Wilson v. Erickson

477 P.2d 998, 1970 Alas. LEXIS 213
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1970
Docket1277
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 477 P.2d 998 (Wilson v. Erickson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Erickson, 477 P.2d 998, 1970 Alas. LEXIS 213 (Ala. 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

ERWIN, Justice.

In this appeal, appellants assert that the Superior Court erred in reversing a finding of permanent total disability and a finding that certain penalties were due which was rendered by the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Board. Our review is limited to a determination of whether the Board’s findings were supported by substantial evidence in light of the whole record. 1

The evidence before the Board as to the nature of claimant’s disability and the causal relationship to the August 10, 1966, injury was conflicting. On review, it would not be our province to weigh the evidence or choose between competing inferences reasonably to be drawn from the evidence. Judge Holtzoff articulated this well-established principle of review in compensation cases in Great American Indemnity Co. v. Britton, 2 in an appeal under the Longshoremen’s and Harborworkers’ Act. He wrote:

The only questions that the Court may consider are, first, whether the award is contrary to law; and second, whether the administrative findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence. * * That countervailing evidence may have more probative value would not warrant the court in overruling the findings. So, too, the Court may not set aside the inferences drawn by the Administrator from the evidence that he chose to believe, if such inferences are reasonably possible and have a rational basis. * * * The Court may not substitute its own judgment for that of the Deputy Commissioner. 3

In the case at bar, Clayton Wilson is 59 years of age and has lived in the Anchorage area since he came from Kodiak in 1955. Claimant is married and has four dependents, ages 16, 11, 8 and 3. Claimant had been employed regularly between 1955 and 1965 by the same employer. In 1966, the claimant went to work for Stewart Erickson and indicates that he did not miss any work because of illness, but apparently had had a hernia operation at one time. The claimant denied completely that prior to the accident he had had any back trouble or neck trouble.

The accident occurred on August 10, 1966, and from that time on up and through the date of the hearing the claimant has not been able to do any regular work, even though he indicated that he had, in the year after the accident and before the time for which any temporary total disability was awarded herein, worked at some five jobs which took up approximately five months’ period of time. The record indicates that claimant had no earnings in 1968 and had earned $6,153.00 in 1966 and $7,467.00 in 1967.

The accident apparently happened when a P & H Dragline cable caught the claim *1000 ant’s feet, flipping him into the air. The claimant was initially seen by Dr. Sims on August 15, 1966. He next went to Dr. Voke on April 30, 1968, May 16, 1968, May 21, 1968, June 6, 1968, and June 27, 1968. Dr. Voke apparently referred claimant to Dr. Perry Mead and Dr. Paul Dittrich. While the findings of Dr. Dittrich are referred to by the Board, the findings of Dr. Mead were not part of the record.

There is no question but that the accident happened in the course of the employment because the parties so stipulated. The problem appears to be whether or not the claimant suffered a compensable injury. That he did was the opinion expressed by Dr. Wichman, 4 the claimant, and the Workmen’s Compensation Board, while, on the other hand, Dr. Dittrich felt that the present injury was attributable to advanced degenerative arthritis.

In view of this state of the record, three prior decisions of this court have significance here. In Thornton v. Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Board, 5 the court found it is a well-established rule in workmen’s compensation law that a pre-existing disease or infirmity does not disqualify a claim under the work-connection requirement if the employment aggravated, accelerated or combined with the disease or infirmity to produce the death or disability from which compensation is sought. The question in a particular case of whether the employment did so contribute to the final result is one of fact which is usually determined from medical testimony. 6 In Thornton 7 we also said:

In these circumstances we find that there is lacking the kind of evidence which a reasonable mind might find adequate to support the Board’s determination that the climbing of the tower was not a crucial precipitating factor in Thornton’s death. Whether ‘crucial’ or not the evidence shows that the exertion of climbing the tower was a precipitating factor in Thornton’s death, and this bolsters the statutory presumption that the death arose out of and in the course of Thornton’s employment. The superior court erred in granting judgment for ap-pellees in this action by appellant to set aside the Board’s order denying compensation.

Additionally, in the case of Aleutian Homes v. Fischer, 8 the court stated:

Compensation is not to be barred because the risk is not generally recognized or because only those unusually susceptible or predisposed to a given disease will contract it.

In the case of Brown v. Northwest Airlines, Inc., 444 P.2d 529, 533 (Alaska 1968), the court cited the Thornton and Fischer cases in holding as follows :

It is on the basis of the Thornton, Fischer, and Vereen trilogy that we have con- *1001 eluded this case must be remanded for more explicit findings of fact. These three cases establish that disability flowing from traumatic neurosis is compen-sable ; that compensation will not be barred because appellant was ‘unusually susceptible or predisposed to’ a given mental or nervous disorder; that the appellant is entitled to compensation if the work-connected accident or injury ‘aggravated, accelerated, or combined with the disease or infirmity to produce * * disability,’ or, as we said in Thornton, appellant should be compensated if the fall was ‘a precipitating factor’ in any disability resulting from traumatic neurosis causally related to her employment.

It is thus clear that the aggravation of the pre-existing condition would in fact be compensable.

The Board found that the claimant was totally disabled from April 30, 1968, until the date of the award and that such disability was permanent and would continue in the future until evidence showed improvement. The question of whether or not such injury is permanent is not altogether clear from the medical testimony. Dr. Wichman’s testimony is subject to more than one interpretation 9 and while Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
477 P.2d 998, 1970 Alas. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-erickson-alaska-1970.