Schell v. Central Engineering Co.

4 N.W.2d 399, 232 Iowa 421
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 16, 1942
DocketNo. 46004.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 4 N.W.2d 399 (Schell v. Central Engineering Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schell v. Central Engineering Co., 4 N.W.2d 399, 232 Iowa 421 (iowa 1942).

Opinions

Stiger, J.

Claimant sustained an injury to his right foot on April 19, 1937, arising out of and in the course of his employment by defendant Central Engineering Company. A memorandum of agreement was entered into awarding claimant weekly compensation for 125 weeks for the loss of his foot, under the provisions of Code section 1396, subsection 14. This agreement was signed and approved by the industrial commissioner on May *422 24, 1937. The amount due under this agreement was paid to claimant.

On June 28, 1940, claimant filed an application for review, stating that since the injury was sustained and the amount due under the agreement was paid it was necessary to have a second amputation between the knee and the foot, at a place seven and one-half inches below the knee, which resulted in a greater loss than his foot for which compensation was first awarded, and that he is entitled to payment for a greater number of weeks than theretofore awarded to him. The deputy industrial commissioner found the injury received by claimant caused more than the loss of a foot and less than the loss of a leg, and awarded him 25 weeks’ additional compensation under the provisions of section 1396, subsection 20. This ruling was sustained by the trial court.

The first amputation removed the anterior part of the foot, including all the bones beyond the ankle joint except the two bones of the foot and heel immediately below the joint. This operation is known to the medical profession as Chopart’s amputation, the remaining portion of the foot being known as Cho-part’s stump.

The material portion of section 1396 reads:

“1396 Permanent partial disabilities. Compensation for permanent partial disability shall begin at the date of injury and shall be based upon the extent of such disability, and for all cases of permanent partial disability included in the following schedule compensation shall be paid as follows: * * *

‘ ‘ 14. For the loss of a foot, weekly compensation during one hundred twenty-five weeks.

“15. The loss of two-thirds of that part of a leg between the hip joint and the knee joint shall equal the loss of a leg, and the compensation therefor shall be weekly compensation during two hundred weeks. * * *

“20. In all other cases of permanent partial disability, the compensation shall bear such relation to the periods of compensation stated in the above schedule as the disability bears to those produced by the injuries named in the schedule.”

The question is whether claimant lost a foot or whether he lost a foot and part of his leg, as a direct result of the injury.

*423 Tbe physician and surgeon who performed both operations testified there was no infection in the foot and the limb had entirely healed at the time of the second amputation. The deputy commissioner so found.

We quote from the reopening decision of the deputy commissioner :

“The attending and operating physician testified that the second operation was made necessary because of the fact that the first operation at the point of election through the line of Cho-part’s joints proved unsatisfactory in that the stump due to the injury and infection including tenderness and pain following the first operation was not usable. The site of the second amputation was selected in order to secure the best use of a prosthesis or artificial appliance. The only issue in the case involves the determination of the question as to whether or not due to the injury in question claimant has suffered a compensable loss in excess of the loss or loss of use of his right foot within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Law. * * *

“We are of the opinion that due to the facts, as testified to by the attending physician, the stump was not usable and that good surgical practice required the amputation at the point finally selected, seven inches below the knee, that as a matter of law that whatever the ultimate loss may be, it was attributable to the injury. *• * * the entire loss was one flowing from and caused by the injury.

‘‘ Claimant, as a fact, has suffered an actual loss of the foot and part of the leg by amputation, which we believe was due to the injury in question. He has not suffered the whole loss of the leg for the reason that an amputation or loss of two-thirds of that part of a leg between the hip joint and the knee joint is required to equal the loss of a leg. The amputation was at a point about seven inches below the knee joint or through the upper part of the middle third of the lower leg. The loss, therefore, is more than the loss of a foot and less than the loss of a leg.”

We cannot agree with the conclusion reached by the commissioner and the district court. The only operation necessary for a complete recovery from the injury to the foot was the first *424 amputation, at which time there was no infection, and the stump entirely healed.

At the time of the second operation, claimant had lost a foot. This was the extent of his disability under section 1396. At that time no part of his leg had been injured. Manifestly, the second amputation was not necessary to the proper treatment of the injury to the foot. The injury to the foot did not require both operations. The surgeon testified:

“The limb was entirely healed at the time of this amputation. There was no running sore any place on the Chopart’s stump or any place above it. The leg was amputated at the point in question in order to give him the best stump. The best stump is the most serviceable stump. You have the use of the limb and you are more likely to have a good pad on the stump. As I recall, he had used some attachment or artificial foot, but had said that he just couldn’t use it. By a serviceable stump I mean one that he could get around on and use as a head for an artificial attachment. He wasn’t able to get around. He came in complaining many times that he just couldn’t use the apparatus that he had and he wasn’t able to get around on it. That is why I took it off higher up.

“I think that Mr. Schell has a very good stump now and gets around very well and is able to get along. Operations have changed in the last quarter of a century. The point of election used to be a little bit higher up than where I amputated this leg. The more recent opinion is to amputate the leg at about the level it is here in order to give the best result. We talked to him many times before I performed the second operation as to why we wanted to cut off the foot. I told him that he would have a better stump.

“No, I don’t consider that I made any mistake [first operation] . Before I went in this case, I had three other doctors see him. I scarcely ever go into anybody’s case without other operators seeing it with me and talking it over and that was gone over before the first and last operations.”

Appellee’s leg was not injured by the accident. The only member injured or lost was his foot. The schedule or standard fixed by the legislature for the loss of this member provides for *425 weekly compensation for 125 weeks, which includes compensation for resulting reduced capacity to labor, and earning power.

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4 N.W.2d 399, 232 Iowa 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schell-v-central-engineering-co-iowa-1942.