Vinson v. Curators of the University of Missouri

822 S.W.2d 504, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1815, 1991 WL 262929
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1991
Docket59203
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 822 S.W.2d 504 (Vinson v. Curators of the University of Missouri) 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
Vinson v. Curators of the University of Missouri, 822 S.W.2d 504, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1815, 1991 WL 262929 (Mo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

SATZ, Judge.

This is a worker’s compensation case. Claimant, Mr. Robert Vinson, appeals from the finding of the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (Commission) that he sustained a twenty percent permanent partial disability. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

Claimant raises several issues on appeal. Two of them rest on his conclusion that he was permanently totally disabled, rather than permanently partially disabled.

At the time of his injury, claimant was employed as a floor maintenance worker at the University of Missouri, St. Louis. (UMSL) His duties included cleaning, waxing and buffing floors and moving furniture to fulfill those duties. On May 21, 1986, while on the job, he injured his back moving furniture.

Claimant’s conclusion that he is permanently and totally disabled is based upon his interpretation of oral testimony and his view of the legally allowable inferences that may be drawn from that interpretation. He contends his uncontroverted evidence shows that his mental capacity, education and training limit him to heavy manual labor, and he contends UMSL’s evidence shows his work-connected injury caused him to be unable to do that kind of work. Moreover, he contends, there is no evidence showing he is capable of performing light work. Therefore, he reasons, the evidence shows his injury has made him unemployable, which means he is permanently totally disabled.

implicit in this argument is claimant’s unarticulated premise concerning the par *506 ties’ respective burdens of proof. Implicitly, claimant assumes it was UMSL’s burden to show there was light work available to him and not his burden to show light work was unavailable. This unexpressed allocation of this burden of proof is simply an unexpressed application of the “odd-lot” doctrine. See 2 Larson Workmen’s Compensation Law §§ 57.61 (1989). We need not discuss the logic of this doctrine nor its acceptance in Missouri, however. Claimant’s use of the doctrine depends on his interpretation of the testimony of UMSL’s medical expert, which, he contends, shows that claimant’s injury caused him to be incapable of doing heavy manual labor. This contention is not justified by record.

UMSL’s medical expert was Dr. James Stiehl. Claimant’s contention is based upon a part of Dr. Stiehl’s testimony on recross-examination. To put this testimony in proper context, however, it must be viewed in light of Dr. Stiehl’s other testimony.

On direct-examination, Dr. Stiehl said that claimant’s work-connected injury was a “lumbosacral sprain” which caused claimant “a partial permanent disability ... [of] 10 to 15 percent.” Consistent with this testimony, he said that claimant “had significant to advanced degenerative changes in his back that most likely had been of longstanding nature and were causing him chronic lower back pain that was keeping him from going back to work.... [I]t was unlikely that [his] injury was causing [his] prolonged and persistent disability....”

On cross-examination, Dr. Stiehl’s testimony was no different. “[W]hat has kept [claimant] from work and has made him disabled at this point”, Dr. Stiehl said,

is long-standing occupational back disease with severe degenerative arthritis.... [L]imitations of motion and this sort of thing where he is unable to do lifting ... [is] based on the fact that he has ... a bad back_ I cannot state with conclusion [sic] that this causal episode of May of 1986 has led to the problem that he has not been able to return to work. It may have been one more exacerbation that caused him to have pain that took him away from his work but it did not cause the back problem that he has today.

On re-cross-examination, claimant’s counsel asked Dr. Stiehl what “amount of permanent disability” is a “result of [claimant’s] back irrespective of the accident.” When Dr. Stiehl answered unresponsively that claimant’s “disability rating” for the “lumbosacral sprain” was about ten to fifteen percent, claimant’s counsel “explained” that he was asking about claimant’s disability based upon his “total back condition”:

Q: That’s not what I asked you. I’m talking about his total back condition. Not just the lumbosacral sprain, but I’m talking about based upon his condition of his back with the arthritic changes and ... everything else that has taken place over his entire life time at work, do you have an opinion, based upon a reasonable medical certainty, as to what his permanent disability is from that?

This “explanation” is ambiguous. At first, claimant’s counsel asked Dr. Stiehl for his rating of claimant’s back “irrespective of the accident”, but, in his explanation, counsel asked for a rating of claimant’s “total back condition.” It is not clear whether counsel was asking for a rating of the back without the injury or with the injury.

Dr. Stiehl’s understanding of what was being asked is not made clear by his response. Apparently, he understood claimant’s counsel to be asking his original question — what was his rating of claimant’s back without injury. Dr. Stiehl responded:

... I’m not sure that I have any frame of reference to make such a statement....
I would estimate a person’s permanent partial impairment from a back condition that he has, the arthritic changes, would be fifteen to twenty percent....

Sensibly construed, Dr. Stiehl’s testimony, at this point, was that claimant has ten to fifteen percent permanent partial disability due to his May 21 injury and fifteen to twenty percent permanent partial disability due to pre-existing degenerative changes.

*507 The re-cross-examination of Dr. Stiehl continued:

Q: ... In your opinion, [claimant] can only lift twenty pounds, is that correct?
A: That’s correct.
Q: He cannot do any bending, ... stooping ... climbing ... twisting, is that correct?
A: That’s correct.
Q: It’s your opinion, based upon reasonable medical certainty, that that disables a person by only twenty percent?
A: ... [I]f a person is a hod carrier, he is a hundred percent disabled. If he works as a bank teller, he may not be disabled much at all.
# * * * * *
Well, any type of white collar work, he may not be disabled at all.... What I have stated is that he is only capable of moderately light work_ It’s likely that he could not go back to the type of work that he was doing.
Q: ... [I]f he had a white collar job, the odds are he wouldn’t have the back that he has now?
A: That’s correct, but he did have the job he’s got now or he did up until May 21 of ’86, and with that back being in that condition, built up over all these years, it’s likely that he can’t work at the level he may have been required.
Q: ... Is it your opinion that he has a permanent partial disability or permanent disability that would be total?

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Bluebook (online)
822 S.W.2d 504, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1815, 1991 WL 262929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vinson-v-curators-of-the-university-of-missouri-moctapp-1991.