A single issue of first impression is presented — what is a major member within the meaning of
FACTS
While serving in the United States Navy in 1945, the respondent, Jack Figgins (Fig-gins/employee), developed bronchial asthma. On May 9, 1988, Figgins injured his back. He was employed by Broken Arrow Public Schools (Broken Arrow/employer). The workers’ compensation claim was settled by joint petition on October 23, 1989. Figgins was awarded a lump sum benefit based on a 10% permanent partial disability to the whole person. On November 21, 1989, Figgins filed a claim against the Indemnity Fund asserting additional permanent disability resulting from his status as a previously impaired person. 3
The cause was tried on June 6, 1990. Figgins presented testimony that his breathing disorder was obvious and apparent to a lay person. His medical evidence was presented in reports from Dr. Scho-borg. The reports indicated that Figgins had sustained a 30% disability resulting from his asthma and that the 10% disability from the back injury combined to produce a
*1381
65% disability — a material increase of 25%. The Indemnity Fund’s medical expert, Dr. Young, prepared a report stating that Fig-gins’ asthma was not obvious and apparent. Without rating the asthmatic condition, Dr. Young concluded that there was no material increase in impairment. Fig-gins did not object to Dr. Young’s report. The trial court combined the asthma and back injury and awarded Figgins a 25% material increase of $21,625.00. A divided
en banc
Panel affirmed. The Court of Appeals sustained the order. We granted certiorari on March 10, 1992, to consider a question of first impression — what is a major member within the meaning of
PURSUANT TO85 O.S. 1991 § 171, A MAJOR MEMBER IS A HAND, AN ARM, A FOOT, OR A LEG. (BECAUSE § 171 SPECIFICALLY INCLUDES THE LOSS OF SIGHT IN ITS DEFINITION OF A PHYSICALLY IMPAIRED PERSON, IT IS NO LONGER NECESSARY TO INCLUDE THE EYES WITHIN THE MORE GENERAL TERM “MAJOR MEMBER”.) A PREVIOUSLY UNAD-JUDICATED INJURY TO THE LUNGS AND RESPIRATORY SYSTEM DOES NOT QUALIFY AN EMPLOYEE AS A PHYSICALLY IMPAIRED PERSON ENTITLED TO RECOVERY FROM THE SPECIAL INDEMNITY FUND.
The Indemnity Fund asserts that Figgins was not a physically impaired person pursuant to
The Special Indemnity Fund Act (Indemnity Act) was originally enacted as House Bill No. 249 of the 1943 regular session of the Oklahoma Legislature.
5
Before creation of the Indemnity Fund, it was extremely difficult for physically impaired persons to obtain employment. If an impaired person suffered an on-the-job injury causing additional disability because the injured employee was a physically impaired person, full responsibility for compensation fell on the employer or the insurance carrier.
6
A strict enforcement of the full responsibility rule created a natural reluctance on the part of employers to hire or retain employees suffering from an obvious handicap.
7
In
Nease v. Hughes Stone Co.,
The purpose of the Indemnity Fund is to encourage employment of previously impaired workers. 8 Pursuant to § 172 of the Indemnity Act, a physically impaired person who is injured in a second accident is *1382 entitled to compensation for the totality of his/her disability. However, the employer is liable only for the amount of disability caused by the subsequent accident. The Indemnity Fund is responsible for excess awards resulting from combined disabilities. 9
Section 171 defines a physically impaired person as:
"... (A) person who ... has suffered the loss of the sight of one eye, the loss by amputation of the whole or a part of a major member of his body, or the loss of the use or partial loss of the use of a major member such as is obvious and apparent from observation or examination by an ordinary layman ... or any disability which previously has been adjudged and determined by the Workers’ Compensation Court ...”
Before an award against the Indemnity Fund can be sustained, the claimant must show that he/she is a physically impaired person within the meaning of § 171. 10 Because Figgins’ asthmatic condition has not been adjudicated as a workers’ compensation injury, 11 he qualifies as a physically impaired person only if the respiratory sys-tern is a “major member” within the meaning of § 171.
