Rutz v. Tennant & Hoyt Co.

253 N.W. 665, 191 Minn. 227, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 758
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 23, 1934
DocketNo. 29,721.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 N.W. 665 (Rutz v. Tennant & Hoyt Co.) 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
Rutz v. Tennant & Hoyt Co., 253 N.W. 665, 191 Minn. 227, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 758 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

HILTON, Justice.

Certiorari to review an order of the industrial commission aivarfling compensation at the rate of $10.40 per week from and after March 18, 1932, during disability, and for the payment of certain expenses for medical and hospital care.

At about 11:00 a. m. on March 18, 1932, Henry Rutz (respondent) was, with another employe, Carstens, engaged in loading a box car with sacks of bran which were two and a half feet long and weighed 100 pounds each. As Rutz and Carstens, both in a stooped position, were about to toss a sack of bran from the floor of a low truck onto the top tier of piled sacks near the ceiling of the car, a distance of eight and a half feet, a sack of bran rolled off the top tier, fell clear a distance of about four feet, and struck Rutz on the back of his head and neck. When the sack struck him he heard a crackling noise in his spine and felt an electric shock pass on down to his right foot. Carstens also heard the crackling noise. Rutz ivas not knocked down or rendered unconscious; he could not, however, start work at once and rested awhile, after which he resumed his work and continued, with a few minutes off for lunch, until 3:00 p. m., the end of his shift.

About a half hour after the accident Rutz’s right hip began to stiffen, gradually growing worse, and he suffered pain. After reaching his home the pain and soreness increased. At that time all the pain was in the region of his lower back and hip. He returned to work the next morning, but for only about an hour. He then suffered great pain and after stooping over had difficulty in straightening up. This condition increased and he became weaker until he was unable to stoop over and lift the sacks. He reported his injury to the foreman and was instructed by him to consult his *229 own family physician, Dr. Bowers, who examined him on March 19. The doctor found Rutz suffering with considerable pain and soreness in the lumbar and sacroiliac regions, and diagnosed the case as sacroiliac sprain with a trauma to the muscles of the back; he then had no pain in either of his legs. At that examination there was no apparent injury to the sciatic nerve of the right leg, but in a few days or a week considerable pain and soreness to that nerve developed and continued to increase until on April 3 he was taken to a hospital, where he remained five days. On April 30 he was returned to the hospital and there remained until May 12. From that time until the hearing he was incapacitated and continued to receive treatment from various physicians.

The assignments of error are that the commission erred in finding that as a result of the accident and injury the employe became disabled and continued to be so disabled and in awarding compensation and medical and hospital benefits; and in denying a motion of relators to dismiss the appeal of respondent to the industrial commission from an order of the referee, which order was adverse to respondent here.

It is conceded that the injury received by Rutz on March 18 arose out of and in the course of his employment. Relators, Iioavever, contend that the injury then received Avas trivial; that the medical testimony does not support a finding of causal connection between the accident and a resulting disability; that such disability Avas caused by infectious sciatic neuritis and not from trauma received at the time of the accident. The position of respondent is that his disabling ailment was a sacroiliac sprain with a resulting-sciatic neuritis in the right leg, caused by the injury received on March 18, 1932.

The evidence discloses that Avhen respondent Avas 14 or 15 years old, about 30 years before the accident, he had inflammatory rheumatism and Avas in bed four or five days and had not suffered from it since. About three years prior to the hearing he had a stiff shoulder, Avhieh he referred to as rheumatism. In April, 1931, his tonsils Avere removed after a first attack of tonsilitis; previous to that time he had a sore throat occasionally but not more often than *230 about once a year. He had a cleft palate. His upper teeth were poor and would not hold fillings; all but five of his upper teeth had been extracted and a plate put in; he had all his lower teeth; he never had trouble with the gums or had any treatment for pyorrhea. The evidence was in conflict as to whether there was pus in the gums.

Three physicians testified on behalf of relators, one of whom was a roentgenologist. The latter had not examined respondent, but from an examination of an X-ray picture of the sacroiliac and the history of the case gave an opinion favorable to the contention of relators. The other two- physicians made an examination of respondent on July 5, 1932. They stated that they could not find pain or tenderness over the sacroiliac joint or evidence of a strain thereof, and diagnosed the case as sciatic neuritis of the right leg resulting from an infectious condition.

Three of the four physicians testifying for respondent, one of whom was an osteopathic physician, had examined respondent upon numerous occasions and. prescribed treatment for several months. So-me of such examinations were made before those made by relators’ physicians and some after. The fourth physician examined respondent in August, 1932. The testimony of the physician witnesses for respondent was that there was pain, tenderness, and soreness in and around the sacroiliac joint and lower lumbar region; that there was a difference in the level of the posterior-superior spine. It was their opinion that respondent’s ailment ivas of traumatic origin, and diagnosed it as traumatic sciatica of the right leg caused by a chronic strain of the sacroiliac, and, further, that the disability resulted from the injury received on March 18, 1932. Further reference need not be made to the lengthy and detailed statements made by the respective physicians as to what they found, their opinions therefrom, and the reasons therefor.

A neutral physician called by the referee examined respondent and made a report of his findings. His conclusions were: '

“This man presents a clear-cut history of injury, followed by direct disability. He shows an atrophy of the musculature of the right leg, with all the signs and symptoms of a sciatic neuritis. *231 I have carefully searched for a focus of infection, and was unable to find anything to lead me to believe that a focus existed. I examined his teeth, his sinuses, his prostate, and his tonsils and appendix have been removed. The X-ray indicates that he has had an old sacroiliac arthritis on the right side, and it is my belief that when the sack of bran struck him it was transmitted to these joints, and this produced an aggravation of his preexisting sacroiliac arthritis. It is a common finding to have a sciatic involvement where the sacroiliac joint is involved.
“I believe that this man is disabled as a result of this injury, and feel that with proper medical care he will be able to return within two or three months to productive work.,”

The conflicting medical findings and opinions presented to the commission the fact question as to whether respondent’s admitted serious condition was the result of trauma received at the time of the accident or from an infectious condition.

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State Ex Rel. Rajala v. Rigg
101 N.W.2d 608 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1960)
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281 N.W. 713 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
253 N.W. 665, 191 Minn. 227, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutz-v-tennant-hoyt-co-minn-1934.