Waites Bogany v. Consolidated Underwriters

252 F.2d 764, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3764
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1958
Docket16650
StatusPublished

This text of 252 F.2d 764 (Waites Bogany v. Consolidated Underwriters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waites Bogany v. Consolidated Underwriters, 252 F.2d 764, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3764 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

JONES, Circuit Judge.

Waites Bogany was a log tripper employed by a lumber company. He became entangled in a machine into which his right hand and arm were pulled. The arm was so mangled as to require amputation above the elbow. This entitled him to a workmen’s compensation award for the specific injury of the loss of the arm. He claimed to be entitled to an additional award for injuries to his shoulder and neck and for general disability. The insurance carrier for the employer which was the defendant in the district court and is the appellee here, asserted that the shoulder and neck condition was arthritis unconnected with the injury, or resulted from atrophy caused by disuse of his arm and shoulder muscles, or was only an incident to and encompassed within the specific injury of the loss of the arm. The testimony was without conflict that the appellant Bogany had an arthritic condition in his neck and shoulder, and that he had peritendinitis in the right shoulder. It was established that these conditions produced much pain; that they were disabling and would probably continue. Bogany urges that the evidence shows he not only suffered the loss of an arm but that he also received disabling injuries to his shoulder, his neck and his back for which he was entitled to a general recovery. On this issue the district court agreed with the defendant insurer and directed a verdict for it upon which judgment was entered. From the judgment Bogany has appealed and the decisive question with us is whether the court erred in taking the case from the jury. This is a Texas case and is to be decided by the provisions of its statutes as interpreted by the decisions of its courts.

*766 For total incapacity for work a disabled employee is entitled to workmen’s compensation payments of sixty per cent, of his average weekly wages, but not more than $25 nor less than $9 for not more than 401 weeks. Vernon’s Ann. Tex.Stat. art. 8306, Sec. 10. Certain specific injuries are enumerated in the Texas statutes for which designated compensation is fixed, and for such injuries the recovery is limited to the amount designated. For the loss of an arm at or above the elbow, the award is fixed at sixty per cent, of the average weekly wage, with the same minimum and maximum provisions as the section covering general disability, for 200 weeks. Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Stat. art. 8306, Sec. 12.

In determining whether a verdict was properly directed for the defendant a reviewing court will consider the evidence and all inferences that might be drawn from it in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. The public policy of Texas requires the Workmen’s Compensation Act to be liberally construed in favor of employees. See Hargrove v. Trinity Universal Ins. Co., 152 Tex. 243, 256 S.W.2d 73, 75, where it is said, “A liberal interpretation will award him the greatest benefits the nature of his injuries will sustain”. With these doctrines before us we have gone through the record and from the welter of testimony we have sought such evidence as might tend to support the appellant’s contentions. The appellant and appellee direct our attention to the portions of the record which they believe sustain them in their several positions.

The appellant testified that he was a good man before he was injured but hadn’t been able to work since, that he was in constant pain in his neck and shoulder. Dr. J. Markewich testified as a witness for the plaintiff. He testified as to the appellant’s arthritis, the bone atrophy in the shoulder girdle, the peritendinitis and the pain which the appellant suffered. He was asked whether the appellant’s pain in the neck region was caused by the accident or by the arthritic condition or an aggravation of the arthritic condition. The witness replied:

“The pain he complained of at the present time in my opinion is due more to the injury to his arm and shoulder and could be probably as much secondary pain in the neck from this shoulder from the atrophy and from tendinitis that radiates into the neck as much as it can be to actually arthritic process. Now the only way the arthritic process could be causing pain is if it was there before an accident, from aggravation or sudden twist or jerk in motion, as he experienced, causing that narrowing in that inner space. It could be a combination of both, but more likely it’s the result of the original injury and the secondary complications that had developed since then which has involved the entire shoulder or girdle all the way to the cervical spine, and many people can get radiating pain from one area into the neck.”.

He expressed the opinion that most of the neck pain was coming from the shoulder girdle rather than from the arthritis. Dr. T. R. Gardner, the surgeon who amputated the appellant’s arm, was a witness for the appellee. He stated that peritendinitis in the shoulder is very painful and a person suffering from it would use his arm less than if he didn’t have it. The loss of the arm, he said, would cause a lessening of the use, and the lessened use could result in the atrophied condition. He stated that the injury was not confined to the arm but extended into and affected the shoulder girdle.

Dr. Joe W. King, an orthopedic surgeon, testified for the appellee, and primarily upon his testimony the appellee seeks to sustain the judgment of the district court. Peritendinitis, he said is very painful, that it was caused by ad-hesions and adhesions could result from an injury. He was asked whether the appellant’s injury was limited solely to his arm or extended into and affected *767 his shoulder girdle. The witness answered :

“The best I can tell and what I think is that the man had an injury to his arm. Certainly he could obtain at that time, and I would have expected him to obtain, sprain or injury to his shoulder. I don’t think that I can get my arm cut in two or caught into something and pull real hard without doing that. Sure, if I got my arm cut, I would jerk and I would jerk pretty hard, and I wouldn’t be surprised if I wouldn’t # sprain my shoulder in doing so. I think that if he obtained sprain or anything to his shoulder joint at that time, and I could readily see why he would, I can find no evidence of that being anything permanent as far as the injury to the shoulder at that time is concerned. Certainly at the present time he has disability as far as his shoulder girdle is concerned.”

The peritendinitis and the atrophy, he thought, came from disuse of the arm following amputation. The neck condition, which he believed to be a degenerative disc having its origin before the accident, could, he said, have resulted from the injury.

Such are the portions of the evidence most favorable to the appellant. The court, although recognizing a disability of the shoulder as well as an injury and disability of the arm, was unable to see any evidence that the shoulder involvement, the peritendinitis and the other shoulder conditions, were other than the result or the effects of the loss of the arm, and that recovery was limited to the specific injury to the exclusion of any award for the general injury.

The applicable rule has been thus stated:

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Bluebook (online)
252 F.2d 764, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waites-bogany-v-consolidated-underwriters-ca5-1958.