The term “major member” is not statutorily defined. To ascertain its meaning, we must determine the legislative intent. 12 Legislative familiarity with extant judicial construction of statutes is presumed. Unless a contrary intent clearly appears or is plainly expressed, the terms of amendatory acts retaining the same or substantially similar language as the provisions formerly in force will be accorded the identical construction to that placed upon them by preexisting case law. 13 If a former statute is clear or its meaning has been judicially determined, legislative amendment may reasonably indicate a legislative intent to alter the law. 14
From its enactment in 1943 until its revision in 1976, § 171 provided that a physically impaired person was one who had suffered the loss by amputation of the whole or a part of some member of the body or the loss of the use, or partial loss of the use, of a specific member. 15 Under the original statute, the reference to a specific member in § 171 was interpreted to include only those body parts specifically scheduled for compensation — thumbs, fingers, toes and hands, arms, feet, legs, and eyes. 16 *1383 The 1976 amendment provides that a physically impaired person is a person who has sustained an injury to any part of the body or a specific member thereof. 17 When the statute was amended again effective July 1, 1978, it retained the language contained in its 1976 predecessor. 18 Section 171 obtained its present form in a 1986 amendment. The Legislature deleted the reference to “any part of the body” and substituted the term “major member” for “specific member”. 19
There is a body of case law interpreting the original version of § 171. In
Special Indem. Fund v. Davidson,
Special Indem. Fund v. Scott,
If § 171 presently retained the form considered in
Scott,
a previously unadjudicated impairment to the lungs might be combina-ble with a job-related injury to justify an award against the Indemnity Fund. We are unprepared to say that the lung injury here would have been sufficient to constitute Figgins a previously impaired person even under the earlier statute.
25
Figgins presented lay testimony from his nephew that the employee often had difficulty in breathing when exerting himself and that the condition was obvious on numerous occasions. However, in
Special Indem. Fund v. Scott,
Nevertheless, on the date of Figgins’ injury, the statute had been altered. When the Legislature amended § 171 in 1986, it deleted the reference to “any part of the body” and substituted the term “major member” — a term of art in workers' compensation law encompassing the extremities 26 — for “specific member.” Under pri- or case law, this Court used the term major member to identify the arms, hands, legs, feet, and eyes. 27 Because § 171 specifically includes the loss of sight in its definition of a physically impaired person, it is no longer necessary to include the eyes within the more general term “major member”.
The deletion of the reference to any part of the body indicates the legislative intent to narrow rather than to expand its definition of a physically impaired person within the meaning of § 171. We presume that the Legislature is cognizant of our prior jurisprudence
28
establishing the definition of a major member as an arm, a hand, a leg or a foot. We find that pursuant to
Even if we were to assume that the Legislature was not aware of the judicially determined meaning of major member, we would be constrained to find that the lungs are not encompassed within the meaning of the term. Section 171 provides that a physically impaired person is one who has lost by amputation part or all of a major member or the loss of use or partial loss of use of a major member. The Legislature’s use of the word amputation in conjunction with the term major member indicates that it was referring to the body’s extremities. The lungs, the heart, and the kidneys are essential to the functioning of the human body.. However, one would not refer to the amputation of these organs in common par *1385 lance. Additionally, § 171 allows lay testimony to establish the existence of a previous disability. The disability must be obvious and apparent from observation or examination. The amputation or loss of use of an arm, a hand, a leg, or a foot would be easily discerned by casual observation. It would be difficult or impossible to pick a person out of a crowd who had lost the function of his/her kidneys and relied upon dialysis to function normally.
CONCLUSION
The Special Indemnity Fund was established to reduce, not to eliminate, the number of physically handicapped persons who employers might hesitate to hire because of possible liability for impairment beyond that suffered in an on-the-job injury. Employers are protected against additional liability for that class of individuals identified as physically impaired persons in
CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED; COURT OF APPEALS OPINION VACATED; THREE-JUDGE PANEL AND TRIAL COURT OVERRULED.
Notes
. Title
"For the purpose of Sections 171 through 176 of this title, the term ‘physically impaired person’ is hereby defined to be a person who as a result of accident, disease, birth, military action, or any other cause, has suffered the loss of the sight of one eye, the loss by amputation of the whole or a part of a major member of his body, or the loss of the use or partial loss of the use of a major member such as is obvious and apparent from observation or examination by an ordinary layman, that is, a person who is not skilled in the medical profession, or any disability which previously has been adjudged and determined by the Workers' Compensation Court including all separately adjudicated injuries and adjudicated occupational diseases even though arising at the same time.”
