Schnurrer v. Hoerner-Waldorf

345 N.W.2d 230, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1256
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 24, 1984
DocketNos. C0-83-563, C2-83-564
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 345 N.W.2d 230 (Schnurrer v. Hoerner-Waldorf) 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
Schnurrer v. Hoerner-Waldorf, 345 N.W.2d 230, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1256 (Mich. 1984).

Opinion

KELLEY, Justice.

The Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals (WCCA) held that the employee had not proved Gillette-type injuries to his knee and back and vacated findings of a compensation judge concerning temporary total and permanent partial disabilities and their apportionment between insurers. We conclude the evidence as a whole does not support this conclusion and, therefore, reverse.

Employee worked as a paper baler for Hoerner-Waldorf beginning in 1947. The work required him to stand constantly on a cement floor, to climb up and down steps from 50 to 100 times each shift, to bend and crawl around the bales, and to do heavy lifting. In 1972, he sustained an injury to his knee when he fell. After conservative treatment he underwent surgery to remove a torn medial cartilage. Later, additional surgery removed a cyst which had developed in the knee. Employee continued to experience pain in his knee, and back pain began to “come on slowly.” Employee’s right leg became deformed, bending outward to the point where he “walked crooked” and wore out the outer heel of his shoe. The pain in his knee went through his upper leg and hip and into his back. He continued to take increasing amounts of pain medication.

In 1979, while at work employee slipped on stairs and hit his knee against one, resulting in a chipped kneecap. Although the medical witnesses disagreed about the seriousness of this injury, the surgeon who had performed employee’s knee surgery concluded shortly afterward that employee would need a total knee replacement. Employee missed no time from work but felt both his knee and back pain increased after this incident. By October 1979, he felt his pain was so great that he had to stop working. Although he informed his employer, he did actually remain on the job until January 1980 in order to receive accumulated vacation.

Hoerner-Waldorf and Insurance Company of North America (INA), its workers’ compensation insurer in September 1972, admitted the 1972 injury, alleged payment of 17 weeks of temporary total disability and a 10% permanent partial disability to the right leg caused by that injury but denied further liability. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, the employer’s workers’ compensation insurer from May 31, 1977 to October 31, 1979, also denied liability, claiming that employee had not sustained a Gillette-type injury and had suffered no loss of time during the period when it covered the employer for workers’ compensation.

In addition to the admitted injuries to the right knee in 1972 and 1979, employee also claimed he had sustained Gillette-type injuries to his back and knee as a cumulative effect of his daily work activities on a pre-existing abnormality and degenerative condition in his back and, following the 1972 injury, on his injured knee.1

The compensation judge, in addition to finding the specific 1972 and 1979 injuries to the knee, found that employee had sus[232]*232tained Gillette-type injuries to his right knee and low back between 1975 through October 1979. Likewise, he found that employee was totally disabled from January 1980 through October 1981, and that he had a 30% permanent partial disability to the right leg for which he apportioned responsibility 15% to the 1972 injury and 15% to the 1979 injury and the Gillette-type injury. Additionally, he found employee had a 25% impairment of the back for which he apportioned responsibility 12.5% to the underlying scoliosis and 12.5% to a Gillette-type injury. Finally, he ordered the two insurers to share the permanent partial disability to the leg, ordered Liberty Mutual to pay permanent partial disability of the back and ordered each insurer to pay 50% of the temporary total disability compensation and medical costs.

On appeal the WCCA vacated the finding that the employee had sustained Gillette-type injuries, the finding relating to employee’s temporary total disability and apportionment and the equal apportionment of liability between the insurers for that compensation and for employee’s medical expenses. It further awarded compensation to employee for 30% disability óf the right leg and 25% disability of the back as a result of the 1972 injury and directed INA to pay all compensation and medical expenses. Both INA and employee seek review.

We are cognizant of our restrictive standard of review in workers’ compensation cases. We have stated repeatedly that we will view the facts in the light most favorable to findings of fact and will not disturb such findings “unless consideration of the evidence and inferences permissible therefrom requires reasonable minds to adopt a contrary conclusion.” Talmage v. MedTronic, Inc., 315 N.W.2d 433, 437 (Minn.1982) (citations omitted); Guggenberger v. Cold Spring Granite Co., 332 N.W.2d 655, 656 (Minn.1983). Applying that standard, we can ascertain no evidentiary support in the record for the WCCA’s determination that employee did not sustain Gillette-type injuries. Instead, the evidence compels a finding that employee had sustained such injuries to his right knee and back by October 1979.

All of the medical witnesses, Dr. Gustafson, the surgeon who had performed the knee surgery, Dr. Michael Davis, and Dr. David Johnson, agreed that employee had sustained significant permanent impairments of his right leg and back. Their assessments ranged from 20 to 30% permanent partial disability of the leg and from 20 to 25% permanent partial disability of the back. Dr. Gustafson expressed the opinion that employee’s work activities from 1975 on had been a substantial contributing factor to both disabilities. Dr. Davis attributed half of the leg disability to employee’s work between 1972 and 1979, and Dr. Johnson attributed a third of the leg disability to employee’s work during that time. Both attributed half of employee’s back disability to his work from 1947 to 1979. Thus, while the medical witnesses offered varying opinions on the extent of employee’s permanent disabilities, they agreed that the arduous work employee had performed had contributed substantially to those disabilities. In light of these opinions and employee’s uncontradicted testimony that he found it increasingly more difficult and painful to perform his work, we conclude that the finding that employee had sustained no Gillette-type injuries is manifestly contrary to the evidence. Consequently, we reverse that finding and the compensation award based thereon and remand with direction to the WCCA to enter findings and an award conforming to the evidence.

Liberty Mutual, the employer’s insurer from May 31, 1977, to October 31, 1979, claims that even if employee sustained Gillette-type injuries he could not have sustained them before January 5,1980, his last day of work. The claim is based on Liberty Mutual’s narrow reading of our language in Carlson v. Flour City Brush Co., 305 N.W.2d 347 (Minn.1981). There we found that the evidence did not support equitable apportionment of liability between successive insurers for compensation awarded an [233]*233employee who sustained a specific back injury on January 16, 1978, and also sustained a Gillette-type injury due to the repeated bending, turning, and lifting required by her work over a 6-year period. The employee’s physician advised her to quit work after she sustained the specific injury, and she did so a few weeks later.

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Bluebook (online)
345 N.W.2d 230, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schnurrer-v-hoerner-waldorf-minn-1984.