered evidence to that effect.

Defendant prayed that the award of August 15, 1956, be set aside and vacated and that it be discharged from further liability.

The appeal to the district court was under the procedure that provided for a trial de novo in that court.

Plaintiff pleaded the award of March 22, 1957, and alleged error in it. Defendant, by answer, admitted the award and pleaded that there had been a decrease of disability since the award of August 15, 1956; alleged that plaintiff was “not now” wholly disabled as a result of the accident; that plaintiff had had two separate operations for which it had paid; that plaintiff’s disabilities resulted from congenital defects not related to the accident; that it had offered additional surgery which plaintiff refused; and that he had refused to follow medical advice designed to rehabilitate him.

It appears clearly then that the appeal to the district court and to this court rests essentially upon the modified award of March 22, 1957, which award rests on the application made by the defendant for a modification of the award of August 15, 1956.

The rule is: The statute, section 48-141, R. R. S. 1943, authorizing a decrease or increase on the ground of incapacity due solely to the injury, limits the basis for the modification to that increase or decrease of incapacity which is due solely and only to that violence to the physical structure of the body which resulted from the accident, and which increase or decrease has occurred since the award was rendered. Ludwickson v. Central States Electric Co., 142 Neb. 308, 6 N. W. 2d 65. See, also, Riedel v. Smith Baking Co., 150 Neb. 28, 33 N. W. 2d 287; Chadd v. Western Cas. & Sur. Co., 166 Neb. 483, 89 N. W. 2d 586.

In Chadd v. Western Cas. & Sur. Co., supra, we restated the rule that: “Before recovery may be had for *731 an increase of incapacity due solely to the injury, within the meaning of subdivision (b), section 48-141, R. R. S. 1943, the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that his incapacity has been increased; that is, that there now exists a material and substantial change for the worse in the plaintiff’s condition — a change in circumstances that justifies a modification, distinct and different from that for which an adjudication had been previously made.” That rule was in accord with the fact situation, for there the plaintiff was the applicant for modification. However, in Riedel v. Smith Baking Co., supra, we held: “Upon an application to modify an award under the workmen’s compensation statutes., the burden of proof rests upon the petitioner to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the disability has increased, decreased, or terminated as alleged.”

As a rule, then, the statement in Chadd v. Western Cas. & Sur. Co., supra, should refer to the applicant for a modification. Applied here, the defendant has the burden of establishing a decrease of incapacity and the plaintiff has the burden of showing an increase of incapacity under the limitation of the above rules.

It is patent that to give effect to these rules they must be held to include a change in the original award of amounts and period of compensation payments so as to be in accord with findings, if any, of an increase or decrease of incapacity.

There being no cross-appeal here, we are concerned only with the question of whether there has been an increase in disability since the award. We limit the evidence discussion to that question.

This brings us to the evidence here.

The findings of the award of August 15, 1956, were:

“That on January 10, 1956, plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant as a laborer and while so employed and on said date and while engaged in the duties of such employment sustained an injury to his back as a result *732

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.W.2d 492, 167 Neb. 727, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pavel-v-hughes-brothers-inc-neb-1959.