584 S.W.2d 744 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1979
The Special Fund and Delores Mae Parker have taken these consolidated appeals from the February 24,1978, judgment of the Logan Circuit Court. In that judgment, the court directed the Workmen’s Compensation Board to find Parker’s occupational disability in an amount in excess of the 35% which the Board had found and to place some of the responsibility for payment on the Special Fund. The judgment also denied Parker’s request for default against Emerson for total disability which Parker asserted when Emerson did not timely respond in the circuit court. Emerson filed a notice of cross-appeal in this Court, but did not file a brief. Emerson additionally neglected to file an appellee’s brief in either Parker’s or the Special Fund’s appeal. We dismiss Emerson’s attempted appeal from the judgment of the Logan Circuit Court civil action number 5862. CR 76.12(8)(b).
An order of the Court of Appeals entered on September 6,1978, passed to the merits the remedies pursuant to CR 76.-12(8)(c) brought on by Emerson’s not filing appellee’s briefs. Our review of the record leads us to the conclusion that in Parker’s appeal we will accept the appellant’s statement of the facts and issues as correct. CR 76.12(8)(c). From our examination of the evidence before the Board, we observe that the Board had an adequate foundation upon which to base the percentage of disability that it set and that if Emerson had properly appealed, we would have reversed the judgment of the circuit court which required the
Parker, in her appeal, argues that the circuit court abused its discretion for not entering a default judgment of total permanent disability when the employer did not timely respond. The Special Fund, in its appeal, challenges the decision of the court which remanded the case to the Board to require the Special Fund to pay for some portion of the disability and instructed the Board to reconsider the evidence for the purpose of assessing a greater amount of occupational disability.
Delores Mae Parker worked as a connect line operator for Emerson Electric Company in Russellville, Kentucky. On January 22, 1974, while in the process of unloading motors from a conveyor belt, Parker turned and stepped on a large vacuum hose which rolled and caused her to lose her balance. As she fell, she grabbed the conveyor belt and twisted her back in the motion.
Parker’s family doctor, Wan, gave her an ultrasonic treatment and prescribed medication. Upon the advice of Dr. Wan, Parker entered the hospital due to the persistence of her pain. While in the hospital, Dr. Kerwin Armand Fisher, an orthopedic surgeon, treated her.
Dr. Fisher testified that x-rays of Parker’s spine revealed a narrowing of the lumbosacral disc and a sacralized last lumbar vertebra on the right side. Dr. Fisher also noted that the x-rays showed the defects of spina bifida and a piece of bone on the front of the fourth lumbar vertebra. Dr. Fisher offered his opinion that as a result of the accident, Parker had incurred 15% permanent functional disability, 7½% of which he attributed to the accident alone and the other 7½% he assigned to the arousal of a preexisting nondisabling condition into disabling reality.
The Board appointed Dr. 0. Tom Evans, Jr., an orthopedic surgeon, to examine Parker upon the authority of KRS 342.121, because of the issue of whether the injury aroused a prior condition. Dr. Evans provided the only other medical testimony of the claimant’s impairment. Dr. Evans presented his conclusion that due to the injury, Parker had sustained 6% permanent functional disability. Dr. Evans also observed that despite the congenital abnormalities in Parker’s lower lumbar spine, in his view, this condition did not contribute to the disability.
Dr. Glen R. Larson, a clinical psychologist who qualified as a vocational expert, gave his deposition on behalf of the claimant. Larson conducted a series of tests. He stated that although Parker’s intelligence was in the normal range, her actual education attainment derived from her completion of high school only rose to about a fifth grade equivalency. Because of Parker’s educational background, Larson believed that she would be best suited for vocational training. Larson surmised that ideally Parker should look for a job doing light retail work where she could sit down as well as occasionally walk around and where she would only lift light objects.
The employment experience of Parker, 28 years old on the date of the hearing August 27, 1975, consisted of factory work. From 1966 to 1968, she worked for three companies operating a sewing machine. In 1968, Emerson hired her. She has no other vocational training.
On January 24, 1977, the Board awarded Parker compensation based on 35% permanent occupational disability. The Board overruled Parker’s petition for reconsideration on February 15th. On March 3rd, Parker filed a petition of appeal in the circuit court under KRS 342.285 in which she claimed that the Board erred in not finding her totally disabled. This petition con
It is within the discretion of this court to hold that this claim be now remanded to the Workmen’s Compensation Board for its consideration in light of the Plaintiff’s greater disability on the basis of the testimony included. Mandatory obedience to the directives of Carnahan v. Yocom, Ky., 526 S.W.2d 301 (1975) is not compelling within the perimeter of these circumstances.
Parker urges that Carnahan, supra, required the circuit court to enter a judgment in her favor of 100% occupational disability. Carnahan, supra, involved a default obtained by the Special Fund in conformity with its pleadings as a result of the absence of an answer by the claimant to the petition of appeal of the Special Fund which sought a remand for reopening and the taking of proof. Carnahan, supra, established the applicability of CR 55.01 to proceedings in the circuit court on appeal from the Workmen’s Compensation Board. CR 55.01 provides in part that,
[i]f, in order to enable the court to enter judgment or to carry it into effect, it is necessary to take an account or to determine the amount of damages or to establish the truth of any averment by evidence or to make an investigation of any other matter, the court without a jury, shall conduct such hearings or order such references as it deems necessary and proper.
As reflected in the quoted portion of CR 55.01, the rule does not bind the court to granting the particular relief requested in the successful movant’s pleadings. The relief requested by the Special Fund’s pleadings in Carnahan, supra, was the appropriate remedy. In the case before us, Parker appended to her petition a copy of the opinion and award of the Board. Thus, the court could observe from the petition itself that the correct remedy would not be an award by the circuit court of 100% disability; when a reviewing circuit court determines that, substantial evidence does not support the amount of occupational disability set by the Board, the court must remand the case to the Board, because the court does not have the authority to direct a specific disability award. Yocom v. Conley, Ky.App., 554 S.W.2d 416 (1977). Consequently, even though the circuit court suggested that in remanding, it exercised its discretion not to comply with Carnahan, supra, because of the circumstances of the case before it, the result the court reached came under the holding of Carnahan, supra, and was the right decision based upon that case. The determination of the court falls within the portion of CR 55.01 which instructs the court to “order such references as it deems necessary and proper. . . ” Therefore, we do not reach the question raised in Hawes v. Cumberland Contracting Company, Ky., 422 S.W.2d 713 (1968) of whether the court abused its discretion in overruling the motion for default, since Parker received the same relief to which a default judgment would have entitled her.
The Special Fund maintains that substantial evidence supports the finding of the Board as to the degree of Parker’s occupational disability as well as for the determination by the Board that the work related incident caused all of this disability. Because we believe that a sufficient eviden-tiary foundation existed to allow the Board to believe that the accident produced all of Parker’s disability, we will not address the other issue. Dr. O. Tom Evans expressed his views that the abnormalities in Parker’s spine did not increase her disability. In the situation where the work related incident independently brings about all the disability the employer incurs the entire liability.
The judgment is affirmed to the extent that it requires the Board to reconsider the evidence to make an award against the employer based on occupational disability greater than 35%. So much of the judgment which made the Special Fund a party in the further proceedings is reversed with directions to dismiss the Special Fund.
All concur.
. This case was briefed and argued prior to the Supreme Court decision in Yocum v. Bratcher, Ky., 578 S.W.2d 44 (1979), and is not cited as authority.