Yockey v. Department of Labor & Industries

150 P.2d 680, 21 Wash. 2d 171
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1944
DocketNo. 29285.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 150 P.2d 680 (Yockey v. Department of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yockey v. Department of Labor & Industries, 150 P.2d 680, 21 Wash. 2d 171 (Wash. 1944).

Opinions

Jeffers, J.

Claimant, D. W. Yockey, was injured on November 27, 1938, while engaged in extrahazardous employment at Coulee Dam, being at the time employed by Consolidated Builders, Inc. The workman’s report received by the department of labor and industries at Olympia contained the following: “I fell on my face on concrete. (I was climbing on steel and slipped and fell about 40 ft. landing on my face.)” The doctor’s report, which is a part of the same form on which the workman’s report is made, shows the following injuries to have been received by claimant: Multiple fractures face, mandible, maxilla nose, teeth, lacerations, and deformity.

On November 5,. 1941, Mr. Yockey was examined by Dr. H. Eugene Allen, whose report concludes as follows:

“This man is carrying on a regular occupation. No further treatment is indicated. He has reached a fixed condition. For the injury to the bones of the face and the *172 fractured jaw resulting in deformity of both the upper and lower jaw with the resulting inability to get proper occlusion of his teeth and interfering with proper mastication and for the impaired sensation of the left side of the face above described, he should receive a P. P. D. of 20% of the maximum allowed for unspecified injuries.”

On November 19, 1941, Mr. Yockey’s claim was closed by the supervisor, with an award of $480 for permanent partial disability. Claimant filed an application for rehearing before the joint board. The application was sworn to on December 11, 1941, and states in substance that at the time of the application claimant was suffering from numerous disabilities in his head, teeth, eyes, ears, sense of taste, sense of smell, sinuses, neck, and nervous system; that prior to the accident he was in the best of physical condition, and was suffering from none of the disabilities therein set forth. The application was granted, and the first hearing before the joint board was held February 5, 1942. At this hearing the following witnesses were called by claimant and testified: Mr. and Mrs. Yockey, John R. Johnson, Harold F. Severson, and Dr. Ernest A. Rickards.

Mr. Yockey testified that he was twenty-nine years, old, married, and had three children; that he was a steel worker by trade. He then described the accident and his treatment following, the accident at the Mason City hospital, where he was confined about twenty-eight days. He testified that he did not return to work for about six months, and then worked only one day, when he was ordered off the job by the doctor.

It appears from claimant’s testimony that he has been given a great deal of medical and dental attention, including some plastic surgery by Dr. Schriner of Seattle, in an endeavor to correct, in so far as is possible, the effects of the injuries received.

Mr. Yockey further testified that he had no sense of balance; that he was bothered with the sinuses all the time, with headaches up into the ear and nose; that his left eye was practically useless, being all blurred; that his ears ran all the time; that he could not hear out of the left ear as *173 well as he used to, or the right ear either; that the left ear was worse than the right; that he had ringing and popping in his ears all the time. He stated that his jaws locked, especially when they got cold, and it would take a minute to get them unlocked, and that when he did get them unlocked they would snap and then he would bite himself; that the jaws were out of line. He testified that he had a large depression in the left side of his face and that there was no feeling on the left side of his face; that he could not taste and could not smell; that he had colds all the time; that he could not climb, on account of his sense of-balance; and that he could neither drive nor buck rivets. Claimant further testified that since his injury he worked on the Narrows bridge, in the Lake Washington shipyard, and is now working an eight hour shift at Boeing’s, where he receives $1.55 per hour.

Mrs. Yockey’s testimony generally corroborated that of her husband.

Mr. Johnson, who was working with claimant at Coulee Dam and saw him fall, testified that Mr. Yockey was a good workman; that he last worked with him in September, 1940 (apparently on the Narrows bridge); that claimant was wobbly and complained of his head.

Mr. Severson stated that he was a structural foreman, and had known claimant about six months, during which time Mr. Yockey had worked under his supervision about three and one-half months on different jobs; that, from his observation of claimant on the jobs, he believed claimant had lost his equilibrium; that he complained of headaches. The substance of this witness’s testimony was that Mr. Yockey could not now do many of the things which a structural iron worker is expected to do, especially where his work requires him to be oft' the ground.

Dr. Rickards, who examined claimant on January 31, 1942, after stating that claimant had related to him the history of the accident and his subsequent treatment, further testified that, based upon such history and his examination, he would rate claimant as follows:

*174 “I would rate this man on the loss of his balance, the head condition and the dizziness and blurring of the eyes and the buzzing in the ears and the nervousness — this is due to concussion of the brain, at thirty three and a third per cent of the unspecified. Then for the deformity of the jaws and the loss of his teeth and loss of sensation, thirty three and a third per cent of the unspecified and for the frequency of colds and the effect of a partial loss of smell and taste, twenty-five per cent of the unspecified. His injury to the neck, ten per cent of the unspecified and ten per cent for the miscellaneous or unspecified for the pain and discomfort he has from where the cartilage on the right side has" been removed he has considerable pain and discomfort which is reflected down his leg from his abdomen.”

The doctor was asked why he grouped the loss of sense of balance and claimant’s complaints of headaches, dizziness, blurring of his eyes, and ringing of his ears into one unit, and his answer was:

“A. Due to the concussion of the brain which he received at the time of the accident. Q. Are those all residuals of concussion? A. Yes. . . . Q. How do you account for his complaints of frequent colds? A. From the injury to his nose to a large extent and his lowered resistance as a result of this accident.”

During the cross-examination of the doctor, the following questions, among others, were asked and answered:

“Q. You spoke of the zygoma or the zygomatic process— what’s that? A. A bridge of bone. Q. The cheek bone is it? A. The cheek bone, the upper part of the cheek bone there. Q. Doctor, all these fractures he has had are healed are they not? That is, there are no ununited fractures? A. The lower jaw does not present a particularly healthy appearance. The bones have to some extent healed but the left antrum of Hymore there — that’s in the jaw here on the left side — that has been badly depressed. Q. That’s the antrum under the eyes? A. Leading to the eye — the Antrum of Hymore. Q. That was doubtless crushed or broken at that time? A. Yes. Q.

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Bluebook (online)
150 P.2d 680, 21 Wash. 2d 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yockey-v-department-of-labor-industries-wash-1944.