Taylor v. Industrial Insurance Commission

206 P. 973, 120 Wash. 4, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 885
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1922
DocketNo. 16832
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 206 P. 973 (Taylor v. Industrial Insurance Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Industrial Insurance Commission, 206 P. 973, 120 Wash. 4, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 885 (Wash. 1922).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

— Respondent,. while employed as a workman in the plant of Skinner & Eddy, in Seattle, on July 19, 1919, was injured. A crane ran over his left hand, injuring it to such an extent that the index finger was subsequently amputated. In due course of time he proceeded to present his claim to the industrial insurance commission, where his injury was classified as a permanent partial disability, after he had been examined by Dr. Dudley of Seattle, and Dr. Bird, chief medical officer of the industrial insurance commission. Upon the report of the physicians, he was awarded by the commission for eighteen degrees of injury, or $450, which respondent refused, and an appeal was taken by him to the superior court for King county, where he resided.

A trial was ordered by the presiding judge, over the objection of appellant, to a jury, which resulted in a finding by the jury that the disability of respondent was 55% of the amount he would have received if his injury had consisted of the loss of the major hand at the wrist, which was reduced by the trial court to 50%, or an award of $800. Section 6604-5, subd. f, Remington’s 1915 Code,1 provides that $1,600 shall he paid for the loss of a major hand at the wrist. Judgment was then entered in conformity with this reduced verdict. A motion for a new trial was unsuccessfully made, and the commission appeals from the judgment of the court.

When the case was called for trial before the superior court, objection was made by appellant to a trial by a jury, and in contemplation thereof counsel for appellant moved the court to exclude the talesmen from the court room while the motion to quash the demand for a jury was argued. This was refused by the court, and is urged as error by appellant.

[6]*6We agree with the trial court that he had no authority to send anyone out of the court room unless he excluded the public generally for reasons of public policy, except the jury after a jury had been duly empaneled and sworn. In any event, we can see no prejudice that could possibly result to appellant from the presentation of this motion in the presence of talesmen or jurors.

It is next urged that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to quash the demand for a jury. Section 6604-20, Eem. 1915 Code (P. C. §3488), provides that the calling of a jury shall rest in the discretion of the court, except that in cases arising under §§ 6604-9, 6604-15 and 6604-16, Eem. Code (P. C. §§ 3477, 3483, 3484), either party shall be entitled to a jury trial upon demand. [See Eem. Comp. Stat., §§ 7683, 7690, 7691.] Under this broad provision, the assignment urged by appellant is untenable. If there were any questions of fact whatever to be determined upon the appeal of the injured party from the decision of the commission, they were properly triable before a jury if the court so ordered, and necessarily if they fell within the sections above referred to.

The principal question to be determined upon this appeal is whether there were any proper questions of fact triable by a court and jury.

There is some dispute between the physicians who testified as to the extent of the injuries. The physician for the Skinner & Eddy corporation, who treated respondent at the timé of the injury and for some time thereafter, testified that the hand was extensively wounded; that the flesh was torn from the hand so that one could look through the hand, and that the wound involved the entire palm of the hand and laid the whole tissues of the hand open in the form of a wound; that [7]*7the index finger was broken and the metacarpal bone of the index finger in the hand was broken. The superficial layer, or fascia, in the hand was entirely destroyed. Dust and dirt were ground into the hand; the blood vessels were exposed and some of them destroyed ; the nerves and tendons were exposed and the tendons in places were crushed; the deep fascia was exposed; a cut across the back of the hand was filled with dirt, oil and rust. It was testified that respondent, besides suffering the loss of the index finger by amputation, has lost substantially all the use of the .middle finger and of the ring finger, and the gripping-power of the little finger, and that the scar on the hand is a permanent disability; that there is no sensation in the fingers of the left hand, and that respondent has lost at least 50% of the power and use of the left hand. On the other hand, the physicians for the appellant testified that there was loss of the index finger; that there was a very slight diminution of the flexion of the middle finger, and that a scaration of the tissues of the hand existed to a slight degree. Upon the report of the physicians and the recommendation of the chief medical officer, respondent was allowed compensation for injuries as follows: (1) loss of index finger, 11 y2 degrees; (2) limitation of flexion of middle finger, 2y2 degrees; (3) injury to the scar tissues in the hand, 4 degrees.

For a permanent partial disability not specifically described in Rem. 1915 Code, § 6604-51, the commission has devised a classification by degrees. Each degree amounts to $25 compensation. The statute prescribes $1,600 for loss of the major hand at the wrist, and provides further for compensation for any other permanent partial disability in the proportion which the ex[8]*8tent of such, other disability shall bear to the permanent partial disability specified in the statute which most closely resembles and approximates in degree of disability such other disability, but in no case to exceed the sum of $2,000. For loss of the minor hand at the Avrist, a rating of 62 degrees of compensation, or $1,550, is given. The chief medical officer of appellant reported and testified to a little more than one-third disability, or 331/3 per cent; but the actual award made to respondent Avas only 29 per cent disability. A 33 1/3 per cent award based on $1,550 for the loss of the entire left hand, as a simple arithmetical calculation shows, would amount to $516.65.

The trial court considered that the case was one to be determined by the court and a jury, under the decision in Foster v. Industrial Ins. Comm., 107 Wash. 400, 181 Pac. 912. That case contains the folloAving language:

“Not only is a total sum prescribed for a specified loss, but where an injury is not one of those so specified in the statute, the commission is ordered to make an award proportionate to the award specified ‘which most closely resembles and approximates in degree of disability such other disability’ (that is, a specified disability). Of course, under this statute, the courts have authority to determine whether or not a schedule adopted by the commission for unspecified injuries is properly proportionate to the most closely related specified injury. That question is not raised in this action.”

Appellant contends that the language above quoted ‘ ‘ of course, under this statute, the courts have authority to determine whether or not a schedule adopted by the commission for unspecified injuries is properly proportionate to the most closely related specified injury” is, as shown by the succeeding sentence, mere dictum in that case, or, if not, that it is only applicable where [9]*9there is no dispute as to the extent of the injury itself. On the other hand, respondent contends that the language quoted from that decision is in harmony with the express language of the- statute, § 6604-20, Rem. 1915 Code (P. C.

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Bluebook (online)
206 P. 973, 120 Wash. 4, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-industrial-insurance-commission-wash-1922.