Case Title: J.E. CARLSON, INC. v. WHITE

Citation: 

Docket Number: 42979

State: oklahoma

Court: Oklahoma Supreme Court

Date: 1969-03-11T00:00:00Z

Document:
J.E. CARLSON, INC. v. WHITE  J.E. CARLSON, INC. v. WHITE 1969 OK 46 452 P.2d 145 Case Number: 42979 Decided: 03/11/1969 Supreme Court of Oklahoma J.E. CARLSON, INC., AND NATIONAL AUTOMOBILE AND CASUALTY INSURANCE CO., PETITIONERS, v. CLARENCE R. WHITE, CLAIMANT, DON MANNERS, HIS ATTORNEY, AND THE STATE INDUSTRIAL COURT, RESPONDENTS. Syllabus ¶0 1. Title 85 O.S. 1961, § 77, of the Workmen's Compensation Law provides that on appeal to the entire Industrial Court, the entire court, or a majority thereof, sitting as a body shall hear such appeal, and since there is no limitation in the Law or statutes concerning the trial judge participating in the hearing on appeal, it was not error for the trial judge to act as presiding judge and participate with the other judges in the appeal hearing. 2. The strict procedural rules applied to courts of general jurisdiction are not applicable to pleadings and practice before the State Industrial Court. 3. An injured employee is not bound to know or to gauge the extent of his injuries nor their future developments, and exact precision is not required in describing the nature and extent of an accidental injury in a claim of an injured employee filed with the State Industrial Court. It is sufficient if it states in ordinary language the nature and cause of the injury. Appeal from the State Industrial Court of the State of Oklahoma; A.R. Swank, Jr., Trial Judge. Original proceeding by petitioners, J.E. Carlson, Inc., and its insurance carrier, National Automobile and Casualty Insurance Co., to review an order and award of the State Industrial Court rendered in favor of Clarence R. White, under the Workmen's Act. Award Sustained. John F. Eberle, Oklahoma City, for petitioners. Don Manners, Oklahoma City, for respondent, Clarence R. White. DAVISON, Justice. ¶1 This is an original proceeding by petitioners, J.E. Carlson, Inc., and its insurance carrier, National Automobile and Casualty Insurance Co., to review an order and award of the State Industrial Court rendered in favor of Clarence R. White, claimant. ¶2 The record reflects that claimant sustained an accidental injury on December 31, 1965, when he fell from a scaffold. On February 4, 1966, claimant filed a Form 3, Employee's First Notice of Injury and Claim for Compensation with the State Industrial Court in case No. D-40498, in which he described the nature and extent of his injury as "Fractured right heel, ankle and foot." The attorney shown thereon is not claimant's present attorney. On February 9, 1966, the employer, J.E. Carlson, Inc., filed its First Notice of Injury, reciting that claimant slipped off the scaffolding and "lit on heel of foot," injuring the "right foot." Claimant was furnished medical treatment by his employer, J.E. Carlson, Inc., beginning December 31, 1965, and thereafter, as hereinafter set forth in connection with disposition on a proposition of error presented by petitioners. ¶3 On January 27, 1967, claimant filed another Form 3 with the State Industrial Court, in case No. D-47196, for the same accidental injury, and describing his injury as "Right foot and back." The name of his present counsel appears thereon as his attorney. On February 6, 1967, J.E. Carlson, Inc., filed in that case an Employer's First Notice of Injury describing claimant's injury as "Sprain to right foot." Petitioners also filed in that case a Plea in Abatement on the ground that there was a prior pending claim for compensation. Thereafter, on February 17, 1967, the claimant filed a "Dismissal Without Prejudice" in D-47196 in which he asked the court to dismiss the same without prejudice to his prosecution of D-40498. ¶4 Both cases were set and came on for hearing on September 21, 1967, and petitioners requested the trial judge to sustain the plea in abatement to D-47196. The attorney for claimant agreed to the plea in abatement, but the trial judge refused to dismiss D-47196 and combined the two cases for hearing. On December 20, 1967, the trial judge entered an order finding claimant sustained a compensable injury, consisting of injury to his right foot and lower back, being an aggravation of a pre-existing condition. The order found claimant had sustained 25 per cent permanent partial disability to his right foot and awarded 37.5 weeks of compensation therefor, and found 10 per cent permanent partial disability to his back and awarded 50 weeks of compensation for such disability. ¶5 Petitioners appealed to the Industrial Court en banc and there raised the propositions of error now presented to this court. The trial judge acted as presiding judge and participated in the hearing before the court en banc, but abstained from voting at the conclusion of the hearing. The other four members of the court adopted and affirmed the trial judge's award. ¶6 Petitioners contend that the Industrial Court erred when it denied their motion to disqualify the trial judge from acting as presiding judge and from participating in the hearing before the court en banc. They urge, as a separate proposition of error, that the denial of time to petitioners in which to argue before the court en banc was reversible error. This latter contention is also presented in support of the disqualification proposition. We therefore combine them for the purpose of disposition. ¶7 The tenor of petitioners' argument is that under ¶8 The defect in petitioners' argument is that they do not refer us to any place in the record where facts and circumstances exist that make the statute and decisions applicable. The trial judge did refuse to grant the plea in abatement and rendered an award against petitioners, and, when acting as presiding judge, restricted argument to 10 minutes. However, petitioners fail to show by argument or authority wherein this is evidence of prejudice requiring the trial judge to disqualify before the court en banc. ¶9 Petitioners further contend on this proposition of disqualification, that the trial judge, having heard and determined the matter originally, was disqualified to participate in the appeal proceedings and review of the case by the Industrial Court en banc and that his