Vanderbilt Mining Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission

258 P. 982, 85 Cal. App. 134, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 356
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 16, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5876.
StatusPublished

This text of 258 P. 982 (Vanderbilt Mining Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vanderbilt Mining Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission, 258 P. 982, 85 Cal. App. 134, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 356 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

TYLER, P. J.

Certiorari to review an award of the Industrial Accident Commission. It is alleged therein in substance that on January 30, 1924, respondent John A. McFarlane filed an application for adjustment of claim under the Compensation Act (Stats. 1917, p. 831), in which it was alleged that he sustained an injury by slipping on a *135 timber while working for Vanderbilt Mining Company at Ivanpah, California, on September 26, 1923, causing abrasion of his right shin and a strain of the right knee. That evidence taken upon the hearing showed that McFarlane had worked for several days following this injury and that he had been treated for superficial injury of the leg by a Dr. Brook of Las Vegas, Nevada, but after about two weeks’ time he went to Bakersfield and placed himself under the care of doctors of that city. That shortly after the first day of January following, the insurance carrier had him removed to Los Angeles, where a complete examination was made by specialists on behalf of the company, and also by a referee doctor appointed by the Industrial Accident Commission; that the medical evidence showed that McFarlane was suffering from a Charcot joint of the knee caused by syphilis; that a Charcot joint is one evidence of the disease known as “tabes dorsalis,” often referred to as “locomotor ataxia.” Thereafter findings and award were issued April 12, 1924, by which it was determined that McFarlane had scraped the inner aspect of his right leg from the knee to the ankle, approximately precipitating a previous diseased condition resulting in a Charcot knee. As a result of this injury the Commission found that disability had continued from October 5, 1923, to and including February 6, 1924, which on maximum earnings amounted to $348.16 compensation ; that it was necessary to do a fixation operation of the right knee-joint, together with anti-syphilitic treatment. It was further found that the proper apportionment between the disease and injury was to award applicant certain medical and surgical care without compensation from and after February 6, 1924, as said injury might result in permanent disability which in such event would be rated subsequently upon request and the filing of medical reports. This award became final. Thereafter McFarlane refused to accept the operation on his knee, and the Commission found the refusal justified. McFarlane then filed a request for a permanent injury rating. The Commission filed its decision upon this petition September 3, 1924, in which it held the condition to be permanent, consisting of what is technically known as Charcot knee, and it further found that the proportion of permanent disability attributable to the injury, and not to the pre-existing disease, had been fully compen *136 sated by the compensation awarded for the temporary disability in the previous award. On September 22, 1924, MeFarlane filed a petition for rehearing in which he set forth, among other things, that he had paid out over $770 for medical expense while in Bakersfield, prior to the first hearing, and he asked that the Commission grant him a further award in reimbursement for such expense. On October 17, 1924, this petition came on for a rehearing and was denied. Following this decision MeFarlane then petitioned for a writ of review in the district court of appeal, second appellate district, division two, which petition was denied on December 9, 1924. Thereafter, on April 22, 1926, some sixteen months later, MeFarlane filed a petition for further compensation based on new and further disability and also for an allowance for medical bills, said petition setting forth that on September 26, 1925, it had become necessary for him to have his leg amputated because of the Charcot knee. Applicant asked for a further allowance of compensation on account of the loss of his leg and for the medical, surgical, and hospital expense incurred in connection therewith, and the sum of $933.85 to cover medical expenses that were incurred previous to the first hearing, a part of which had, it is claimed, been the subject of the petition for writ of review which had been denied. Petitioners herein answered said application and set up that the said matter had become res judicata and that the denial of the writ of review established the previous decisions of the Commission as the law of the case. Thereafter on July 21, 1926, the Commission entered its decision on applicant’s petition for further compensation in which it determined that (1) the order and decision of September 3, 1924, was a final decision upon the claim for disability compensation and therefore the applicant was entitled to no further compensation for permanent disability; (2) that MeFarlane was entitled under the award of April 12, 1924, to certain medical and surgical treatment and such treatment had not been furnished by petitioners herein; and (3) that as the applicant’s claim for such medical treatment had not been acted on in the denial of the petition for rehearing on September 22, 1924, the case should be set down for further hearing as to such medical expense. Thereafter MeFarlane filed a petition for rehearing on July 9, 1926, claiming that the amputation of the leg was a new *137 and further disability and the Commission granted the petition and subsequently on April 2, 1927, rendered two decisions. Under the first, medical expense incurred prior to the first hearing was disallowed, but an award was made for anti-syphilitic treatment subsequent to the first hearing, and prior to the amputation of the leg, in the amount of $187.50, for which an award was made. Under the second, it was found that the employee was entitled to a new and further disability by reason of the amputation of the leg above the knee which was rated at seventy-three and three-fourths per cent, amounting to $20.83 a week for 240 weeks and thereafter $4.41 a week for life, but as said disability was caused in part by pre-existing disease and in part by injury, that the proportion of said disability attributable to the injury was twenty-five per cent, which reduced the amount to $5.21 for 240 weeks, and thereafter $1.10 a week for life. It also found the reasonable medical expense to be $141.10 for the cost of amputation, one-quarter of which is $35.28' and award was made accordingly. Petitioners aver in support of the present application that the Commission in entering its decision of April 2, 1927, acted without and in excess of its powers; that the findings and award are not sustained by the evidence and the findings do not sustain the awards, and, further, that they are unreasonable. It is also claimed that the award of September 3, 1924, was a complete decision of the case as it disposed of all issues up to that date, which included anti-syphilitic treatment, and the fact that the knee should not be operated on. That the condition of Charcot knee is a diseased condition and the award contemplated that the disease might become worse and might necessitate an operation to amputate it, in accordance with the course of such disease; that there was no rating of the amount of permanent disability, but the findings were general that the full disability of the employment for precipitating an impending Charcot knee had been fully compensated and the final order that applicant take nothing further was a complete disposition of that issue; that a denial of the writ of review to the district court of appeal confirmed this and that, therefore, the Commission could not reopen the case and give further relief for the same condition of Charcot knee existing eighteen months later.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 982, 85 Cal. App. 134, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanderbilt-mining-co-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1927.