Victor Nye Wilson, claimant-respondent, was employed as an equipment operator by appellant, Gardner Associated, Inc., insured by appellant, Truck Insurance Exchange. Wilson, after being injured July 20, 1965, in a fall from an employer-owned truck, filed a claim for workmen’s compensation benefits with the Industrial Accident Board. Later he filed with the board a petition for hearing, alleging the accident and injury; that he was totally disabled for work from July 20, 1965; to October 14, 1965, the date of his petition; and would continue so disabled for an undetermined time. By its answer, appellants generally denied the allegations of the petition and affirmatively alleged that claimant’s disability, if any, resulted from a prior automobile accident wholly unrelated to his employment.
The board heard the petition in November 1965. Following presentation of the claimant’s testimony and that of Dr. Gardner, an orthopedic specialist who attended claimant and who was called as a witness by appellants, the board announced:
“Based on his testimony [Dr. Gardner’s] the Board is disposed to enter an interim order requiring the Defendants to pay all medical expenses to date. * * *. We are also disposed to order you_ to pay total temporary disability compensation from the time of the accident to date and to continue thereafter until the further order of the Board. * * *.”
Later a formal interim order was entered directing the defendants to pay all of claimant’s medical bills to date and total temporary disability compensation from July 20, 1965, “until such time as the claimant is surgically healed.” The order contemplated further proceedings to determine whether Wilson suffered any partial permanent disability. Appellants have appealed from this order.
Appellants claim the board erred in its order in failing to apportion the temporary total disability and claimant’s hospital, surgical and medical expenses as between his injuries sustained from the fall from his truck and his pre-existing infirmity.
At the hearing claimant testified that he had suffered a broken right hip in an automobile accident in California in 1961 and did not attempt to return to work until he came to Idaho in the summer of 1964, when he went to work for Gardner Associated, Inc., as a truck driver. Following the 1961 accident, by operative procedure, claimant’s femur and femur head were strengthened by two pins. This operation was not wholly successful, because claimant re-entered the hospital while he was in California, for removal of a pin that had worked out. Wilson did not see any doctor following the removal of the pin until after the injury in 1965.
As • a result of the California accident, Wilson’s right leg was three to four inches shorter than his left leg. X-rays of his right hip taken subsequent to the 1965 accident disclosed that the old fracture of the femur had never properly healed and that there was a displacement between the femur and its head, and that scar tissue held the femur in relationship to the head of the femur enabling claimant to move and work.
Even though claimant was suffering from this condition, he was able to work as a truck driver. On July 20, 1965, he was driving a watering truck for his employer. He fell out of the truck, and his right foot *498 caught between the brake pedal and clutch pedal of the truck. He fell to his knees and felt a “real sharp pain * * * high on the hip,” but was able to get back into the truck. He reported to an inspector on the construction job, and left his work on the watering truck, but completed the day’s work of an hour or two by driving a “tamper,” a machine used to compact loose road material. After the shift he crawled to his vehicle and drove to consult a doctor in Rigby, who immediately advised him to go to the hospital in Idaho Falls for X-rays to assist in the diagnosis. He was in the hospital overnight and then brought to Boise for treatment by Dr. Gardner, an orthopedic specialist.
Dr. Gardner took X-rays of the hip and then placed claimant in traction for over a month, which was ineffective in the attempt to re-align the old separation. Subsequently Dr. Gardner performed an osteotomy, cutting the femur, and reattaching it in a slightly offset position employing a pin to hold it in place, together with a plate and other pins. The head of the femur was still left separated from the femur itself. The joint was not fused, which would have rendered it immobile. Dr. Gardner stated that the right leg would continue to be about two inches shorter, even following the surgery. In response to questions by a member of the board, Dr. Gardner testified that the surgery was intended to decrease pain and maintain motion in spite of the degeneration of the femoral head. The doctor diagnosed the cause of claimant’s pain as a strain or sprain tearing loose the old scar tissue which had been holding the joint in position and enabling claimant to walk. Dr. Gardner further stated that the operation was necessitated by the claimant’s pain and, considering the prior history of the hip area, the pain would eventually have become so acute as to have required remedial attention anyway. According to his testimony, he could not give a date as to when such eventuality would have come to pass, dependent in large part upon the individual’s capacity to withstand pain and discomfort.
In resolution of the issue presented by this appeal, a review of decisions of this court in relationship to statutory law as it existed from time to time is in order.
