118 So. 2d 345 | Miss. | 1960
This case is before us on appeal by the Mississippi Products, Incorporated, from a judgment of the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, reversing an order of the Mississippi Workmen’s Compensation Commission denying the claim of Cary Skipworth, a former employee of Mississippi Products, Incorporated, for compensation for permanent partial disability resulting from an injury sustained by the claimant on May 14, 1956, and awarding compensation for permanent partial disability to the claimant.
The record shows that the appellee, Cary Skipworth, received an accidental injury to his head on or about May 14, 1956, when a stack of 20 wooden panels, 12 or 14 feet
The record also shows that the employer had notice of the claimant’s injury on the day that it occurred, and that the claimant was paid disability compensation at the rate of $25 per week from the date of his injury until the time of the hearing before the attorney-referee on March 3, 1958. His medical and hospital expenses were also paid by the employer. The claimant filed with the Commission an application for a lump sum settlement on December 29, 1956; but no action seems to have been taken upon that application. The claim was finally controverted, and the cause was set for hearing by the at
The claimant testified that he was 24 years of age and lived at Terry with his mother and father before he went into the Military Service in 1954; that he was in the Army two years and was discharged on February 29, 1956; that he started to work for the Mississippi Products, Incorporated, March 7, 1956, and about three weeks later was made an inspector on the night shift, and was working at that job at the time of his injury. The claimant stated that during the summers before he went into the Army he worked on the farm, built fences, dug post holes, milked the cows, carried water and firewood, but he was unable to do any work of that kind at the time of the hearing. The claimant testified that, since his injury, he had been totally disabled; that he was unable to sleep well at night; that he was jittery, and when he became the least bit exhausted he had blind spells, and “everything just goes foggy.” He stated that he suffered occasional blackouts, and that he bit his finger nails — a thing that he had never done prior to his injury.
On cross-examination the claimant stated that he had finished his junior year at the high school when he went into the Army. He stated that since the accident of May 14,. 1956, he had engaged in no outside activities other than going to the barn with his daddy to feed the cows. The claimant stated that he did not remember when he registered to go to school at Hinds County Junior College at Raymond. He stated that he had taken courses in automobile mechanics at the college under the GT Bill of Rights, and the government had paid him a subsistence allowance of $135 a month. He stated that he had purchased a 1957 Ford car in July 1957, which he had driven some himself, but he did not spend much money on the automobile himself — “I mean, I don’t use it at all hardly.”
Several witnesses were called to testify on behalf of the employer concerning the claimant’s physical and mental condition before and after the accidental injury of May 14, 1956. Mrs. C. M. Burleson, the custodian of the records of the Vocational Department at the Hinds County Junior College, testified that the claimant had enrolled for a course in automobile mechanics at the college on January 7, 1957, and, with the exception of two interruptions, had attended classes regularly since that time. The claimant had only two unsatisfactory grade marks during the time he was enrolled as a student at the college. The two unsatisfactory marks were on textbook study in Unit No. 103, on January 1, 1958, and February 2, 1958. With the exception of those two unsatisfactory marks, the reports showed that he had received satisfactory grades during the time he was enrolled. Miss Estelle Scott, principal of the Terry Consolidated School, testified that Cary started to school in Terry in 1939, and that he was in the first grade two years, in the third grade two years, in the fourth grade two years and in the fifth grade two years. He dropped out at the end of the first semester while he was in the eleventh grade. He was slow to learn and appeared to be nervous and fidgety while he was in school; but he was never a problem child so far as discipline was concerned.
L. B. Bryant, teacher of Vocational Agriculture in the Terry High School since 1939, testified that he had known Cary since he was in grade school; that he seem
Dr. Walter Neill, neurologist, testified concerning his examination and medical treatment of the claimant, and also Dr. Frank Donaldson, a psychiatrist, to whom Dr. Neill referred the claimant for further examination sometime during the month of September 1957. Dr. Neill testified that for some considerable period of time following the injury of May 14, 1956, the claimant suf
Dr. Donaldson testified that he had examined the claimant on several occasions. The first examination was made at Dr. Neill’s request, while the claimant was in the hospital in Jackson in September 1957; that he had diagnosed the claimant as without neurological disease. Dr. Donaldson stated that the symptoms which he had observed in the claimant were vascular headaches, nail biting, hypesthesia of both hands at times, and of his right hand and arms most of the time. These symptoms had produced what the claimant described as blackout spells, and also a certain amount of fear within the claimant which was still present at the time of the hearing. The psychiatric diagnosis which the doctor had made was anxiety neurosis. That is a multiplicity of symptoms that come from an overstimulation of the autonomic system coming out of the subconscious mind.
