This appeal is from an opinion of the Court of Appeals which reversed a judgment of the circuit court affirming the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Board not to award permanent partial total disability benefits to Burkhardt.
The questions presented are whether the Court of Appeals applied the proper standard of review and whether the Court of Appeals invaded the province of the Workers’ Compensation Board as to fact finding.
Burkhardt, age 63 and a 35-year employee at the time of the accident, fell into a large pickle tank and dislocated his right shoulder. After a brief hospitalization, he returned to work and continued to work for almost a year. At that time he was returned to the hospital for a shoulder manipulation. This procedure was successful, and he was released to return to work. Shortly thereafter, he decided to retire.
The Board awarded temporary total benefits, but denied any permanent partial or permanent total benefits based on the evidence. The circuit court upheld the decision of the Board. The Court of Appeals determined that the Board had attempted to overrule
Osborne v. Johnson,
Ky.,
This Court reverses the decision of the Court of Appeals because the wrong standard of review was applied to this situation. In order to reverse the findings of the Board unfavorable to a claimant, the evidence must be so overwhelming as to compel a finding in his favor of permanent occupational disability.
Howard D. Sturgill & Sons v. Fairchild,
Ky.,
Here the Court of Appeals limited its review of the Board’s finding of fact to whether the decision and award was clearly erroneous. The Court of Appeals ignored the standard set out in Sturgill, supra that in order to reverse the finding of the Board, the claimant must present evidence that is so overwhelming as to compel a decision in his favor. The Court of Appeals chose some evidence over other in the record and made its own decision.
The Board, as the finder of fact, and not the reviewing court, has the authority to determine the quality, character and substance of the evidence presented to the Board. Here, the findings of the Board were based on evidence of substantial quality and the reviewing court is bound by the record.
Armco Steel Corp. v. Mullins,
Ky.,
Burkhardt’s supervisor testified that the job required less than 5 percent manual labor. As a group leader or working foreman Burkhardt was not required to do any of the physical work included with cleaning the tank or heading or unheading the tanks.
The physician testified that the rating of 10 percent permanent partial disability meant an anatomical or functional disabili *420 ty and not the liberal “permanent” disability.
Burkhardt returned to his job shortly after the accident and continued to perform his work for almost a year before taking an eventual longevity retirement.
Although Dr. Goddy found Burk-hardt to have a 10 percent functional disability, the evidence is not so overwhelming as to compel a finding that Burkhardt sustained a permanent disability or occupational loss.
It is well settled that a reviewing court may not substitute its judgment for that of the Board as a finder of fact. This case is remarkably similar to that of
Old Republic Insurance Co. v. McCarty,
Ky.,
The arguments presented by Burkhardt simply indicate a conflict of testimony between the claimant and his supervisor. The Board as a finder of fact had sufficient evidence to find that the job required less than 5 percent manual labor. Certainly there is nothing to compel a finding of permanent disability for this unsuccessful claimant.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the judgment of the circuit court is reinstated.
