Starcke v. Krey Packing Co.

426 S.W.2d 692, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 768
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 1968
DocketNo. 32847
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 426 S.W.2d 692 (Starcke v. Krey Packing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starcke v. Krey Packing Co., 426 S.W.2d 692, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 768 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

TOWNSEND, Commissioner.

This Workmen’s Compensation proceeding was initiated by Herman A. Starcke’s filing of claim for compensation with the Division of Workmen’s Compensation on January 10, 1964. In his claim he alleged injuries to his left hip, left leg, left ankle and back resulting from an accident suffered on January 24, 1963. Hearing before the Referee was had on October 25, 26, 27 and November 1, 1965. At the hearing it was stipulated, inter alia, that no compensation had been paid for temporary total disability, that no time was lost and none claimed, that medical aid had been furnished by the employer in the amount of $35.00 and no claim was being made by the employee for additional medical. The Referee awarded claimant for permanent partial disability the sum of $42.50 per week for eighty weeks. Upon the employer’s Application for Review the Industrial Commission affirmed the award of the Referee. In turn, upon appeal, the Circuit Court of St. Louis affirmed the action of the Industrial Commission.

At the hearing before the Referee the claimant testified in substance as follows: At about 11 p. m., January 24, 1963, while engaged in his duties as a stationary engineer for the employer he slipped on the ice in an alley on the employer’s premises and fell with heavy impact on his left hip and upper thigh. He arose unassisted and worked the balance of his shift. He was bothered only by the soreness of his hip at that time. He states that the next day his leg had turned black from the ankle to the hip; he reported to the nurse at the company dispensary and was given some pills. He was having no trouble with any part of his body other than his leg at this time. He continued to do his regular type of work, although his leg was sore and he was limping a little. His back started “bothering” him the second or third day after the fall. About two days after the fall claimant called Doctor Donley, a company physician, and went to his office on Grand Avenue. Doctor Donley gave him a prescription for some pills “to dissolve that blackness in the leg”. The doctor took no x-rays at this time. When asked when he first started having pains in his back, claimant answered “I would say seven or eight days after that.” Eight or ten days after the initial visit to Doctor Donley he saw the doctor again (apparently at the dispensary) and was given a hypodermic shot by the nurse at the doctor’s direction. He was in the dispensary eight or ten times thereafter, receiving some kind of light and heat treatment on his hip, over a period of eight or nine months. Claimant was hospitalized for pneumonia in March 1963, but otherwise he lost no time from work between the day of his accident in January and the termination of his employment in October 1963. At the time of this pneumonia incident claimant made no complaint to his physician of any back trouble, nor did he do so when the same physician treated him for a virus in January 1964. He saw Doctor Donley a third time about a year after the fall and at that time he was sent to Christian Hospital for x-rays.

About eight years before the time of the hearing claimant started seeing Doctor Yochum, a chiropractor, because he then had “sciatica rheumatism”, a matter that cleared up in about twelve days after he first visited Doctor Yochum. Thereafter he visited the chiropractor sporadically when he “didn’t feel too good” or had body aches. There might have been intervals of six to eight months between some visits. Claimant received a traction treat[694]*694ment each time he visited Doctor Yochum, but upon no such visit prior to the accident in question here was he complaining of back pains. The last time the witness saw Doctor Yochum prior to the accident was one and a half to two months before. At that time he “gave me manipulation for the back and gave me traction”, although he was having no difficulty with his back at that time. About six months after the accident he went to Doctor Yochum because his back was bothering him and between that time and February 1964 he visited him from twelve to fourteen times.

Throughout his examination claimant testified to the continuing and persistent soreness in his hip and back up to the time of the hearing.

The attendant nurse at the dispensary testified that the claimant did not appear at the dispensary until January 28, 1963. Thereafter he was at the dispensary nine times by May 21, 1963, but did not appear there between May 21 and October 25, 1963. During the whole of this period claimant never complained of his back hurting him. On October 30, 1963, Doctor Donley, company physician, sent the claimant to Christian Hospital for x-rays; the order for x-rays related only to the area of the thigh and no x-ray was taken of the back. The report from the radiologist at Christian Hospital was negative; however it did disclose an arthritic condition. On the last previous occasion of claimant’s visit to the dispensary, namely, on October 25, 1963, when the claimant was seen by Doctor Donley he stated that he still had pain in the left upper lateral thigh six to eight inches below hip trochanter.

Doctor Donley testified that he first saw claimant about January 28, 1963. Upon examination he found that there was a bruise over the left hip area with hematoma formation. Thereafter he saw claimant “pretty often * * *. He would come into the dispensary when I was there.” At no time did claimant complain of any pain in his back; his references were always to the hip. On September 18, 1964, approximately eleven months after claimant’s employment with the packing company had terminated, he was sent to Doctor Donley for a rating. At that time claimant stated that his hip condition had improved, but he also had other complaints, such as pain along the side of the thigh and into the left lower leg. He also complained of some pain in the low back region. This was the only occasion upon which claimant had complained of any pain other than the pain in the hip region.

It is clear that if the Commission’s award of permanent partial disability were based upon the injury to the claimant’s hip alone, there was not sufficient evidence to justify the award. Claimant’s medical witnesses, after examination and x-rays, testified (1) that the x-ray of claimant’s hip showed no pathology there and (2) that there was no restricted motion of either hip, that there was some palpable tenderness over the left greater trochanter and that witness made no objective findings with regard to the left thigh; there was no pathology associated with the hips. Accordingly, the Commission’s award must have been founded upon the alleged back injuries alone or upon the combination of back and hip injuries.

Apart from claimant’s own testimony the only evidence of injury to his back came from his two medical witnesses. The substance of their testimony follows.

Dr. Harry I. Berland, radiologist at St. Louis State Hospital, testified that on January 15, 1965, he x-rayed the lumbosacral spine and the left hip of claimant. The x-rays showed spur formations on the margins of the lumbar and lower dorsal vertebrae and a narrowing of the right side of the first lumbar vertebra and of the second lumbar vertebra. He found a narrowing of the intervertebral space between the fourth and fifth lumbar vertebrae. The x-ray of claimant’s left hip gave no evidence of any pathology there. He stated as a conclusion that the x-rays showed a healed fracture [695]*695or compression fracture in the first lumbar vertebra and he was suspicious of a mild compression deformity in the body of the second lumbar vertebra.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Eubanks v. Poindexter Mechanical Plumbing & Heating
901 S.W.2d 246 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1995)
Wright v. Sports Associated, Inc.
887 S.W.2d 596 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1994)
Griggs v. AB Chance Company
503 S.W.2d 697 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1973)
Downs v. A. C. F. Industries, Inc.
460 S.W.2d 293 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1970)
Morgan v. Krey Packing Co.
454 S.W.2d 939 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
426 S.W.2d 692, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starcke-v-krey-packing-co-moctapp-1968.