Dr. Donaldson stated that the symptoms referred to have a disabling effect upon the patient and the blackouts and fear of blackouts would limit the activities of the patient; that an anxiety neurosis is somewhere around 50 per cent disabling, and about 50 per cent of those who suffer from anxiety neurosis will get completely well. In regard to the relationship of the acci
The attorney-referee found that there was a marked conflict between the testimony of the claimant’s witnesses and the testimony of the witnesses called on behalf of the employer in regard to those factors indicative of the prior existence of an anxiety neurosis and a change in the condition of the claimant following the accidental injury, and that conflict in the testimony was incapable of being reconciled. The attorney-referee was of the opinion that the evidence offered on behalf of the claimant was not sufficient to establish as a fact that an anxiety neurosis resulted from the accidental injury to the claimant on May 14, 1956. The attorney-referee found that, as a result of the accidental injury complained of, the claimant was temporarily totally disabled from May 14, 1956, to December 13, 1957; that on December 13, 1957, the claimant attained the point of maximum medical recovery; and that the claimant had no residual or permanent disability as a result of the accidental injury on May 14, 1956. The attorney-referee therefore ordered that the employer pay to the claimant compensation for temporary total disability from May 14, 1956, to December 13, 1957, at the rate of $25 per week, and
The learned circuit judge, after reviewing the record on appeal, was of the opinion that the defendant had not met the burden of proof imposed upon it under the rule laid down by this Court in Hale v. General Box Manufacturing Co., 235 Miss. 301, 108 So. 2d 844, that, “Where injury by accident arising out of and in the course of employment is shown, the burden is on the employer to prove his defense that present disability is due to some other intervening cause or preexisting' condition for which he is not responsible.” The circuit judge was of the opinion, and so found, that there was no substantial evidence in the record to support the findings of the attorney-referee and the Commission that the claimant suffered no residual or permanent disability as a result of the accident. In reaching that conclusion, the circuit judge stated that all of the testimony of the claimant and his family might be ignored, “and it may be assumed that some of them were not telling the truth. ’ ’ The circuit judge was of the opinion that, although the testimony offered on behalf of the employer clearly indicated that the claimant had been going to school under the GI Bill of Bights and had taken a course in automobile mechanics at the Hinds County Junior College since January 1957, and that the claimant had purchased a new automobile during the month of July 1957, which had been driven approximately 18,000 miles at the time of the hearing on March 3, 1958, and the evidence did not show that the claimant was totally disabled. Dr. Donaldson’s testimony that he did not consider the claimant
The only question presented for our decision on this appeal is whether the learned circuit judge erred in holding that there was no substantial evidence to support the findings of the attorney-referee and the Commission.
After a careful review of the entire testimony, we think there was substantial evidence in the record to support the findings of the attorney-referee and the Commission that the claimant had suffered no residual or permanent disability as a result of the accident of May 14, 1956; and that the learned circuit judge erred in reversing the order of the Commission denying the claim for compensation for permanent partial disability. As we have already stated, Dr. Neill, who had treated the claimant from the beginning, testified that from a neurological standpoint he could find no evidence of nerve root pressure except the irritation of the second cervical nerve root, which he thought had cleared up. Dr. Neill was of the opinion that at the time of the hearing the claimant had no neurological disability, and that any headaches that he might be suffering from were of a psychiatric nature. Dr. Donaldson testified that in his opinion the claimant was suffering from anxiety neurosis, and that he felt that the claimant’s disability was causally related to the accident. But Dr. Donaldson stated that, if the claimant had the neurotic symptoms “that he has now” prior to the accident, then he would say that it was an anxiety neurosis which was a continuation of one that existed prior to the injury.
This'case is somewhat similar to the Hale case, supra, but it is a much weaker case from the claimant’s standpoint than the Hale case. In the Hale case there was no serious doubt as to the claimant being practically
The Commission is the trier of the facts under the "Workmen’s Compensation Law. The Commission had a right, and it was its duty, to evaluate the testimony of the lay witnesses and the medical testimony and to base its findings upon the evidence as a whole. The testimony of the claimant’s lay witnesses as to the claimant’s disability was greatly discredited by the testimony of other disinterested witnesses who had known the claimant both before and after his injury. The opinion evidence of Dr. Donaldson, we think, was inconclusive, and the weight to be given to that opinion was to be determined by the Commission in the light of all of the evidence.
The learned trial judge, in our opinion, erred in setting aside the findings and award of the Commission and in entering a judgment for the claimant which included an award of compensation benefits for permanent partial disability at the rate of $14 per week.
Reversed and remanded.