This matter comes before this court upon an appeal by the Phillips Petroleum Company and its insurance carrier, Cravens, Dargan & Company (hereafter “employer”) from the finding of the Alaska Industrial Board (hereafter “Board”) made December 18, 1957. u The employee had been paid temporary disability compensation under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, A.C.L.A. 1949, § 43 — 3—1 et seq. by the plaintiffs in the amount of $3,400 for the period December 17, 1955 through August 10, 1956.
The employee filed an application for the adjustment of his claim with the Board, and on May 24, 1957, a hearing was held before the full Board. No oral testimony was taken at that hearing. The Board made an award, finding that the employee had refused to undergo surgery; that had the employee undergone the necessary surgery he would have been temporarily disabled until September 1, 1957.
The Board further found that the maximum permanent disability without surgery was 40% of total and the Board was of the further opinion that the maximum permanent disability that might be anticipated in normal cases of this kind would be 40%. The Board granted the employee temporary total disability compensation to September 1, 1957.
The employer claims that the employee was without sufficient legal justification to refuse the operation, and that the employer should not be held further responsible for any damage suffered by the employee. Medical testimony indicated that the condition of the employee could be corrected only to a 20% permanent partial disability.
The employer claims also that although the employee had been placed upon compensation at the maximum rate of $100 a week and was paid this compensation from the time he left work until August of 1956, he actually was employed a great portion of this time; that he admitted on cross examination that he worked in Anchorage for the City Bus Lines for a period of five days and that he
Employer claims that the employee’s condition became fixed in August of 1956 and that as to this the doctors are all in substantial agreement.
The Employer presents the issues in this appeal as follows :
(1) That the employee is barred from additional compensation over and above the compensation already paid him by reason of his refusal to undergo surgery as recommended by the doctors.
(2) That in the event he is not barred from additional compensation as is requested, the period of total temporary disability should be found to have terminated as of August 10, 1956 and that it should be found that the employer had overpaid compensation, for the period the employee was working in Anchorage and drawing maximum compensation, in the sum of $140, and that in addition he should be barred from obtaining compensation during the period he was assisting his wife in her restaurant in Oklahoma.
(3) That in the event additional compensation is allowed employee for the period of convalescence involved in an operation, the amount of*663 permanent partial disability should be reduced to 20%, which is the amount the doctors agree would result if an operation were performed.
It is recognized that an injured workman will be denied a right to compensation from his employer for any disability which may be removed or modified by surgical treatment not involving serious suffering nor attended by great danger, where the employee refuses to undergo such an operation. Sultan & Chera Corp. v. Fallas, Fla. 1952,
The facts of the instant case are much the same as those presented in Alexander v. Chrysler Motor Parts Corporation, 1949,
Although the employee did not state specifically that he feared the consequences and suffering of the operation, the claimant’s refusal to submit to surgical treatment couched in the language of “domestic and personal reasons” is sufficiently broad as to warrant a finding that the claimant contemplated some grave consequences resulting from the operation, whether such contemplation be founded in fear of life or suffering, or over-burdening inconvenience. The seriousness of disc operations, the attendant suffering, and the fact that the operation could effect at most only a correction of the injury to a 20% permanent partial disability, should not warrant a finding-that the refusal to submit to the operation was unreasonable.
The plaintiff also contends that the Board unlawfully extended payments for total disability beyond a period during which the employee’s condition became “fixed,” that is, at such time as the claimant was restored to the
Pursuant to Section 43-3-1 (e) A.C.L.A. Cumulative Supplement (1958) a workman’s compensation claimant is entitled to temporary total disability payments, and such amounts paid or due the claimant “shall be in addition to the amount to which he shall be entitled” under provisions of the act relating to scheduled allowances for total partial disability. Libby, McNeill & Libby v. Alaska Industrial Board, 9 Cir., 1951,
“ * * * the healing period or the time during which the workman is wholly disabled and unable by reason of his injury to work. It is, therefore, a separate and unitary period of compensation, and as such is distinguished from a permanent partial disability.”
In determining compensation payments for temporary total disability, the fact that a condition can be diag
The testimony of the examining physicians clearly shows that the claimant’s condition was “fixed” in August of 1956. The claimant should not be allowed to prolong the period of compensation through speculative argument that, had he undergone an operation, he would have been disabled until a later date. At all times the claimant is under a duty to mitigate his damage, and where his condition is fixed prior to an operation, and he chooses to forego that operation, he must elect to take his condition as is, and cannot avail himself of the recovery period of an operation to reap additional benefits, where in fact he never consented to surgical treatment.
In a majority of jurisdictions, total disability is not to be determined by a claimant’s inability to engage in work similar to that performed at the time of his injury, but the test is whether the employee can engage in some activity
Notwithstanding the above conflict as to the effect of post-injury earnings on total compensation payments, there is recognized the rule in practically all jurisdictions that the ability of an employee to engage in “light or occasional” work does not negative a finding that the employee is entitled to total compensation. Jersey City Printing Co. v. Klochansky, 1950,
In the instant case, it appears that the Board found the employment of the claimant as a temporary or part time bus driver, as well as the assistance of the claimant to his wife in her restaurant operations, as “light and/or occasion
The facts of the instant case disclose that the employee-claimant left Alaska to reside in Oklahoma within six months after the date he left work for the plaintiff. This court has previously decided that the Board must consider the pay scale of similar employment at the residence of the claimant in determining compensation awards. Hohn v. Alaska Industrial Board, D.C.1957,
The foregoing shall constitute Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law unless the parties desire additional Findings or Conclusions.
This matter will be remanded to the Board for a redetermination of the award consistent with this opinion. Proper order will be presented.
