Shroyer v. Industrial Commission

405 P.2d 875, 98 Ariz. 387
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1965
Docket8545
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 405 P.2d 875 (Shroyer v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shroyer v. Industrial Commission, 405 P.2d 875, 98 Ariz. 387 (Ark. 1965).

Opinion

98 Ariz. 387 (1965)
405 P.2d 875

David R. SHROYER, Petitioner,
v.
The INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION of Arizona and Chicago Bridge and Iron Company, Respondents.

No. 8545.

Supreme Court of Arizona. In Division.

September 29, 1965.

*388 A.D. Ward, Minne & Sorenson, Phoenix, for petitioner.

Courtney L. Varner, Industrial Commission, Joseph P. Ralston, Ryley, Carlock & Ralston, Phoenix, for respondents.

McFARLAND, Justice:

This is a writ of certiorari to review an award of The Industrial Commission of Arizona, hereinafter designated the Commission, which in effect denied compensation to petitioner, David R. Shroyer, hereinafter designated as claimant.

Claimant, a journeyman boilermaker, was injured within the course of his employment September 4, 1962, while in the employ of respondent Chicago Bridge and Iron Company at Page, Arizona. The Commission, in an order entered December 10, 1963, determined that claimant's average wage at the time of injury was $1,000 per month, that his physical condition became stationary November 23, 1963, and he had sustained a five percent general physical functional disability as a result of the accident. At that time the Commission ordered claimant to "make a sincere, honest, and conscientious effort to obtain and retain work of any nature that he was physically and mentally capable of performing." On March 24, 1964, the Commission made an award for unscheduled partial disability, wherein it determined that claimant had sustained a 65.48 percent loss of earning capacity as a result of the injury. During the period between November 23, 1963, and March 24, 1964, claimant had been unable to perform the heavy tasks required of a journeyman boilermaker and was restricted to lighter tasks, such as welding and supervisory positions. During this period claimant's average wage was $345.20 per month.

A rehearing was granted the respondent employer on July 7, 1964, and the Commission issued an amended award on September 10, 1964, which found that "the general physical functional disability has not caused a permanent partial disability for work, nor has it caused any loss in said applicant's earning capacity. By virtue of the premises, applicant is not entitled to compensation for permanent partial disability under the provisions of A.R.S. § 23-1044, (c) and (d) 1956." At the time of the rehearing claimant was employed as a boilermaker foreman, and had been so employed in that capacity for the same employer, Ralph M. Parsons Company, Kingman, Arizona, since February 20, 1964, (less than *389 five months) earning in excess of $1,000 per month.

At the rehearing, claimant testified that he had worked full time after the injury until November 25, 1962, and was then laid off, apparently because he could not still perform the heavier, or "bullgang," work. He then testified concerning various jobs he had held from July 1963 until the date of the rehearing, all of which were of the lighter variety. He indicated that, prior to the injury, he was able to find full-time employment as a journeyman boilermaker earning $1,000, or more, per month. As to the job with Ralph M. Parsons Company, at which he was employed at the time of the rehearing, he testified that a friend working as boilermaker superintendent, one Frederick Stalzer, had asked for him as foreman. It appeared that this job was about to come to an end, or at least the part claimant could perform, and there was no guarantee of other like jobs in the future. It appears that claimant is unable to do about 80 percent of the work required of a journeyman boilermaker, but is restricted to some two or three of the various classifications, or tasks, listed on the union work classification sheets — i.e., welding, tube rolling, foreman. Claimant testified that, of the three classes of work he is able to perform, two or three years might go by before such work would be available.

Next, Frederick Stalzer testified. He was a long-time friend of claimant and the boilermaker general superintendent on the Ralph Parsons Company job who had asked the union for claimant as foreman. He testified that there was only a five to ten percent chance of claimant's obtaining a job as foreman. He also stated that, since welding was only one phase of the boilermaker profession, a man unable to do "bullgang" or heavy work would not stay on a job. Stalzer testified that a welder would be much reduced in job opportunity as compared to a physically-qualified journeyman boilermaker, though he considered claimant a highly competent foreman, and would always request him for that position.

Last, Dewey Isaacs, dispatcher for the local boilermaker's union, testified. He stated that he would not send claimant on a job requiring "bullgang" work, although he would for a job as foreman or as a welder. Isaacs also testified that there is reduced job opportunity for one having a partial disability, such as a back injury; that a person handicapped and confined to light work such as welding would work less than 50 percent of the time, as compared to one not so handicapped; that, in a supervisory position, chances of obtaining or keeping a foreman job would be about ten percent. Isaacs also stated that about 30 percent of the work of boilermakers is welding, and that, at the time of the rehearing, most of the jobs in this area required *390 welders who could do heavy work also because they were small jobs on which separate welders were not hired. Welding was therefore done by the same men who did the heavy work.

All three testified to the effect that, as a welder and foreman, there was less opportunity for employment than there would be as a fully-qualified journeyman boilermaker able to perform heavy work.

The issue then, on writ of certiorari brought by claimant, is whether the findings and award of the Commission can be sustained upon the record before the court. This court has held on many occasions that the Commission will be upheld if its findings are reasonably supported by the evidence. Russell v. Industrial Commission, 98 Ariz. 138, 402 P.2d 561; Magma Copper Co. v. Industrial Commission, 96 Ariz. 341, 395 P.2d 616; Phelps Dodge Corporation, Morenci Branch, v. Industrial Commission, 90 Ariz. 248, 367 P.2d 270; and Fendell v. Industrial Commission, 89 Ariz. 180, 359 P.2d 988. As stated in the Magma Copper Company case, supra:

"It is fundamental that in review by certiorari in this type of proceeding, this Court does not weigh the testimony or resolve conflicts therein; it only searches the record to see whether the Commission's findings are reasonably supported by the evidence. McGill v. Industrial Commission, 82 Ariz. 36, 307 P.2d 1042 (1957)." 96 Ariz. at 344, 395 P.2d at 618

It would appear that the Commission determined claimant's reduced earning capacity solely on the basis of wages being earned by him at the time of the rehearing. At that time he had been employed continuously by the Ralph M.

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Bluebook (online)
405 P.2d 875, 98 Ariz. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shroyer-v-industrial-commission-ariz-1965.