GLENN E. WELCH, Claimant and Respondent, v. AMERICAN MINE SERVICES, INC., and OLD REPUBLIC INSURANCE COMPANY, Employer, Defendant and Appellant.
No. 91-539.
Supreme Court of Montana
Decided Apr. 30, 1992.
253 Mont. 76 | 831 P.2d 580 | 49 St. Rep. 378
Submitted on Briefs Jan. 16, 1992.
For Respondent: Michael P. Sand, Bozeman.
JUSTICE GRAY delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Old Republic Insurance Company appeals from the judgment of the Workers’ Compensation Court that Glenn E. Welch suffered a compensable injury arising out of the course and scope of his employment on April 27, 1989. We affirm.
The sole issue is whether the Workers’ Compensation Court erred in concluding that claimant sustained a compensable injury pursuant to
Glenn E. Welch (Welch) was employed as a driller by American
State and federal regulations require mine employees such as Welch to wear either steel-toed or metatarsal safety boots. A steel-toed safety boot has a steel or fiberglass cap which covers just the toes. A metatarsal boot has a steel or fiberglass toe covering which extends over the top of the foot and leather uppers which cover the ankles.
Sometime before April 27, 1989, Welch requested a new pair of steel-toed safety boots from American Mine Services, which provides free boots to its mine workers. The boots which arrived April 27, 1989, were the metatarsal type. Welch wore them to work that day. He states that the boots were a snug fit, but he expected them to loosen up with wear. Throughout his twenty-five year career working in the mines, Welch had broken in many new boots, finding that normally they loosened up within a few hours.
Toward the end of an active shift on April 27, 1989, Welch noticed that his feet were beginning to get sore and his new boots were still a snug fit. Upon removing his boots at the end of the shift, Welch noticed red sores the size of a thumbnail on both the third and fourth toes of his right foot. The sores were open and draining.
Welch had difficulty sleeping the night of April 27 because of burning and pain in his foot. He treated the sores numerous times with alcohol and later with Neosporine, an antifungal antibiotic. They continued to drain throughout the night.
Welch again attempted to wear the new boots to work the next day, but his foot was extremely sore so he wore his old work boots which were looser and roomier and did not irritate his toes. Welch worked an entire shift on April 28, and thereafter was laid off due to a reduction in force.
Welch sought medical attention for his foot on May 1, 1989 when he called his family physician, Dr. Robert Flaherty. Dr. Flaherty was unable to see him until May 5, at which time Welch explained that he had worn new boots a week previously that rubbed his toes.
During this visit, Welch informed Dr. Flaherty that he had been soaking his foot and trying to reduce the amount of time he spent on his feet. Dr. Flaherty asked Welch if he had diabetes. After Welch replied in the negative, Dr. Flaherty diagnosed Welch‘s condition as an “abscess and cellulitis of the right fourth toe.” The doctor then prescribed further soakings and an antibiotic. In his deposition, Dr.
Dr. Flaherty examined and treated Welch on May 8, 10, and 12, 1989; on May 15, 1989, Welch was admitted to Bozeman Deaconess Hospital. At this time, Dr. Flaherty referred Welch to Dr. Lowell Anderson, an orthopedic surgeon, because he thought the bone of Welch‘s right foot might be affected. During Welch‘s stay at Deaconess, his right fourth toe was amputated. Dr. Anderson‘s post-surgery diagnosis was deep foot infection probably complicated by diabetes. Welch was released, but was hospitalized again in March of 1990 because of abscess and infection to the foot. Welch was hospitalized subsequently in October of 1990 and March of 1991.
Old Republic, American Mine Services’ workers’ compensation carrier, accepted Welch‘s claim under the Montana Occupational Disease Act and paid him disability benefits thereunder. On May 14, 1991, the Workers’ Compensation Court considered Welch‘s claim that his injury arose out of the course and scope of his employment with American Mine Services, Inc. and was not an occupational disease. In its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and Judgment dated August 21, 1991, the court found Welch‘s condition to be compensable under the Workers’ Compensation Act of 1987. Old Republic Insurance and American Mine Services appealed.
The sole issue on appeal is whether the Workers’ Compensation Court erred in concluding that claimant sustained a compensable injury pursuant to
(1) “Injury” or “injured” means:
(a) internal or external physical harm to the body;
(b) damage to prosthetic devices or appliances, except for damage to eyeglasses, contact lenses, dentures, or hearing aids; or
(c) death.
