Thom v. Callahan

540 P.2d 1330, 97 Idaho 151, 1975 Ida. LEXIS 378
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1975
Docket11682
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 540 P.2d 1330 (Thom v. Callahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thom v. Callahan, 540 P.2d 1330, 97 Idaho 151, 1975 Ida. LEXIS 378 (Idaho 1975).

Opinion

McQUADE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal by defendant-appellant Mary Callahan, d/b/a Wimpy’s Cafe (employer), from a decision of the State Industrial Commission which found in favor of claimant-respondent Betty Louise Thom. We affirm the order and award of compensation by the Commission to claimant. We also affirm the Commission’s award of a penalty and attorney’s fees to claimant.

Claimant entered respondent’s employ on or about March 1, 1972, with duties as cook, waitress and dishwasher. The Commission found that on March 30, 1972, while lifting and closing an oven door which had slipped off its hinges, claimant sustained a back injury. Based upon claimant’s testimony, the Commission found that claimant felt a sudden sharp back pain while closing the oven door, but continued to work until the end of her shift. On the following day, March 31, claimant worked her shift despite a painful “Backache.” The next day, April 1, the back pain worsened, with pain extending into claimant’s right leg.

On April 4, claimant consulted William T. Wood, M.D., who treated her for a back sprain. The Commission found, in accord with claimant’s testimony, that subsequent to Dr. Wood’s examination, claimant phoned her employer and informed Mrs. Callahan of the back injury. Dr. Wood referred claimant to Dr. W. H. Slaughter, an orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Slaughter hospitalized claimant on April 7. Claimant was treated with traction and medication until her discharge from the hospital on April 12 following a disagreement between claimant’s husband and the attending physician. Claimant’s condition had not improved. She was referred to a second orthopedic surgeon, G. W. Bagby, M.D., of Spokane, Washington. On the evening of April 12, Dr. Bagby hospitalized claimant, who was by this time in acute pain. A myelogram showed evidence of disc irregu *153 larity. On April 14, Dr. Bagby removed a herniated disc from claimant’s back. Claimant was released from the hospital on April 19. Claimant received post-operative treatment from Dr. Bagby until August 1, 1972, at which time Bagby determined she had reached a stable condition.

In answers to interrogatories, which had been propounded by claimant, Dr. Bagby stated his opinion that claimant had made a “[satisfactory but not a complete recovery, that is she did not,, as expected, return to a normal situation with her back.” Dr. Bagby also stated:

“Based upon my examination of the claimant as well as her history, my opinion based on reasonable medical certainty as to the cause of her ruptured inter-vertebral disk, it is my feeling that the accident here in question was the most significant single factor; most disks have some degeneration leading up to an actual situation of rupture, but this is a very hard to determine with any degree of certainty just what degree of degeneration precedes a rupture in any given case. This lady must have had some however, in view of the fact she had had preceding low back pain and her obese situation would lead to this liklihood (sic) also.”

Bagby, in mentioning prior back pain, was referring to pain which arose subsequent to a 1960 automobile accident and which continued intermittently for some time thereafter. While the evidence is conflicting, the Commission found that claimant . . had been free from significant pain in her back for a considerable period prior to March 30, 1972.”

In response to an interrogatory asking “. . . the percentage of . disability as it relates to the whole man .” Bagby concluded that in his opinion claimant had a permanent partial disability amounting to twenty percent of the whole person. The Commission found “. . . that the claimant’s permanent partial disability caused by the accident of March 30, 1972, is 20% of the whole person.” The Commission also found that the injury was sustained in the course of claimant’s employment and was covered by the Workmen’s Compensation Law, but that the employer had failed to insure or secure her liability for compensation as required under the act.

The Commission awarded claimant $643.-50 as income benefits for total temporary disability for work for eleven weeks beginning April 12, 1972; $123.00 for partial temporary disability while recovering during the five-week period immediately preceding August 1, 1972; $6,490.00 for total income benefits for permanent partial disability; and $278.10 for medical expenses incurred as a result of the injury. Because of its finding that appellant had not “secured” payment of compensation as required by I.C. § 72-301, 1 the Commission also awarded claimant $753.46, as a 10% penalty of the entire amount awarded, plus one-third the amount of the award as attorney’s fees ($2,511.53), which the Commission concluded was “reasonable” in this case. 2

*154 On this appeal, Mrs. Callahan urges two assignments of error. She maintains that the Commission erred: (1) In finding that claimant had sustained a back injury causing a twenty percent permanent disability as it relates to the whole person while in appellant’s employ; and (2) in awarding a penalty and attorney’s fees.

Appellant’s first assignment of error deals with the Commission’s finding that claimant sustained an employment-related injury causing a partial permanent disability of twenty percent as it relates to the whole person. Appellant argues that there is a lack of substantial and competent evidence of permanent impairment to support the Commission’s finding, in that the finding of permanent impairment is based solely on Dr. Bagby’s answers to interrogatories. Appellant argues that Dr. Bagby’s answer, relating claimant’s permanent partial impairment (“disability”) at twenty percent of the whole person was in response to a leading question which limited Bagby’s response to a rating in accord with the “whole man” concept. She claims that the objection thereto should have been sustained, leaving no evidence on the record in respect to a rating of permanent impairment.

The Workmen’s Compensation Law contemplates evaluation of permanent impairment in terms of the “whole man,” and in terms of impairment of body extremities as provided by the schedule of income benefits found in I.C. § 72-428. 3 For a time prior to the comprehensive recodification of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, then I.C. § 72-313 (which contained subject matter corresponding to present I.C. § 72-428), prohibited “. . . the rating of partial permanent disability in terms of specific indemnity comparable to a percentage of total permanent disability or on the basis of comparable loss of the ‘whole man’.” Griffin v. Potlatch Forests, Inc. 4 Griffin went on to note that former I.C. § 72-313 had been amended subsequent to the time of the accrual of Mr. Griffin’s cause of action, to abrogate the above rule of law. The schedule of income benefits found in I.C. § 72-428 does not set out specific percentages of permanent disability for back injuries; and the instant claimant sustained an injury to her back and did not suffer an impairment of an extremity as provided for in that schedule.

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Bluebook (online)
540 P.2d 1330, 97 Idaho 151, 1975 Ida. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thom-v-callahan-idaho-1975.