150 Tenn. 474 | Tenn. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Deal, the petitioner, was awarded compensation for injuries sustained April 22, 1922, while at work for the Black Diamond Collieries, the defendant. The defend
The first proposition alludes to a proceeding under the Compensation Act by petition filed July 27, 1919, and ending in a dismissal on appeal to this court as appears from the opinion in Black Diamond Collieries v. Deal, 144 Tenn., 465, 234 S. W., 322.
It is urged that petitioner claimed, in the former proceeding, compensation for total permanent disability of his right arm in consequence ‘of the dislocation of a shoulder, and that in this case he presents a similar claim.
The plea of former adjudication fails because it does not appear that the same questions are involved in this and the former proceeding. Moreover, the former case was not disposed of on its merits. Brewster v. Galloway, 4 Lea (72 Tenn.), 558; Harris v. Mason, 120 Tenn., 668, 115 S. W., 1146, 25 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1011.
The defendant invokes the doctrine of judicial estop-pel, insisting that the petitioner made statements on oath in the former proceeding relative to the injury sustained December 27, 1919, inconsistent with and repugnant to his present claim to compensation for permanent dis
However, mistaken statements or such as involve an opinion, and are not the assertion of a fact do not raise estoppel. The oath to be binding as an estoppel must be willfully false.
The petition and petitioner’s testimony in-the former -proceedings are introduced by the defendant in support of its defense of judicial estoppel and its plea of former adjudication. The petition recites that on December 27, 1919, while switching cars in the mines, one of defendant’s mules kicked petitioner on the right shoulder, and dislocated it, by reason of which he has been unable since the injury to perform manual labor to a great extent, and especially to follow his former occupation as driver in the. mines, and that by reason of the injury his earning capacity was greatly diminished and permanently injured. The petitioner prays for such compensation as the court may decree under the facts.
The substance- of the petitioner’s testimony given October 7, 1920, in the former proceeding was that a mule kicked him on December 27, 1919, injuring his shoulder and impairing the use of his right arm; that, although injured on December 27, he returned to work
As the basis of his claim to compensation in this cause petitioner charged in the petition and testified in the cause that on April 22, while at work in the power house of the defendant, it was necessary to close a valve, an operation which required turning a large wheel, and in turning the wheel lie wrenched his shoulder and dislocated it, rendering his right arm useless because of pain, and because he could not raise it to a horizontal or vertical position. It appears from this record that some time after the first proceeding was heard in the trial court petitioner commenced work in the blacksmith shop, and was promoted to a position in the engine room, where he was engaged when the latter injury occurred.
We are unable to find any statement in the former proceeding inconsistent with or repugnant to the claim presented here, further than that the claim is for disability to the same member — the right arm. The claim presented by the former petition was for injuries sustained from the kick of a mule on December 17, 1919, and in that' petition the accident and the injury are described, followed by the statement that the arm was disabled, for which he asks such compensation as is deemed right by the court.
Dr. J. M. Cox, the mine surgeon for the defendant, who examined petitioner on April 23,1922, the day following the injury, says he found the right shoulder before and behind swollen, and that his examination then and subsequent thereto disclosed that the ligaments were bruised and drawn. It appears from the testimony that such ax-injury to the ligaments of the shoulder may result in an adhesion producing stiffness and impairing the use of the arm. Dr. Cox expressed the opinion that the latter injury permanently impaired the use of petitioner’s right arm. It appears from Dr. Cox’s testimony, and that of other witnesses, that the shoulder is now stiff, and that the arm cannot be raised to a horizontal position, and that only the forearm can be used.
The trial judge carefully investigated the casé, continuing the hearing from one term to another so that additional proof migljt be introduced. He not only heard all of the evidence, but observed petitioner and caused him to manipulate the arm so as to determine from a practical demonstration his ability to use it.
Before the injury of April 22, 1922, and after that of December 17, 1919, Dr. Gammon examined petitioner in order to report upon an application for release from .poll tax and road duty. He testifies that the examination prior to April 22', 1922, revealed that petitioner was in
Dr. Cox testified that after the injury of April 22,1922, the impairment in use of this arm was seventy-five per cent.
Section 20 of the Compensation Act provides:
“If an employee has previously sustained a permanent injury elsewhere than in the employment in which he sustains a subsequent permanent injury, he shall he entitled to compensation only for the disability that would have resulted from the latter accident if the earlier injury had not existed, and such earlier injury shall not he considered in estimating the compensation on the basis of either a total or partial disability, to which the employee may. he entitled under this act. ’ ’
Although the previous injury was sustained while working for the same employer, it was a distinct injury not related to the last accident, and the trial judge properly observed the foregoing section in its application to the facts of the case. He allowed compensation under section 28, subsection (a) and subsection (c), the last paragraph, deducting twenty-five per cent., the impairment in use consequent upon the injury prior to April 22, 1922, testified to by Dr. Gammon, from the total impairment of seventy-five per cent, testified to by Dr. Cox after the injury of April 22, 1922. By this method he found a permanent partial disability of fifty per cent, in the use of the right arm in consequence of the later injury, and there is material evidence to sustain this conclusion.
Upon review in this court the most favorable view of the evidence in support of petitioner's claim must oe
It is insisted by defendant that petitioner was malingering; that the defect in his shoulder is a chronic condition, bearing no relation to the accident alleged in the petition. X-ray skigrams were made by Dr. IT. B. Mc-Campbell, who with Dr. V. D. Holloway testified on behalf. of defendant that these skigrams show no defect in the bones about the shoulder.
It appears from their testimony that the X-ray would not disclose an injury to the ligaments and an adhesion consequent upon a tearing of the muscles about the shoulder. When this statement is considered in connection with that of Dr. Cos that he found the ligaments bruised and torn upon the examination of April 23, 1922, the trial judge could properly infer that in healing these ligaments adhered in such manner as to produce the stiffness disclosed by evidence and the court’s examination of the petitioner.
The judgment of the trial court cannot be disturbed further than by a modification reducing the maximum from $12 per month to $11 per month. The trial judge erroneously applied the act of 1923, which had not become effective when his judgment was rendered. As thus modified, the judgment is affirmed.