Because compensation was sought here after the last amendment to § 171, reference is made to the 1991 codified statutes.
. Title
“A. If an employee who is a ‘physically impaired person' receives an accidental personal injury compensable under the Workers’ Compensation Act, which results in additional permanent disability so that the degree of disability caused by the combination of both disabilities is materially greater than that which would have resulted from the subsequent injury alone, the employee shall receive compensation on the basis of such combined disabilities. Only disability due to an injury to the body as a whole shall be combinable with a prior body disability, except that disability to a major member may be combined with disability to the body as a whole. If such combined disabilities constitute partial permanent disability as now defined by the Workers’ Compensation Act of this state, then such employee shall receive full compensation as now provided by law for the disability resulting directly and specifically from such subsequent injury, and in addition thereto such employee shall receive full compensation for his combined disability as above defined, after deducting therefrom the percent of that disability that constituted the employee a ‘physically impaired person’, as defined herein, all of which shall be computed upon the schedule and provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act of this state. Provided the employer shall be liable only for the degree of percent of disability which would have resulted from the latter injury if there had been no preexisting impairment. After payments by the employer or his insurance carrier, if any, have ceased, the remainder of such compensation shall be paid out of the Special Indemnity Fund provided for in Section 173 of this title, in periodic installments_”
.Title
. Title
.
Grammer
v.
State Indus. Court,
.
Special Indem. Fund v. Davidson,
. E. Blair, "Reference Guide to Workmen’s Compensation (A Quick Retrieval Handbook),” § 11:14 (Thomas Law Book Co. 1973).
.
Special Indem. Fund v. Treadwell,
. Title
.
Reynolds v. Special Indem. Fund,
.
Special Indem. Fund v. Bonny,
.
Fuller v. Odom,
.
Lekan v. P & L Fire Protection Co.,
.
Irwin v. Irwin,
. Title 85 O.S. Supp. 1943 § 171 provides in pertinent part:
”... the term ‘physically impaired person’ is hereby defined to be a person who ... has suffered the loss by amputation of the whole or a part of some member of his body, or the loss of the use, or partial use, of a specific member ...”
. See,
. Title 85 O.S. Supp.1976 § 171 provides in pertinent part:
"... the term 'physically impaired person’ is hereby defined to be a person who ... has sustained an injury to any part of the body or a specific member thereof ...”
. Title 85 O.S. Supp.1978 § 171 provides in pertinent part:
"... the term 'physically impaired person’ is hereby defined to be a person who ... has sustained an injury to any part of the body or a specific member thereof ...”
. Title 85 O.S.1991 § 171, see note 1, supra.
.
Boxleitner
v.
St. Maries Plywood Co.,
. See also,
Transcon Lines v. Brotherton,
.
Whaley v. Special Indem. Fund,
.Title 85 O.S. Supp.1976 § 171, see note 17, supra; 85 O.S. Supp.1978 § 171, see note 18, supra.
Although Larsen acknowledges that almost half of the states having second injury funds limit recovery to specific prior injuries that take the form of the loss of use of a member or an eye, he criticizes Oklahoma’s refusal to extend the definition of a physically impaired person to include other injuries. 2 Larsen, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation, pp. 10-492.467, 10-492.470-71, § 59.31(A) (Matthew Bender 1992). However, Oklahoma's statute is the only statute providing that the impairment must be obvious and apparent to a lay person. See, J. Bates, "Workers' Compensation — Second Injury Liability & the Application of the Special Indemnity Fund,” see note 9 at.339, supra.
. Title 85 O.S.1981 § 171 provides in pertinent part:
"... the term ‘physically impaired person’ is ... a person who ... has sustained an injury to any part of the body or a specific member thereof such as is obvious and apparent from observation or examination by an ordinary layman ..."
. Id.
. See discussion and accompanying footnotes, p. 8, supra.
.
Stoldt Builders, Inc. v. Thomas,
. Irwin v. Irwin, see note 14, supra; Tom P. McDermott, Inc. v. Bennett, see note 14, supra; County Bd. v. Muskogee Indus. Fin. Corp., see note 14, supra.
. Title 85 O.S.1991 § 171, see note 1, supra.
. Grammer v. State Indus. Court, see note 5 at 105; 85 O.S.1991 § 171, see note 1, supra.