In McNeil v. Panhandle Lumber Co.,
Hanson v. Independent School Dist. 11 — J,
“The presence of a previous disease or weakened condition is immaterial. If it should be determined that respondent’s injuries resulted partly but not entirely from the alleged accident, it is the duty of the board to separate the results of the pre-existing disease or weakness from those of the alleged accident and injury *499 and apportion the award accordingly.”50 Idaho at 85 ,294 P. at 514 .
(See however, Hanson v. Independent School Dist. 11-J,
The above quoted language from Hanson v. Independent School District, supra, was disapproved by this court the following year in Strouse v. Hercules Min. Co.,
“Appellants cite Hanson v. Independent School Dist., * * *, to support a contention that, where a disability results partly but not entirely from an alleged accident, it is the duty of the board to separate the results of the pre-existing disease or weakness from those of the accident and apportion the award accordingly. This is not the rule in Idaho, but in Kentucky where a different statute prevails. C.S., § 6217 [now I.C. § 72-201], recognizes no such apportionment. Regardless of pre-existing conditions, if a workman’s disability is precipitated by an accident arising out of his employment, which disability would in all probability not have arisen but for such accident, the statute contemplates full compensation. (McNeil v. Panhandle Lumber Co.,34 Idaho 773 , 788,203 P. 1068 ; In re Larson,48 Idaho 136 , 143,279 P. 1087 .)”51 Idaho at 16 ,1 P.2d at 206 .
As to aggravation of a pre-existing disease, see Nistad v. Winton Lumber Co.,
In 1940 this court in two cases, Young v. Herrington,
“ ‘Where injury results partly from accident and partly from pre-existing disease it is compensable if the accident hastened or accelerated the ultimate result, and it is immaterial that the claimant would, even if the accident had not occurred, have become, totally disabled by the disease.’ ”61 Idaho at 576 ,104 P.2d at 627 .
In 1941, the legislature enacted S.L.1941, Ch. 155, the forerunner of I.C. § 72-323, which as then enacted, provided:
“Except as provided in Section 43-1111 Idaho Code Annotated.
(a) If the degree or duration of disability resulting from an accident is increased or prolonged because of a preexisting injury or infirmity the employer shall be liable only for the additional disability resulting from such accident.
(b) Any compensation previously paid an injured workman for permanent disability to any member or part of his body shall be deducted from the amount of compensation provided for the permanent disability to the same member or part of his body caused by a change in his physical condition or by a subsequent accident.”
In Lay v. Idaho State School,
In Cole v. Fruitland Canning Assn.,
In the case of Zipse v. Schmidt Bros.,
“It was incumbent upon the board, under the statute, to find somewhere in between the two extremes of entire or no causation, respectively, by the disease or accident, the apportionable compensable norm of respondent’s complete disability.”66 Idaho at 35 ,154 P.2d at 173 .
In Walker v. Hogue,
A case similar to Walker v. Hogue, supra, is Oliver v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.,
In Harris v. Bechtel Corporation,
“By § 72-323,1.C. the board is authorized and required to apportion the degree and duration of disability between the injury resulting from the accident and that resulting from any preexisting injury or infirmity, (citations). As recognized in the Cole case [Cole v. Fruitland Canning Assn., supra], this statute contemplates the apportionment of hospital and medical expenses as well as other forms of compensation.”74 Idaho at 313 ,261 P.2d at 881 .
In Beard v. Post Co.,
Lindskog v. Rosebud Mines, Inc.,
Andrus v. Boise Fruit & Produce Co.,
Clark v. Brennan Const. Co.,
Clevenger v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.,
In summary these various decisions lead to the conclusion that this court, prior to the enactment of S.L.1941, Ch. 155 (I.C. § 72-323) held there could be no apportionment of compensation as between industrial accident and pre-existing condition or disability. McNeil v. Panhandle Lumber Co., supra; Strouse v. Hercules Min. Co., supra; Nistad v. Winton Lumber Co., supra; Paull v. Preston Theatres Corp., supra. Subsequent to enactment of this provision this court has recognized that apportionment of compensation is to be made as between disability caused by or resulting from industrial accident and disability caused by or resulting from pre-existing injury, disease or condition residual from previous injury, and that the ratio of apportionment is for the board’s determination. See: Cole v. Fruitland Canning Assn., supra, involving preexisting cancerous kidney; Madariaga v. Delamar Mill. Corp., supra, involving death caused solely by pre-existing cancerous condition; Zipse v. Schmidt Bros., supra, involving determination of the cause and apportionment of partial-permanent disability as between disease and accident; Walker v. Hogue, and Oliver v. Potlatch Forests, Inc., supra, involving apportionment as between different sureties; Harris v. Bechtel Corporation, supra, involving pre-existing condition and two claimed back injuries, where the court affirmed an award of total temporary disability following an accident which aggravated the condition and apportioned subsequent compensation; Beard v. Post Co., supra, involving pre-existing back injury and three separate compensable accidents with three separate sureties, this court affirming an award requiring each surety to pay all medical expenses following each accident for which it was surety, but apportioned subsequent medical expenses; Lindskog, v. Rosebud Mines, Inc., supra, involving an apportionment between two sureties; Andrus v. Boise Fruit & Produce Co., supra, involving successive compensable back injuries, but insufficient evidence to apportion; Clark v. Brennan Const. Co., supra, involving pre-existing back injuries and two subsequent injuries.
