Spangrud v. Precision Grinding Co.

281 N.W.2d 362, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1533
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 18, 1979
DocketNo. 48630
StatusPublished

This text of 281 N.W.2d 362 (Spangrud v. Precision Grinding 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
Spangrud v. Precision Grinding Co., 281 N.W.2d 362, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1533 (Mich. 1979).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Certiorari on the relation of the employer-insurer to review a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals awarding employee benefits consequent upon disability caused by an occupational disease. Our review of the record requires us to reject relators’ contentions that compensation was awarded in contravention of Minn. St.1971, § 176.662, and that a factfinding in a prior compensation proceeding requires reversal of the decision under review. We affirm.

Employee, who worked as a machinist for several years, was disabled on January 21, 1973, by bronchial asthma. In a compensation proceeding commenced in October 1973, the then Workmen’s Compensation Commission found that she had contracted an occupational disease and had been temporarily totally disabled at various periods including one from January 21, 1973, to December 21, 1973, and awarded her compensation for such disability. The commission also found that it was unduly hazardous for her to continue working in employment exposing her to dust, fumes, and smoke. It ordered her removal from such employment as of December 21, 1973, and ordered relators to pay compensation for retraining pursuant to Minn.St.1971, § 176.-662. Relators, after remand of an appeal from that decision, paid employee compensation for temporary total disability to December 21, 1973, and for 20 weeks between September 15, 1974, and January 31, 1975, and also made payments, described in the receipt for compensation as being for removal from industry, for 104 weeks. These payments terminated May 5, 1976. Between September 7, 1976, and March 7, 1977, relators also paid 26 weeks of retraining benefits, and employee took a course in operating bookkeeping machines.

Employee filed a second claim petition in September 1976 seeking further disability compensation. Relators denied liability and alleged that if further temporary total or temporary partial disability was claimed, the first decision must be reopened. The compensation judge disagreed and after hearing found that employee had received removal-from-industry-benefits for 104 weeks, but could still be awarded compensa[364]*364tion for temporary total disability following termination of the 104 weeks. He held that she was not entitled to concurrent disability and retraining benefits. After finding that she had been temporarily totally disabled from May 6,1976, to the date of hearing on March 11, 1977, a period of 44 weeks and 2 days, and that she had received 26 weeks of retraining benefits, he awarded her temporary total disability compensation for 18 weeks and 2 days, and continuing compensation conditioned on her showing evidence of continued diligent effort to find employment with her present skills. He also awarded supplementary benefits pursuant to Minn.St.1976, § 176.132.

On appeal the Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals determined that employee had been temporarily totally disabled on December 21, 1973, and that the 104 weeks of benefits the compensation judge had found to be for removal from industry were compensation for temporary total disability, that the removal-from-industry benefits do not commence until termination of the period of compensable temporary total disability, and that that period had not terminated. The court of appeals further found that employee was entitled to concurrent payments of temporary total disability and retraining benefits during the period of her retraining.1 It agreed that she was entitled to supplementary benefits.

Relators urge that the award is contrary to the provisions of Minn.St.1971, § 176.-662,2 which provided in pertinent part:

“When an employee is afflicted with an occupational disease to such a degree that it is unduly hazardous for such employee to continue in any employment involving the hazard of exposure to such occupational disease, or where for other causes it is medically inadvisable and unduly hazardous for such employee to continue in an employment involving such hazard of occupational disease, the commission shall order the removal of such employee from such hazardous employment.
“An employee so removed is eligible for retraining for a new occupation and compensation during such retraining, as provided by the workmen’s compensation law. In the event retraining benefits are not accepted by such employee, he is to be compensated during his period of unemployment following such removal as though he were wholly or partially disabled by reason of compensable injury, but such compensation shall not exceed a period of 104 weeks following the date of the order so removing such employee. In the event an employee is disabled, by reason of compensable injury, at the time an order for his removal is issued, the benefits provided by this section attach and begin at the termination of such period of compensable disability and constitute additional benefits. In the event retraining of the employee is undertaken during the period of such partial disability compensation is not to continue beyond 104 weeks from the date when such retraining is begun.
$ * * * * *
“An employee so removed from employment is entitled to compensation for disability, or his dependents to compensation for his death, from occupational disease, if such disablement of the employee occurs within three years, in case of silicosis or asbestosis, or within one year, in case of other occupational diseases, from the date of such employee’s last exposure to the hazards of such occupational diseases prior to such removal.”

Relators first contend that in the prior compensation proceeding the court of appeals had made a finding that employee was temporarily totally disabled from January 21, 1973, through December 21, 1973, and that because this finding was made [365]*365after a hearing held February 20 and 21, 1974, it was also an implicit finding that employee was not disabled between December 21, 1973, and February 21, 1974. The argument that this implicit finding controls the question of employee’s condition during the stated period is based on our holding in Hirt v. Leader Hardware & Furniture Store, 309 Minn. 572, 244 N.W.2d 269 (1976). There the Workers’ Compensation Board found that employee’s temporary total disability, which he had claimed was continuing at the date of hearing on June 15, 1971, had terminated May 3, 1971. This court held the finding was also an implicit finding that employee was not temporarily totally disabled between May 3 and June 15, 1971, and reversed an award for that period made in a subsequent proceeding, saying:

“* * * This issue, once decided, could be relitigated by petition to vacate under Minn.St. 176.461, not by a subsequent claim petition.” 309 Minn. 574, 244 N.W.2d 271.

Although the procedure set forth in Hirt ordinarily should be followed when the correctness of such an implicit finding is later questioned, we hold that in this case employee should not be required to petition to vacate under § 176.461 because in our view the evidence on the issue of her disability and the relevant legal principles demonstrate that the finding made by the court of appeals in the proceeding under review must be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
281 N.W.2d 362, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spangrud-v-precision-grinding-co-minn-1979.