abstention from voting did not cure or excuse his failure to disqualify. They cite statutes from other jurisdictions prohibiting an appellate judge from hearing or taking part in a case on appeal from the decision of a case or issue tried by him. They cite no Oklahoma statute or authority that is applicable to the State Industrial Court. ¶10 The statute, ¶11 In Osborne v. State Industrial Commission, ¶12 We therefore conclude that the presiding judge on appeal was not disqualified by reason of prejudice or because he was the trial judge. ¶13 Petitioners contend in a number of related propositions that the Industrial Court erred in refusing to recognize and sustain the claimant's dismissal without prejudice in case No. D-47196 and also erred in refusing to sustain petitioners' plea in abatement filed in No. D-47196. ¶14 Petitioners' argument is that ¶15 We do not agree with this contention. The refusal of the trial judge to abate or dismiss the second filed claim was without doubt based upon his belief that the claimant should have a full and complete hearing as to all his claimed injuries and disabilities arising out of the alleged same and single injury. ¶16 In Mudge Oil Co. v. Wagnon, ¶17 Furthermore, we have held in decisions promulgated since the change in name that the strict procedural rules applied to courts of general jurisdiction are not applicable to pleadings and practice before the State Industrial Court. Bland v. Eagle-Picher Co., Okl., ¶18 There is no merit in the proposition of error advanced by petitioners. ¶19 Petitioners further contend that case No. D-47196, filed one year and twenty-seven days after the accident, was forever barred under the express provisions of ¶20 The applicable portion of the statute provides that the right to claim compensation under the Act shall be forever barred unless within one year after the injury or death, a claim for compensation thereunder shall be filed with the Commission (Court), provided, however, that claims may be filed at any time within one year from the date of the last payment of any compensation or remuneration paid in lieu of compensation. ¶21 As stated above, it was in case No. D-47196, filed January 27, 1967, that claimant for the first time claimed an injury to his back. The purpose of this proposition is to secure a reversal of that part of the award giving claimant compensation for disability to his back. ¶22 There is no dispute that claimant slipped on a scaffold and fell nine feet to the concrete floor whereby the heel bone in his right foot was fractured and his right ankle was wrenched; that he was treated by a Dr. W, who was furnished by petitioners, and that a cast was placed on his foot and ankle and the cast and new casts were worn by claimant for about four months; and that claimant received medical treatment from Dr. W, until about June 8, 1966, when he was referred to petitioners' Dr. B for further treatment. Claimant testified he fell on his right foot and buttocks and that he complained to Dr. W and later to Dr. B of pain in his back, and that when he walked with the cast on his foot, and also when he walked after the cast was removed, he limped and had pain in his back. The reports of Dr. B recite a series of examinations and treatments of the right foot and ankle, beginning June 8, 1966, and continuing to May 31, 1967. Dr. B's reports recite that on December 31, 1966, the claimant complained of pain in the left hip and low back; that on February 18, 1967, claimant complained of pain in the region of the coccyx; and that on May 31, 1967, the claimant complained of pain in his hips and buttocks. Dr. B's reports recite that claimant walked with a pronounced limp and expressed the opinion that claimant's pain in the lower back was a complication resulting from attempting to protect one extremity that was painful, and in another report that the pain in the hips was not related to the fracture of the heel bone. The X-rays taken by Dr. B showed osteoporosis of the lumbar spine and pelvis, with narrowing of the lumbosacral disc spaces, indicating old, degenerative discs of long duration. ¶23 Dr. R testified for claimant that his examination of claimant reflected lipping and spurring in the inferior regions of the cervical area, and a partial sacralization of the fifth lumbar vertebra, and that the accident had resulted in aggravation of a congenital condition consisting of an overlap of the transverse processes of the fifth lumbar onto the pelvic structures. ¶24 It is petitioners' position that claimant knew of an injury to his back, but failed to file a claim for such injury within one year, and is consequently barred by ¶25 Petitioners cite Hambley v. Foster Wheeler Corporation, Okl., ¶26 Petitioners also cite the holding in Dover Oil Corporation v. Bellmyer, ¶27 We do not question the above statements of law. However, we are of the opinion that they are not applicable in the present situation. ¶28 There is evidence and testimony that claimant walked with a severe limp during the four months that he wore the cast and also after the cast was removed; there is undisputed proof that there was an old and degenerative condition of the lumbar spine and pelvis; and there is medical evidence that the pain claimant has in his back was caused by his body attempting to assume a protective position in relation to the injured foot. Under this state of the record there is evidence that the aggravated condition to claimant's back developed in the period subsequent to the accident. There is competent evidence that reasonably supports the back award. ¶29 In Forrest Oil Corporation v. Breshears, ¶30 From our examination of the record it is our opinion that there was competent evidence from which the Industrial Court could reasonably conclude that the claimant's back condition was aggravated or caused in part by the abnormal way in which, over an extended period of time, claimant had to stand or walk. In the language of the Breshears case, supra, the present claimant was not bound to know or to guage the extent of his injuries nor their future developments. ¶31 Petitioners' claim of error is not sustained by the record and the law. ¶32 Award sustained. ¶33 IRWIN, C.J., and WILLIAMS, BLACKBIRD, JACKSON, HODGES, LAVENDER and McINERNEY, JJ., concur.