Posey v. STATE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COM'R

201 S.E.2d 102
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1973
Docket13397
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 201 S.E.2d 102 (Posey v. STATE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COM'R) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Posey v. STATE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COM'R, 201 S.E.2d 102 (W. Va. 1973).

Opinion

201 S.E.2d 102 (1973)

Amel POSEY
v.
STATE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COMMISSIONER and Rolland Glass Company.

No. 13397.

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.

Submitted September 11, 1973.
Decided December 11, 1973.

*104 C. R. Nutter, Clarksburg, for appellant.

Charles G. Johnson, Clarksburg, for appellee.

*103 SPROUSE, Justice:

This is an appeal by the claimant, Amel Posey, from an order of the Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board, which granted the claimant a 40 percent permanent partial disability award as a result of an injury to his left knee. The Appeal Board reversed a decision of the State Workmen's Compensation Commissioner granting the appellant a 25 percent permanent partial disability award.

The claimant contends, however, that he should be awarded a permanent total disabilty award. The appellee, Rolland Glass Company, contends that the action of the Appeal Board should be affirmed for two reasons: First, the evidence clearly supports the Appeal Board's decision, and secondly, even if this was not so, the appellant wrongfully refused to submit to corrective surgery on his knee and, therefore, should not be entitled to a permanent total disability award. The employer further contends that, if the Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board is reversed, and the claimant is awarded a total disability, the payments should be made from the second injury reserve fund.

Amel Posey, the claimant, a 55-year old man, worked continuously for the appellee, Rolland Glass Company, from 1945 until the time of his injury in January, 1969. With the exception of a six-month period working as a laborer for another glass company and his period of military service during which he worked as a longshoreman loading and unloading ships, the claimant has had no other work experience. He has no training or experience except as a manual laborer. He has a fifth grade education and can barely read and write.

The testimony in the case is relatively simple and consists solely of the testimony of the claimant and two doctors: Dr. Robert S. Wilson, who examined the claimant for the Commissioner and the employer, and Dr. R. T. Humphries, who was the treating and operating physician and who testified on behalf of the claimant.

The issue in this case does not turn on the compensability of the claimant's injury, but revolves solely upon the degree of his disability. There is no dispute that Posey "stepped in a hole" and twisted his left knee on January 13, 1969, while in the employ of the appellee. It was a severe injury which resulted in the surgical removal of a part of the internal semilunar cartilage. A second operation was performed, approximately a year later, to remove adhesions which had formed in the same area.

Complicating the disposition of this case are previous injuries to the left knee and leg incurred by the claimant. In 1950, the claimant fractured the femur of his left leg "into the knee joint" in an automobile accident. The claimant's left leg was again injured in 1954 as a result of a work-related accident which, although compensable, apparently was not submitted for a permanent disability rating. The extent of the second injury is not clear from the record and, therefore, is not important to the disposition of this case. The 1950 injury, however, does pose problems which must be resolved. The fact that the claimant was treated by Dr. Humphries for each of the three injuries simplifies somewhat the issue of medical facts involved.

When the claimant fractured his leg in 1950, Dr. Humphries performed surgery upon the leg in order to place a wire *105 through the tibia for traction and to manipulate two broken bone fragments in the knee joint. Approximately a month after the surgery a cast was applied to the leg. According to Dr. Humphries' testimony, the 1950 injury resulted in some degeneration in the claimant's knee and made it more susceptible to future injury.

Dr. Humphries testified that, while the injury to the claimant's leg in 1969 was principally caused by the claimant's accident, the damage to the knee might not have occurred, or might not have been as serious, except for the injury which had occurred in 1950. When Dr. Humphries operated on the claimant's leg in 1969, he found an existing degeneration of the cartilage, the posterior portion of which, the semilunar cartilage, was torn. During the surgery, Dr. Humphries removed the cartilage, but he testified that he could not determine whether the tear was caused by recent injury or had preexisted it. He testified, however, that based on the claimant's history, and his ability to work without pain during the period of years after his automobile accident, he believed the tear which caused removal of the cartilage to be a result of recent injury, although a small tear may have preceded it.

Dr. Humphries was of the opinion that the claimant sustained a 40 percent disability as a result of the 1969 accident. The doctor was also of the opinion, however, that the claimant could no longer perform manual labor or any work which would require standing and walking a shift of seven or more hours a day. He stated categorically that the claimant could not continue to do the work he had previously performed, and could perform no work requiring him to stand.

Dr. Humphries explained the 40 percent disability rating: "I don't use the ability to work. That is not usually put in these reports. If you lose an index finger it is a 10 percent disability there, but you don't say that he can't use his index finger and all that. The Commissioner has a certain rule and regulation concerning the loss of a part and the disability rating is based on that and not on the ability of him to work."

Dr. Robert S. Wilson did not treat Posey, but examined him for the employer and for the Commissioner. He reported and testified that in his opinion the damage to the claimant's knee entitled him to an 18 percent disability award. Dr. Wilson, however, testified on cross-examination that: "When I examined him on November 17, 1971 my opinion was that he was not then able to engage in an occupation which required him to stand and work for eight (8) hours."

The question of determining to what extent, by degree or percentage, an injured worker is disabled from an injury is as troublesome in the law as it is in medicine. Since the earliest industrial compensation laws, medical experts have struggled to define disabilities from a quantitative medical standpoint while lawyers and courts have struggled to reach a just method of compensating an injured worker without penalizing an employer or overburdening a workmen's compensation fund with unjustified or exaggerated claims.

Certainly, if a workman is seriously and permanently injured, there is no way he can be truly compensated for the loss of his God-given physical and mental abilities. Nor has society nor the combined expertise of law and medicine matured sufficiently to secure him in the approximate financial position he occupied prior to the disability. The best that industry and the law can do is, from the fruits of industrial production, pension him at least at a subsistance level.

In attempting to achieve a method of compensating an injured workman to the percent of disability suffered, American courts have used primarily two concepts — the "whole man" theory and the theory of loss of earning capacity.

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201 S.E.2d 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/posey-v-state-workmens-compensation-comr-wva-1973.