In 1963, I.C. § 72-323 was again amended, S.L.1963, Ch. 277, authorizing reduction of benefits payable for death following an accident contributed to by a pre-existing condition or infirmity. Accord: Gjerning v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.,
Another provision to be considered is I.C. § 72-307, enacted as a part of the original workmen’s compensation law as S. L.1917, Ch. 81, which has never been subsequently amended. It provides in part:
“The employer shall provide for an injured employee such reasonable medical, surgical or other attendance or treatment, nurse and hospital service, medicine, crutches and apparatus, as may be required or requested by the employee immediately after an injury, and for a reasonable time thereafter.” (emphasis added).
The board in entering its “Interim Order” following the initial hearing, must have taken into consideration the provisions of I.C. § 72-307 and applied its provisions. In view of the record then before the board, this procedure reflects no reversible error. The order clearly indicates that the board was convinced that claimant had suffered an industrial accident and from this accident flowed the necessity for the hospital, medical and surgical treatment; there is no doubt that during that period claimant was *503 totally disabled for work although prior to the accident he was, notwithstanding the extreme dislocation of his femur and deterioration of the head of the femur, engaged in full-time employment.
The Idaho compensation law speaks in terms of “disability for work,” not in terms of disability in the medical sense. I. C. §§ 72-310(a), 72-312. See: 2 Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law § 57.10.
The provisions of I.C. § 72-307, which provides that the furnishing of the medical, hospital and related expenses occasioned by an industrial accident shall continue “for a reasonable time thereafter,” must be considered and correlated with the provisions of I.C. § 72-323, the first full paragraph of which reads:
“If the degree or duration of disability resulting from an accident is increased or prolonged because of a preexisting injury or infirmity the employer shall be liable only for the additional disability resulting from such accident.”
This latter provision must be considered complementary to I.C. § 72-307, which requires the furnishing of medical, hospital and related expenses for an injured employee — but only for a reasonable time after the injury, and in determination of the issue of what is a “reasonable time” thereunder consideration must be given to a pre-existing injury or infirmity as mentioned in I.C. § 72-323. See Cook v. Roland T. Romrell Company,
Claimant, relying upon I.C. § 72-611, has petitioned this court for an allowance for attorney’s fees in presenting his response to this appeal. Appellants have opposed claimant’s petition and by affidavit in support thereof contend that reasonable grounds existed for their refusal to recognize Wilson’s claim and for the prosecution of this appeal from the interim order of the board. Claimant also petitioned the board for allowance of attorney’s fees. The board has not found or ruled upon that question as yet, reciting in the interim order “That claimant herein has petitioned the Board for allowance for attorney’s fees, the disposition of said petition to be determined at the conclusion of this matter.”
I.C. § 72-611, relied upon by claimant, provides for payment of reasonable attorney fees “[I]f the board or any court * * * determines that the employer or his surety contested a claim * * * without reasonable ground * * This portion of the section has been held to bar allowance of attorney fees as part of the costs if the employer’s action in contesting the claim was not without reasonable grounds. Burch v. Potlatch Forests, Inc.,
There are no findings by the board on the issue whether appellants contested Wilson’s claim “without reasonable ground” or on the issue whether appellants “neglected or refused within a reasonable time” to pay the compensation provided by law. Inasmuch as the interim order, which is the subject of this appeal, by its own terms contemplates further proceedings before the board, this court hereby refers the matter of the allowance of an attorney’s fee in the premises, if any, to the board for determination, as a factual issue.
The interim order of the board is affirmed. The cause is remanded for further proceedings. Costs to claimant.