(2) An injury is caused by an accident. An accident is:
(a) an unexpected traumatic incident or unusual strain;
(b) identifiable by time and place of occurrence;
(c) identifiable by member or part of the body affected; and
(d) caused by a specific event on a single day or during a single work shift. (3) “Injury” or “injured” does not mean a physical or mental condition arising from:
(a) emotional or mental stress; or
(b) a nonphysical stimulus or activity.
(4) “Injury” or “injured” does not include a disease that is not caused by an accident.
(5) A cardiovascular, pulmonary, respiratory, or other disease, cerebrovascular accident, or myocardial infection suffered by a worker is an injury only if the accident is the primary cause of the physical harm in relation to other factors contributing to the physical harm.
A compensable injury must meet all three definitional requirements contained in
The well-established rule in Montana is that an employer takes an employee subject to the employee‘s physical condition at the time of employment. Shepard v. Midland Foods, Inc. (1983), 205 Mont. 146, 666 P.2d 758; Schumacher v. Empire Steel Manufacturing Co. and Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Co. (1977), 175 Mont. 411, 574 P.2d 987. With this principle as a starting premise,
The parties agree that physical harm occurred to Welch‘s foot. Old Republic contends, however, that Welch‘s physical condition arose from the “nonphysical stimulus” of his diabetes; therefore, according to the appellant,
Similarly, Old Republic next contends that Welch‘s condition was the culmination of such factors as his diabetes, vascular calcification and diabetic neuropathy. Arguing that the condition is similar to those of claimants in Wear v. Buttrey Foods, Inc. (1988), 234 Mont. 477, 764 P.2d 139; McMahon v. Anaconda Co. (1984), 208 Mont. 482, 678 P.2d 661; and Whittington v. Ramsey Construction Co. and Fabrication (1987), 229 Mont. 115, 744 P.2d 1251, Old Republic asserts that the time definiteness required by
The physical conditions in the cases relied on by Old Republic were brought about by many years of repetitious activity or exposure to pollutants; as a result, we held that they lacked the time definiteness required. The facts before us are not analogous. Here, an initial and identifiable incident of physical harm occurred on April 27, 1989, when Welch‘s ill-fitting boots rubbed sores on his foot. As discussed previously, Old Republic‘s focus on complications subsequent to that initial incident is misplaced. The initial incident was a “specific event ... during a single work shift” as required by
Finally,
The common meaning of “unexpected” is “unlooked for, unforeseen, surprising.” Webster‘s Third International Dictionary (1971). We note that the 1987 amendments to
Old Republic also contends that the use of the word “traumatic” necessitates the presence of force or violence, neither of which is present under the facts of this case. Webster‘s Third International Dictionary (1971) defines “trauma” as “an injury or wound to a living body caused by the application of external force or violence.” Old Republic‘s expert witness, Dr. Robert Nielson, when asked during his deposition whether Welch‘s blisters could be considered a trauma, responded: “Sure.” Dr. Nielsen continued to refer to the rubbing of Welch‘s toes as a trauma to the foot. We conclude that the rubbing of the ill-fitting boots was a traumatic incident under
Welch sustained an injury and an accident under
Arguing against this causal link, Old Republic asserts that under
Similarly, Old Republic presents a somewhat convoluted argument that Welch‘s diabetes is an “other disease” under
[T]he drastic change in the claimant‘s medical condition was primarily caused by the accident in the work place where she was exposed to chemical toxins or allergens, it was not merely the progressive result of her pre-existing respiratory ailments.
Gaumer, 243 Mont. at 420, 795 P.2d at 80-81. Likewise, the significant change in Welch‘s physical condition was primarily caused by the injury and accident which occurred when his ill-fitting safety boots rubbed abrasions on his foot. While the diabetes may have exacerbated the ultimate severity of the original injury, Welch‘s medical condition was not merely the progressive result of his pre-existing diabetes.
Old Republic makes a final argument, without supporting authority, that the 1987 amendments to the Workers’ Compensation Act were intended to substantially restrict the definitions of “injury” and “accident.” Because the plain meaning of the words used in the statute is determinative in this case, consideration of the legislative history is inappropriate. State ex rel. Roberts v. PSC (1990), 242 Mont. 242, 790 P.2d 489.
We conclude that the rubbing of sores on Welch‘s toes meets the statutory requirements for an injury and an accident, and that the accident caused the injury. We hold that the Workers’ Compensation Court did not err in concluding that claimant sustained a compensable injury pursuant to
Affirmed.
JUSTICES HUNT, McDONOUGH, TRIEWEILER and WEBER concur.
