Wilson v. LARKINS & SONS & SONS

543 N.W.2d 735, 249 Neb. 396, 1996 Neb. LEXIS 30
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1996
DocketS-95-534
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 543 N.W.2d 735 (Wilson v. LARKINS & SONS & SONS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. LARKINS & SONS & SONS, 543 N.W.2d 735, 249 Neb. 396, 1996 Neb. LEXIS 30 (Neb. 1996).

Opinion

Lanphier, J.

This case arises out of appellee Gladys Wilson’s claim for workers’ compensation for personal injuries she allegedly sustained in the course of her employment with appellant Larkins & Sons. Appellant Continental Western Insurance Company is Larkins & Sons’ workers’ compensation insurance carrier. Wilson claims she developed hypersensitivity pneumonitis (farmer’s lung disease) when she was exposed to molds and dust as she transported milo for Larkins & Sons. The Workers’ Compensation Court concluded that Wilson had failed to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that her disease arose out of or in the course of her employment with Larkins & Sons and dismissed Wilson’s petition. Wilson appealed to the Workers’ Compensation Court review panel, which affirmed the lower court’s finding that Wilson had failed to show that her disease arose out of her employment. However, the review panel remanded this matter to the trial court for further findings of fact regarding whether employment conditions caused Wilson to suffer increased symptoms of a preexisting disease. In their timely appeal, Larkins and Continental assert that the review panel erred in remanding this matter for further findings of fact. We affirm the review panel’s judgment in all respects.

BACKGROUND

Wilson has been employed primarily as a truckdriver during her adult life. At the time of the incidents discussed below, *398 Wilson was approximately 51 years of age.

Wilson began driving a grain truck and a flatbed for Larkins in approximately 1990 or 1991. On April 19, 1993, Wilson hauled milo for Larkins from a roller mill to an elevator. In order to load the grain truck, Wilson positioned the vehicle under the mill’s elevator hopper. Wilson remained in the cab of the truck with her window partially open in order to hear commands to move the truck forward or backward. As the milo flowed into the truck, an extreme amount of dust filled the air so that at times, Wilson was unable to see the length of her truck’s trailer. Some dust entered the cab of the truck.

To unload the truck at the elevator, Wilson had to open chutelike hoppers on the bottom of the trailer and monitor the situation as the truck emptied. Wilson testified that April 19 was an extremely windy day, and as she stood by the truck as it emptied, it was “very, very dusty. ”

Wilson hauled three loads of milo from the grain mill to the elevator on April 19. Before Wilson began work on April 19, she thought she had a cold. After the first load, Wilson’s physical condition began to deteriorate. Wilson testified that by the third load, “I couldn’t hardly breathe at all. My chest was extremely tight, and I was in a great deal of chest pain. ” When Wilson arrived home after work, she needed assistance walking from the car to the house. Wilson made an immediate appointment with her physician, Dr. Robert Liebel.

Dr. Liebel’s office notes from April 19 indicate that Wilson had marked bilateral wheezing and was in obvious respiratory distress. Dr. Liebel admitted Wilson to the county hospital. According to the hospital’s records, Wilson said she had suffered from shortness of breath and a harsh, nonproductive cough for the past several days. Wilson was treated and discharged on April 22 with a primary diagnosis of asthmatic bronchitis, but the possibility of pneumonitis was noted.

Wilson had experienced respiratory problems before April 19. Wilson had smoked approximately two packs of cigarettes per day for more than 20 years. In 1985, Wilson was treated for a broken leg. Her medical records indicated that when she was admitted to the hospital for the broken leg, she had an upper respiratory infection and bronchitis and complained of shortness *399 of breath upon exertion. The respiratory problems were attributed to her smoking. It was also noted that Wilson was quite obese.

In May 1988, Wilson underwent a routine physical in order to maintain her commercial driver’s license. Wilson’s smoking and obesity were documented, and she was admonished to quit smoking. However, Wilson was not placed on any work restrictions.

In May 1989, Wilson was tested for a variety of allergies, and those tests indicated that she was sensitive to grasses, ragweed, trees, shrubs, house dust, epidermals, and fungi.

In July 1990, Wilson had a respiratory reaction after picking chokecherries. Wilson was admitted to the county hospital with chest pain, shortness of breath, and wheezing. Wilson remained in the hospital for 3 days and was discharged with a diagnosis of respiratory distress and reactive airways disease.

We now return to the events following Wilson’s April 1993 hospitalization. Wilson was referred to Dr. Anup Chakraborty for further evaluation and was examined on May 12, 1993. Dr. Chakraborty noted that Wilson complained of having had a chronic cough all winter long and shortness of breath upon slight exertion. It was further noted that Wilson had quit smoking after April 19, but continued to suffer respiratory problems. Dr. Chakraborty stated that his impressions of Wilson’s problems included hypersensitivity pneumonitis, probably secondary to her exposure to corn and milo dust or moldy hay; hypertension; significant obesity; and past heavy tobacco use. Dr. Chakraborty prescribed treatment with high doses of steroids.

Dr. Chakraborty saw Wilson again on May 25, 1993. Wilson had improved, but some restrictive defects affecting her pulmonary functions were still present.

When Dr. Chakraborty evaluated Wilson’s progress on July 6, 1993, Wilson’s pulmonary functions had improved. At that time, it was felt that Wilson could go back to work slowly, but she was advised to avoid exposure to grain dust and was encouraged to lose weight. Dr. Chakraborty noted that Wilson’s “[p]resent pulmonary function shows a restrictive defect which is probably because of her obesity rather than anything else. ”

*400 On October 5, 1993, Wilson filed a petition in the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court alleging that she had sustained injuries to her lungs in an accident arising out of and in the course of her employment with Larkins. She alleged that she had developed hypersensitivity pneumonitis precipitated by exposure to molds and dust and that she was permanently partially disabled. In their answer, Larkins and Continental denied that Wilson suffered from any disability and further stated that if she did have a disability, such disability was not the result of or attributable to any accident or occupational disease arising out of the course of her employment.

At the request of Larkins and Continental’s attorney, Wilson was examined by Dr. John Connolly on January 24, 1994. Dr. Connolly concluded that there was no evidence of hypersensitivity pneumonitis. In Dr. Connolly’s opinion, Wilson had chronic bronchitis, which was probably the result of her intense cigarette smoking for many years. Dr. Connolly stated that as a result of her chronic bronchitis, Wilson had reactive airways, which might cause her to respond with increased symptoms to corn and milo dust, but that he did not believe that exposure to corn and milo dust was the underlying cause of her disease.

On February 2, 1994, Dr. Chakraborty examined Wilson on behalf of Wilson’s attorney.

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Bluebook (online)
543 N.W.2d 735, 249 Neb. 396, 1996 Neb. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-larkins-sons-sons-neb-1996.