31 S.E.2d 436 | W. Va. | 1944
The claimant, an employee of the Koppers Coal Division, Eastern Gas and Fuel Associates, suffered an injury to his right hand on the 26th day of June, 1942, in the course *57
of his employment. The principal injury was to his middle finger, although the ring and small fingers were probably injured to a lesser degree. As a result the middle finger was amputated through the middle of the second metacarpal bone. Previous to this injury claimant had suffered a non-industrial accident during World War I, the result of which was that his right index finger was amputated through the middle of the second metacarpal bone. When claimant became an employee of the coal company, he did not execute the waiver provided for in Code,
The only evidence in the record which in any wise justifies the order of the Compensation Appeal Board is the statement of Dr. Wetherby. Claimant, and we assume the appeal board, construes this statement as a finding that claimant had suffered a permanent partial disability to the extent of thirty-three and one-third per cent. We cannot give the statement that interpretation. It plainly says that "his right hand is partially and permanently disabled in the amount of 33 1/3%". This is quite different from saying that he suffered a bodily and permanent disability to that extent. The compensation provided for total loss of a hand is fifty per cent, and if the hand is one-third disabled, it follows that proper compensation would be one-third of fifty per cent. Giving the statement of Dr. Wetherby the interpretation we think called for, there is no substantial conflict as between the two physicians who reported on this accident when the case was reopened, because Dr. Easley says that the claimant was suffering a seventeen per cent disability for all of his injuries. There is not, in our opinion, any evidence to sustain the finding of the appeal board.
Both physicians and the commissioner seem to have proceeded on the theory that the former injury, the loss of the index finger, could not be taken into consideration, and if that course be followed the award of five per cent made by the commissioner would be in line with what both physicians find to be the extent of the recent injury. We are of the opinion, however, that the holding of this Court in McDaniel v.Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board,
The order of the Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board is reversed, and the case is remanded to that board for further action not inconsistent with our holding herein.
Reversed and remanded.