Reynolds v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.

496 S.W.2d 890, 1973 Tenn. LEXIS 486
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 496 S.W.2d 890 (Reynolds v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 496 S.W.2d 890, 1973 Tenn. LEXIS 486 (Tenn. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHN W. WILSON, Special Justice.

The parties will be designated as in the trial court; that is, the appellee, Thomas Junior Reynolds, as plaintiff, and the appellant, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, as defendant.

This action for compensation was filed in the Chancery Court of Sullivan County, Tennessee, on November 17, 1971, the plaintiff averring that on October 21, 1971, while in the course of his employment with Raytheon Company, he was injured while lifting a barrel weighing approximately 740 pounds; that as a result of the accidental injury, he suffered temporary disability from October 21, 1971 to November 8, 1971, and has incurred medical and hospital expenses, drug bills and has suffered permanent disability to his back, muscles, bones, and ligaments thereof, and suffered an additional permanent disability as a result of the reinjury of a dormant hernia.

The defendant, the insurance carrier for Raytheon, for answer, said it was without knowledge of how, where, and at what time the plaintiff sustained an injury as a result of the accident, and demanded strict proof. The allegations of plaintiff as to the cause of injury, resulting hospital and medical expenses, and permanent disability, are denied. The defendant denies that it was indebted to plaintiff in any manner whatsoever.

The trial court awarded no temporary disability, but awarded the plaintiff 25% partial permanent disability to the body as a whole, which award is now before the Court on appeal, and the defendant, while recognizing the rule that if there is substantial material evidence to sustain the finding of the trial court, the judgment will not be disturbed, earnestly insists from the entire record, that there is no [892]*892substantial evidence of a permanent partial disability related to the body as a whole.

The plaintiff testified he was 45 years of age and married; that he had worked at Raytheon two or three years before he got hurt on Thursday, October 21, 1971, while moving barrels on a two-wheel dolly truck, which truck he said you put under a barrel and cock it back. Plaintiff said he felt something “snap inside me”; that he was in pain and as soon as it happened he reported it to Mr. Lonzo Vance, his supervisor; that on the day he went to the medical department at the plant (first aid), that he was sent to Dr. Mooney, the company doctor; that Dr. Mooney couldn’t find anything; that Dr. Mooney, on being informed by plaintiff that Dr. Sutterlin was his doctor and operated on him years ago, Dr. Mooney suggested he go to Dr. Sutter-lin; that Dr. Sutterlin examined him and couldn’t find anything wrong with him. Plaintiff continued to complain of his back hurting and Dr. Sutterlin said he wasn’t a back specialist and got in touch with Ray-theon and they wanted him to go to Dr. McFaddin; that Dr. McFaddin couldn’t find anything wrong and his back kept hurting; that he had seen Dr. Collins, a chiropractor, after seeing Dr. McFaddin; that he went to see Dr. Mongle on his own, and went through the clinic out there, and they found nothing wrong; that the next day after he hurt himself he told a fellow worker, Bill Leonard, that he had hurt his back; that he returned to work at Raytheon and worked until February 7 or 8, 1972, at which time there was a work layoff. That at the time of the trial of this cause, he had pending but not processed, a claim for disability under the Social Security law.

That he went to see Dr. Stout on the _day of August, 1972, and had made a number of visits to Dr. Stout, and that he had been rendered a bill for $134.00 by Dr. Stout for his services.

Mr. Lonzo Vance, who has been employed by Raytheon for twenty years and was maintenance supervisor, testified he was not informed by the plaintiff that he had hurt himself until Monday, October 25, 1971, at which time the plaintiff claimed his injury was in the lower left side, and he sent Reynolds to company first aid.

Mr. Long, Raytheon employment and safety manager, testified that the first knowledge he had of a claimed injury by the plaintiff was on October 25, 1971; that his records were to the effect the alleged injury was to the lower left side.

Mrs. Reba Taff, who was employed as industrial nurse for Raytheon, testified that the records of her office show plaintiff reported injury to her on October 25, 1971, and the date of the injury as October 22, 1971; that Raytheon was advised by Dr. Sutterlin, “T. J. Reynolds has recovered from his injury of 10-22-71 and may return to work on 11-5-71.” In addition Dr. Sutterlin advised Raytheon, by letter of 11-5-71:

“Gentlemen:
I am attaching herewith copy of initial Attending Physician Report, which is self-explanatory.
My original diagnosis was that Mr. Reynolds had merely pulled an adhesion of flat abdominal muscles, and that his pain would subside. Due to the fact that Mr. Reynolds is now improved, this seems to have been the correct diagnosis.
Mr. Reynolds was discharged November 4, 1971, without any disability. He returned to work on November 5, 1971.
Yours very truly,
/s/ Frank W. Sutterlin
Frank W. Sutterlin, M. D.”

Mrs. Helen Deehan, medical record administrator for Bristol Memorial Hospital, appeared as a witness and testified that medical records of the hospital revealed the following:

March 22, 1957 to March 28, 1957 and March 30, 1957, to April 2, 1957— [893]*893Treating physician Dr. Richardson, lumbar pneumonia and pulmonary fluid, type unknown; acute pneumonia, pleurisy with effusia on the right
May 28, 1960 to June 5, 1960—
Treating physician Dr. Mongle, operation left inguinal hernia
April 16, 1961 to April 23, 1961-Treating physician Dr. Mongle, left inguinal hernia and scar tissue
January 16, 1964 to January 28, 1964— Treating physician Dr. Mongle, myosi-tis, a lumbar sacral muscle and bursitis, left hip joint region
September 29, 1964 to October 5, 1964— Treating physician Dr. Sutterlin, il-ioinguinal neuritis
March 4, 1968 to March 12, 1968 — • Treating physician Dr. Harr, esopha-gitis refluxtion and a gastric ulcer
November 15, 1971 to November 21, 1971-
Treating physicians Drs. Mongle and Calcóte, X-rays and IV polygram, lum-bosacral spine and chest X-rays; interpretation of lumbosacral X-rays: “Unremarkable lumbosacral spine was the conclusion. The second conclusion was: Essentially unremarkable poly-gram.’ No radiographic evidence of urinary tract. No X-ray abnormality of the bladder noted.” Interpretation of chest X-rays: “borderline cardio-megalia. Mild diffuse pulmonary fibrosis bilaterally. No active pathology.” Conclusion of the barium enema X-rays: “the left side of the colon suggested a possibility of old ulcerated colitis.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
496 S.W.2d 890, 1973 Tenn. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-liberty-mutual-insurance-co-tenn-1973.