265 P. 176 | Wash. | 1928
Respondent, a longshoreman by occupation, suffered an accidental injury in February, 1924. He made claim for compensation under the workmen's compensation act, and was classified as *150 having a temporary total disability. Under this classification, he received compensation at the rate of $85 per month until October 4, 1926. On November 8, 1926, the department terminated the temporary total disability classification as of October 4 preceding, and then classified the respondent as having a permanent partial disability equal to 33-1-3 degrees, and thereafter tendered compensation accordingly. Respondent appealed to the superior court from the order of re-classification, claiming that he should have been continued under the classification first given him. The case was tried to the court, resulting in a judgment reversing the department and remanding the case with directions to restore the classification of temporary total disability. The department has appealed from that judgment.
[1] The question here presented is one of fact, and of such a nature as to make it determinable almost wholly by medical testimony. The department's witnesses were in complete accord in the opinion that the classification as a permanent partial disability was correct, because respondent's condition had remained the same, or no worse, for a considerable period of time, that it would not grow worse, and that the only possible change was that there would, or might, be improvement with time. Respondent's own testimony and that of his non-medical witnesses practically admitted this situation, but attempted to meet it by saying that respondent was not able to resume his former occupation or work constantly at any kind of labor, and while he had sought light employment, he had found none. His medical witness testified, in part, as follows:
"Q. In other words, it would be your opinion that he could do work where it was not necessary for him to perform violent physical exercise, such as he would *151 do as a stevedore? A. Where it would not be necessary for him to bend his back too much. He could not call upon the straining of those several joints at the back. Q. In other words, he could act as a flag man at railroad crossings? A. Yes. Q. He could act as a clerk in a store? A. I should think so. Q. And he could be a night watchman? A. Yes. Q. As indicated here, or an elevator operator? A. Yes, I would think so. It just depends upon how much functioning of the back would be called upon. Q. Then as a matter of fact, Doctor, if he could get the proper employment he could engage in a gainful occupation? A. Yes.
Here we have a complete agreement with the evidence of the department upon a theory which we think is binding upon the courts. We are not here concerned with the degree of permanent partial disability — that is not now in issue — but simply with the question of whether the extent of the disability having become fixed, so far as growing worse is concerned, a change to a permanent disability classification is proper. Subdivision h of § 7679, Rem. Comp. Stat., [P.C. § 3472], clearly provides for re-classification upon changed conditions being made known, and necessarily what may in the beginning be a total temporary disability may eventuate into a permanent disability, either total or partial.
We see no escape from a holding upon the undisputed facts that the disability had become fixed and that the department was accordingly justified in re-classifying.
Nothing herein said should be taken as an expression of our opinion as to whether or not the degree of partial disability was correctly fixed by the department.
The judgment is reversed.
MACKINTOSH, C.J., MITCHELL, and PARKER, JJ., concur. *153